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So Long And Thanks For All The Fish - Ukraine bombs Russian Nuclear Bombers


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Posted
19 hours ago, LosLobo said:


It’s ironic. Just as Ho Chi Minh turned to the Soviets and Chinese after the U.S. ignored his pleas for support against French colonialism, Trump-style isolationism today could push other nations — especially those under threat — to turn to China or Russia by necessity, not ideology.
 

When the U.S. steps back from global leadership or abandons allies, it doesn’t create peace — it creates a vacuum. And history shows who steps in.

You mean like what happened in Libya after it was destroyed by the west?

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Posted

Just a coincedence this attack happens days after Lindsey Grahams visit, didnt he said 'he'd act without Trump' Graham is John Bolton without the moustache & glasses, Trump needs to bin him off

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Posted
22 minutes ago, LosLobo said:

 

You come across as someone who thinks tossing around buzzwords substitutes for substance — but your post shows you don’t grasp diplomacy, enforceability, or even the basics of critical reasoning.
 

You keep calling it a “genuine offer,” but Hitchens’s Razor applies: what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. And you’ve provided none.
 

Your argument leans heavily on a salad of logical fallacies:
 

Begging the Question – Assuming the offer was legitimate, then using that assumption as proof of its legitimacy.

Straw Man – Recasting my argument as a complaint about all guarantees, instead of what it was: a critique of trusting a regime actively violating prior agreements.

False Equivalence – Comparing the challenges of enforcing normal treaties to accepting an ultimatum from an invader is bad logic — and worse diplomacy.

Appeal to Futility – Dismissing enforceability concerns by claiming no guarantee is enforceable — then turning around and suggesting the UN Security Council, where Russia has veto power, as your solution.

Tu Quoque – Suggesting Ukraine’s flaws justify Russia’s actions doesn’t defend your argument — it dodges it.

Assertion-as-Evidence – Stating something repeatedly doesn’t make it true. It just makes it louder.


Frankly, your post feels disingenuous: all assertion, no proof, and riddled with logical fallacies.


Try again — this time with evidence, not rhetoric.

Where as your proof is quotes of articles from Ukrainian & western media, allied with the current western narrative.

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Posted
1 minute ago, BLMFem said:

Hopefully he's in "permanent storage" already. 

The point is of course Russia will retaliate against Ukraine but there will also be a very dramatic blame game within Russia and heads will surely roll. I don't think they're at the point yet of erasing Putin. But no doubt he's freaking out.

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Posted
2 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

The point is of course Russia will retaliate against Ukraine but there will also be a very dramatic blame game within Russia and heads will surely roll. I don't think they're at the point yet of erasing Putin. But no doubt he's freaking out.

I think it will be very difficult, if not impossible, to predict the fall of Putin. It seems to me that it will be one of those 'here today, gone tomorrow' scenarios. 

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Posted
2 hours ago, LosLobo said:

 

You come across as someone who thinks tossing around buzzwords substitutes for substance — but your post shows you don’t grasp diplomacy, enforceability, or even the basics of critical reasoning.
 

You keep calling it a “genuine offer,” but Hitchens’s Razor applies: what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. And you’ve provided none.
 

Your argument leans heavily on a salad of logical fallacies:
 

Begging the Question – Assuming the offer was legitimate, then using that assumption as proof of its legitimacy.

Straw Man – Recasting my argument as a complaint about all guarantees, instead of what it was: a critique of trusting a regime actively violating prior agreements.

False Equivalence – Comparing the challenges of enforcing normal treaties to accepting an ultimatum from an invader is bad logic — and worse diplomacy.

Appeal to Futility – Dismissing enforceability concerns by claiming no guarantee is enforceable — after suggesting the UN Security Council, where Russia has veto power, as your solution.

Tu Quoque – Suggesting Ukraine’s flaws justify Russia’s actions doesn’t defend your argument — it dodges it.

Assertion-as-Evidence – Stating something repeatedly doesn’t make it true. It just makes it louder.


Frankly, your post feels disingenuous: all assertion, no proof, and riddled with logical fallacies.


Try again — this time with evidence, not rhetoric.

I tried.  You just don't understand, and so you want some sort of "proof."  

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Posted

Dmitry Medvedev war humor:

"To all who are worried and waiting for retribution.


You need to worry - this is a normal person's quality. Retribution is inevitable.

At the same time, you should remember:

1. Our Army is actively advancing and will continue to advance. Everything that should explode will certainly explode, and those who should be exterminated will disappear;

2. The negotiations in Istanbul are not needed for a compromise peace on unrealistic conditions invented by someone, but for our speedy victory and the complete destruction of the neo-Nazi government. This is the meaning of the Russian Memorandum, which was published yesterday."

And there you go.  

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Posted
2 hours ago, LosLobo said:

 

You come across as someone who thinks tossing around buzzwords substitutes for substance — but your post shows you don’t grasp diplomacy, enforceability, or even the basics of critical reasoning.
 

You keep calling it a “genuine offer,” but Hitchens’s Razor applies: what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. And you’ve provided none.
 

Your argument leans heavily on a salad of logical fallacies:
 

Begging the Question – Assuming the offer was legitimate, then using that assumption as proof of its legitimacy.

Straw Man – Recasting my argument as a complaint about all guarantees, instead of what it was: a critique of trusting a regime actively violating prior agreements.

False Equivalence – Comparing the challenges of enforcing normal treaties to accepting an ultimatum from an invader is bad logic — and worse diplomacy.

Appeal to Futility – Dismissing enforceability concerns by claiming no guarantee is enforceable — after suggesting the UN Security Council, where Russia has veto power, as your solution.

Tu Quoque – Suggesting Ukraine’s flaws justify Russia’s actions doesn’t defend your argument — it dodges it.

Assertion-as-Evidence – Stating something repeatedly doesn’t make it true. It just makes it louder.


Frankly, your post feels disingenuous: all assertion, no proof, and riddled with logical fallacies.


Try again — this time with evidence, not rhetoric.

Sorry if you don't understand what I wrote.  Maybe I wasn't clear enough.  And I think I've already answered this question somewhere in the last three days.  

 

A number of topics, all connected and all important to establishing a diplomatic framework for settlement.  It all works together. Diplomacy can be messy, and we're not talking about theory. We're talking real world.  That's where things matter.   That's the part you want so desperately to avoid. 

 

You ask for "evidence."  And yet sometimes, the thing speaks for itself, so to speak. Res ipsa loquitur.  It's not hard to connect the dots, sometimes. If you don't understand that, I can come up with many examples. 

 

Appeal to futility?  An agreement may be difficult to achieve, but not impossible.  Anyone will tell you that.  Again, consider history. Consider other diplomatic solutions, and connect the dots. It can be done. 

 

False equivalence?   It's not false if there's areal connection in the mind of one of the parties.  In this example, what you think doesn't matter.  What Putin thinks absolutely does matter.  Unless, of course, he's taken out of the equation and one of your theoretical straw men is substituted in his place.

 

And yes, much of your argument does beg the question.  Maybe you should go back and read it again. 

 

Tu Qouque?  Give me a break. If you understand any of the above you'd know why that's not the case. 

 

 

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Posted
3 hours ago, frank83628 said:

Where as your proof is quotes of articles from Ukrainian & western media, allied with the current western narrative.

Dimitry !!!! did u use google translate!!!, you must have pushed the wrong button

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Posted
17 minutes ago, Mavideol said:

aren you trying to say/divert that Ukraine started the war and they don't have the right to defend themselves

Not at all.  Who "started" the war?  How far back in history do you want to go? 

 

Sure, Ukraine has a right to defend itself. That goes without saying. And the rest of us have some interest in not being turned into dust via thermonuclear war.  

 

So what's the solution? A diplomatic solution. One that establishes transparency and a framework for agreement and verification.  And yet all that is complicated by the fact that, after yesterday's drone attacks, the US can no longer be trusted.  Or rather, the Russians may not trust the USA at this point, given the recent history of CIA meddling and the Maiden Revolution. And of course, the failed Minsk accords.  

 

So, justified or not, Russia may not trust the USA at this point and they may well think Trump is a wishy washy madman.  And that complicates the situation and makes war more likely, not less likely.  Read up on Game Theory, the Prisoner's Dilemma, and why a lack of transparency and an irrational actor can make it more likely that a nation act in it's perceived best interest and less likely to agree to any kind of diplomatic framework for a solution.   

 

The bottom line: the sooner this war is stopped, the better.  Otherwise, we're headed for trouble. 

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Posted

Notice how the narrative that we are fighting to save democracy  in Ukrain is gone ?  now it's all about defeating Russia, which it was all along, a NATO proxy war to bring anout the collapse of Russia.

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