It's a unipolar gobal economy dominated by the dollar used as a reserve currency.
It's a unipolar gobal economy dominated by the dollar used as a reserve currency.
The U.S. manipulated Ukraine and Russia to keep the dollar propped up. It manipulated Ukraine after that to encircle Russia also to keep the dollar propped up. It's now arming Ukraine using the same war machine that arms Israel to keep the dollar propped up.Yes, the US was losing its importance as single remaining superpower.
But Russia helped the US retain it by invading the Ukraine.
From Russia. There were all in the past suppressed parts of the Russian Empire and they are rightfully scared to become that again.
They don't care whether the US motivations are true or not as long as its influence keeps Russia at bay. If someone else could keep Russia at bay they night even choose someone else. But at the moment that is not really the case.
Basically everyone in Eastern Europe feels the need for protection against Russia because they didn't trust is. And with the invasion now all those fears were proven right.
This is all about Russia, not about the US.
Propaganda against Russia. At least you got something right.Against Russia. Duh. The entity that keeps trying to oppress them. Learning a bit about the region would really help you.
For the simple fact that other countries exists and are always independent actors to some degree or not. To discount that would be foolish. Not to mention extremely rude.
There exist a history between Russia and its victims that's completely divorced from the US. Russia was terrorizing Poland back before the US even existed.
Except that the "tinfoil" I've been sharing started with George Kennan.You're reaching tinfoil-hat levels of "everything bad in the world is because of the US".
Ukraine has been in the crosshairs of every neighbor plus the West, and especially the latter since the early 1990s.Yes, Ukraine was in an extremely unequal partnership with Russia in the Soviet Union. Russian domination and oppression of Ukraine took place throughout the USSR's existence, and further back into the era of Empire that Putin now openly wants to restore.
The rest of this post is just regurgitation.
I've no idea who this Absent is, but I came back here because I felt that the mods wouldn't pick on me in this forum unlike in other. Given that, my point is very clear about this issue, and I'd rather talk about that than myself:Someone else first suggested ralfy might be an alt (specifically, Sean's due to how similar their positions are). You were the one who passive aggressively insinuated that ralfy was instead Absent's alt due to what you were framing as suspicious timing which you capped off with the quintiessentially sarcastic "I'm sure it's just a coincidence" line. As such, it is pertinent to point out that your reasoning - such as it is - is pretty much a straight up Texas Sharpshooter fallacy, treating a period in which ralfy is active and Absent is...well, absent as if that were a smoking gun without consideration for the times that they were active concurrently (which is to say, it fails to even make its point on its own terms). Similarly, it is worth pointing out that due to Absent's observed position being both antithetical and hostile to that voiced by ralfy and Sean (whom you imply Absent is now defending), your insinuation simply doesn't have anything behind it.
It's like if someone were to speculate that you were my alt (or vice versa, if you prefer), because of a period where one of us was active and the other was not. And when pointed out that it doesn't make sense because not only have we been active concurrently, there's quite a bit of bad blood between us and that the inactive user was quite vocally opposed to the positions the active user is championing...they turn around and claim that said bad blood was just a cover. That's not an intelligent argument, that's just scrambling for an explanation that would allow the speaker to dismiss contradictory evidence out of hand.
The U.S. was manipulating former Soviet Republics right after the Union collapsed:I'm not avoiding contemplating it-- I'm pointing out how irrelevant it is to the question at hand. I'm refusing to accept it as justification for autocrats and kleptocrats around the world to prey on their neighbours and seize land wherever they please.
What, are we supposed to accept any and all flagrant abuse and slaughter so long as those who perpetrate it give some anti-American rhetoric now and then? Is that how paper-thin and conditional your opposition to imperialism and war are?
You haven't drawn a credible relationship between 1) opposing invasions and annexations around the world and 2) "maintaining the American empire". There's no causal link; and simple righteous indignation doesn't cut it. Opposition to the US's imperial ambitions doesn't necessitate support for other imperial ambitions-- quite the opposite, because you can hardly mount a credible criticism of American abuses if you enthusiastically endorse the same abuses being perpetrated by other states.
Russia's actions categorically empowered the United States and NATO.
Almost every point that he says is similar to mine, and I'm not even a conservative or a Trump supporter.
A presidential candidate in 2028 everyone.
interesting and unexpected admissionand there's only one user here (edit: in the last decade, I won't forget you blablahb) I've given that treatment to deserve repayment in kind.
You are not merely "opposing invasions and annexations around the world". You are supporting the Empire's planned response to certain invasions (both present and theoretical future), repeating the propaganda of the Empire about the reasons for them, and denying the extent of its provocations and responsibility. You are also encouraging Ukraine to exhaust its people fighting for territory whose inhabitants don't even appear to want to be part of Ukraine. So that's lovely.You haven't drawn a credible relationship between 1) opposing invasions and annexations around the world and 2) "maintaining the American empire". There's no causal link; and simple righteous indignation doesn't cut it.
Thinking that and yet denying that the United States and NATO manipulated the circumstances to provoke Russia into war with Ukraine is champion-tier mental gymnastics. Though it seems to have been the plan, I'm not so sure it is true, though; NATO has expanded, but it is also showing cracks and the rest of the world tires ever more of American hypocrisy. The situation in Palestine has obviously devastated what little perception of moral credibility America had, but outside of white countries Ukraine hasn't exactly been a great conversation topic for perpetuating American influence either. Humans are pattern-recognizing creatures, and patterns there are to recognize. In any case, the price and tragedy of all this has been carried mostly by Ukrainians with very little input from them and, despite its rhetoric, the US and friends have not in any way meant to change that. They support any decision Ukrainian leadership (such as it is) makes so long as that decision is continuing to fight.Russia's actions categorically empowered the United States and NATO.
And one neighbour has gone far further than any other, being the only one to attempt the full invasion and annexation. And that's the one you have no problem with.Ukraine has been in the crosshairs of every neighbor plus the West, and especially the latter since the early 1990s.
The reasons for the invasion are blindingly obvious, and we even have sources straight from the horse's mouth: from Putin giving his speech about how Ukrainian independence was a mistake and should be rectified, to the Russian soldiers who attested their goal had been to take Kyiv and depose the government.You are not merely "opposing invasions and annexations around the world". You are supporting the Empire's planned response to certain invasions (both present and theoretical future), repeating the propaganda of the Empire about the reasons for them, and denying the extent of its provocations and responsibility. You are also encouraging Ukraine to exhaust its people fighting for territory whose inhabitants don't even appear to want to be part of Ukraine. So that's lovely.
You talk about provocations, and there were indeed some from the US. Yet nothing they did ever approached the level of manipulation and provocation from Russia, with which you have zero issue. So why this double standard? If we have a third country, supposedly sovereign, why should we (on the one hand) condemn the manipulations and provocations of the US, while (on the other hand) accept and endorse the far greater manipulations and provocations of Russia?In Ukraine, the Empire is weakening its perceived enemy, a country it chose to alienate long ago, helping it to maintain its hold on power and perhaps eventually take over that country. The Empire also deliberately provoked that enemy. The Emprie knew that what it was doing in Ukraine was unacceptable to Russian leadership for decades. It is documented in diplomatic cables, influential think tank articles, academia, and so on. They knew it would result in something like this. They pressed forward anyway because they wanted this war to happen or they wanted the undermining of Russian security that would have resulted had this war not happened. Russia, it must be noted, made efforts to diplomatically resolve this issue. Meanwhile agents of the Empire and you specifically have denied that Russia had the right to even consider the NATO-Ukrainian relationship an issue to be resolved. That's how wars happen; the continuation of diplomacy by other means happens when diplomacy is closed off as a means to resolve serious problems.
Obviously I supported arms control and reduction. I'd like the same from Russia. But once one of those powers decides to invade and annex a third country regardless, then the conversation has obviously shifted, and defending it from Imperial rapaciousness becomes pretty important.Rather than advertising an intent to make Ukraine some kind of bulwark the Empire could have instead pursued a path lightly tread in ages past between it and the Soviet Union: multilateral arms control and reduction. And it could have attempted to act in the spirit of that, not just the letter. I imagine you would have supported this? Or am I being too generous in my assessment of your inclinations?
"Russia's actions benefitted NATO, so therefore those actions of Russia must somehow be the fault of NATO too".Thinking that and yet denying that the United States and NATO manipulated the circumstances to provoke Russia into war with Ukraine is champion-tier mental gymnastics.
We are not talking about China or Iran or North Korea or Syria or Afghanistan or Iraq. Those are all very different countries with different circumstances and the only common trend is that the US didn't like them. They also all aside from Iraq did not actually invade their neighbors to conquer them since at least the 70ies.The idea that it's all about Russia, or China, or Iran, or North Korea, or Syria, or Afghanistan, or Iraq, or whatever country where the U.S. also supported dictatorsh, death squads, helped foment terrorists, instigated color revolutions, and manipulated through military deals in exchange for pricing oil in dollars or even playing both sides of the field, is made morally bankrupt by the fact that the one making such accusations is no different, if not worse than, the one making such accusations.
Not really. The Romanovs, the Soviets and now the current gangsters in the Kremlin all want to spread their power over an unwilling eastern Europe. That's three strikes. they're out. It be propaganda to pretend Russia hasn't always been out to get their neighbors.Propaganda against Russia. At least you got something right.
That's not how it works. That's not how it as ever worked. No matter how powerful the top dog is countries always have their own desires, agency and goals.In a unipolar global economy, most aren't independent actors. That's why it's unipolar in the first place.
Every country has some beef against others but Poland hasn't been out to subjugate Ukraine and all their neighbors in every single incarnation of its state, nor do they have a desire to do so currently. Russia is unique in that particular regard. Also ''working with the soviet republics'' is a pretty curious way of spelling ''conquered against their will and then starved because Stalin found it funny''To add to what you said, Russia was not only terrorizing Ukraine, so was Poland and other neighbors. Meanwhile, Ukraine worked with the other Soviet Republics, then sided with the Nazis, then went back to the allies, and so on.
Not really. Assuming Ukraine is an independent country is not a ''provocation''. Its only a provocation if we humor Russia's claims that it still owns or ought to own Ukraine.In Ukraine, the Empire is weakening its perceived enemy, a country it chose to alienate long ago, helping it to maintain its hold on power and perhaps eventually take over that country. The Empire also deliberately provoked that enemy.
Uh no they didn't. Russia got a panic attack over a trade deal, forcefully paraded the Ukrainian president around as a puppet and then invaded when this backfired. Russia has been the one to initiate every single escalation while the west was pussyfooting not to lose their precious Russian gass.it must be noted, made efforts to diplomatically resolve this issue. Meanwhile agents of the Empire and you specifically have denied that Russia had the right to even consider the NATO-Ukrainian relationship an issue to be resolved. That's how wars happen; the continuation of diplomacy by other means happens when diplomacy is closed off as a means to resolve serious problems.
he Emprie knew that what it was doing in Ukraine was unacceptable to Russian leadership for decades. It is documented in diplomatic cables, influential think tank articles, academia, and so on. They knew it would result in something like this. They pressed forward anyway because they wanted this war to happen or they wanted the undermining of Russian security that would have resulted had this war not happened.
Almost as if the Russian stance was utterly illigitimate to begin with. We shouldn't surrender the sovereignty of countries just to make Russia feel good. Russia has no inherent right to determine the foreign policy of its neighbors, and the only reason it even wants to do this is so that it can subjugate those neighbors it forcefully withheld NATO protection from.Meanwhile agents of the Empire and you specifically have denied that Russia had the right to even consider the NATO-Ukrainian relationship an issue to be resolved
What is the basis of such enlargement?
Where to even start? The Holodomor? The partition of Poland? The Soviet conquest of Poland? The Prague Spring? Decades of being occupied and terrorized for just about all of Russia's neighbors.Why is that needed?
Fair enough. I'll probably maintain the accusation at some level cause it's funny, but like, how much more fun would it have been if I was right?I am nowhere near patient or invested enough to have an alt on this forum.
The NATO enlargement requires the unanimous decision of all members and the candidate.What is the basis of such enlargement?
Well, one of the things about being American (and to a lesser extent British, French, etc.) is having less motivation to think about or empathise with citizens of countries for whom the USA is not the greatest threat. Or citizens of countries whose people toiled away in relative poverty and underdevelopment for decades, only to thrive when they finally got capitalism. (The GDP/capita of the Baltic states and Poland is nearly ten times larger than at independence just over 30 years ago.)They are doing it because they don't want an aggressive empire successfully conquering countries next to them.
And that was in reaction to what one non-neighbor did. The latter, apparently, considers the whole world its neighborhood.And one neighbour has gone far further than any other, being the only one to attempt the full invasion and annexation. And that's the one you have no problem with.
We should because the same country that manipulated Ukraine and is now arming it is also dealing with the rest. That's why Stoltenberg mentioned them, and implicitly gave the reason why the West is going against China, Russia, and the rest, and is arming Ukraine: they are a threat to the dollar-dominated global financial system:We are not talking about China or Iran or North Korea or Syria or Afghanistan or Iraq. Those are all very different countries with different circumstances and the only common trend is that the US didn't like them. They also all aside from Iraq did not actually invade their neighbors to conquer them since at least the 70ies.
They are not relevant to the Ukraine war. Because the US is not that relevant to the Ukraine war. The relevant parties are Russia and Ukraine. Then the other countries around them, who nearly all fear Russia as well. And only then maybe the US.
And the Ukraine is also very much different from Israel. That the US supports both is pretty much the only thing they have in common.
As for "all for the Dollar", i hope you are aware that most countries sending military help to the Ukraine would rather prefer the Euro over the dollar as world reserve currency. They certainly are not doing it to prop up the Dollar. They are doing it because they don't want an aggressive empire successfully conquering countries next to them.
Eastern Europe is preyed upon by two sets of gangsters, and one doesn't consider itself so. Rather, it's the "hero" of the world:Not really. The Romanovs, the Soviets and now the current gangsters in the Kremlin all want to spread their power over an unwilling eastern Europe. That's three strikes. they're out. It be propaganda to pretend Russia hasn't always been out to get their neighbors.
That's not how it works. That's not how it as ever worked. No matter how powerful the top dog is countries always have their own desires, agency and goals.
Every country has some beef against others but Poland hasn't been out to subjugate Ukraine and all their neighbors in every single incarnation of its state, nor do they have a desire to do so currently. Russia is unique in that particular regard. Also ''working with the soviet republics'' is a pretty curious way of spelling ''conquered against their will and then starved because Stalin found it funny''
Not really. Assuming Ukraine is an independent country is not a ''provocation''. Its only a provocation if we humor Russia's claims that it still owns or ought to own Ukraine.