kalm wrote: ↑Mon Jun 27, 2022 6:00 amBut then he’d be agreeing with the left…UNI88 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 27, 2022 5:47 am So what does what the US did in Iraq or Afghanistan or NATO did in Bosnia have to do with Ukraine and why are they repeatedly brought up in a thread about Ukraine?
If someone feels strongly that US transgressions and hypocrisy need to be discussed they should start a thread about them.
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The Ukraine Crisis
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
well, its easier than trying to blame Ukraine for being invaded by the neighbor that promised they wouldn't do that when Ukraine turned over the nukes on their terriotory after the collapse of the Soviet Union...UNI88 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 12:19 pmHow is repeatedly bringing up US (or NATO) actions in a thread about Ukraine not a deflection or attempted hijack?SeattleGriz wrote:
I didn't say he didn't invade. I was asking for your list of past Putin transgressions that show he has a track record of saying one thing and then doing another.
How are US fuckups a distraction? Because it's okay when the US trots into some third world country and completely over turns it for faulty reasons? It matters because we are talking about justification for starting shit.
If you are going to hold Putin accountable, are you holding the US to the same level of accountability?
Do I think Putin uses really weak excuses and subterfuge to skirt international law? You bet. But does the US pull the same shit when they want. Yes.
Look at Yugoslavia. That was a NATO war that was not UN approved, but hey, it's okay!
Maybe I'm looking at it too formulaic by expecting there to be some standard, but all I'm seeing is as long as you're on the right team, you get to make up rules as you go.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Oh so the argument of the US not having a "coalition" going in not matter?UNI88 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 27, 2022 5:47 amSo what does what the US did in Iraq or Afghanistan or NATO did in Bosnia have to do with Ukraine and why are they repeatedly brought up in a thread about Ukraine?SDHornet wrote:
Because NATO is poking around and supporting a country that isn't a NATO member. People seem to be conflating Russian actions against Ukraine (as unfounded and belligerent as they are) as direct acts against NATO or a NATO member.
There's a difference between Russia attacking a NATO member and attacking a non-NATO member. People seem to be forgetting that context.
If someone feels strongly that US transgressions and hypocrisy need to be discussed they should start a thread about them.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
This didn't age well.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Oh...so it is plausible the Bucha massacre was the result of Ukrainian shelling...
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
The German government has even been messing with her family back home and Ukraine has deemed her to be a Russian terrorist.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Who's "going in"?SDHornet wrote: ↑Fri Jul 01, 2022 7:53 pmOh so the argument of the US not having a "coalition" going in not matter?UNI88 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 27, 2022 5:47 am So what does what the US did in Iraq or Afghanistan or NATO did in Bosnia have to do with Ukraine and why are they repeatedly brought up in a thread about Ukraine?
If someone feels strongly that US transgressions and hypocrisy need to be discussed they should start a thread about them.
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We're just supplying Ukraine with equipment so they can kill Russians - the enemy of my enemy is my friend. "Payback time" in the common speech.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Patton was right. Should have taken care of the Russians in 45'/46'. And it got him killed.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
We should have sent equipment to both sides at Stalingrad
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
https://www.wsj.com/articles/coal-makes ... 1656936180Coal Makes a Comeback as the World Thirsts for Energy
…The push is being led by Europe, which is boosting coal purchases to ensure it can keep power flowing to homes and factories after Russia cut gas supplies to the continent. Germany, which has promised to eliminate coal as a power source by 2030, is among the nations now importing more. Economy Minister Robert Habeck called the increased reliance on coal bitter but necessary.
“Right now the sentiment is that more coal is better than more Russia,” said Alex Msimang, a London-based partner at law firm Vinson & Elkins LLP specializing in the energy sector.
Parts of the U.S. are boosting use of coal power, as high demand for electricity amid unusually hot temperatures pushes regional power grids to the brink of blackouts this summer.
China, the world’s biggest coal consumer, is expanding production of the fuel and its use in power generation, spooked by shortages last year that caused electricity cuts and outages throughout the country, energy experts say.
India is also leaning hard on coal as energy demand increases. The nation’s coal-power generation hit a record in April, said Rahul Tongia, a senior fellow at New Delhi-based think tank the Centre for Social and Economic Progress.
Domestic coal production in China and India helped drive a 10% increase in global investment in 2021, the International Energy Agency reported last month. The IEA projects another 10% increase this year as China and India try to stave off shortages…..
….Coal use fell in many major Western countries over the past decade, displaced by cleaner forms of energy that became more cost-competitive. Natural gas became more plentiful thanks to the American fracking boom and Russian exports to Europe. Renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power also gained market share, buoyed by falling prices and government subsidies and mandates.
Still, global coal demand held strong, fueled by fast-growing energy needs in much of the rest of the world—and is on track to hit record highs this year, according to forecasts by the IEA…..
…Still, efforts to wean Western nations off Russian energy figure to strain global supplies for the foreseeable future. In April, the European Union agreed to ban imports of Russian coal. Before the war, Russia was Europe’s largest supplier of the thermal coal used in power generation, and the ban affected around 70% of the supply that European power stations require, according to Rystad Energy.
In addition to Germany, Italy, France, the U.K., the Netherlands and Austria have now said they are preparing to restart coal-fired power plants, boost their production or keep them running longer than planned. Many countries say they are trying to build up stockpiles of natural gas ahead of winter, when it is in high demand as a heating fuel.….
….China, the world’s largest greenhouse-gas emitter, already comprises around half of the world’s coal-power capacity, with plants accounting for nearly a third of global coal consumption, according to energy data trackers.
The country is still building new coal plants at a rapid clip, at risk of oversupply, “because it can’t afford a power shortage,” says Ryna Cui, co-director of the China program at the University of Maryland’s Center for Global Sustainability….
The US is the Saudi Arabia of coal. We should be taking full advantage of this. Mine baby mine.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
BDKJMU wrote: ↑Mon Jul 04, 2022 7:46 amhttps://www.wsj.com/articles/coal-makes ... 1656936180Coal Makes a Comeback as the World Thirsts for Energy
…The push is being led by Europe, which is boosting coal purchases to ensure it can keep power flowing to homes and factories after Russia cut gas supplies to the continent. Germany, which has promised to eliminate coal as a power source by 2030, is among the nations now importing more. Economy Minister Robert Habeck called the increased reliance on coal bitter but necessary.
“Right now the sentiment is that more coal is better than more Russia,” said Alex Msimang, a London-based partner at law firm Vinson & Elkins LLP specializing in the energy sector.
Parts of the U.S. are boosting use of coal power, as high demand for electricity amid unusually hot temperatures pushes regional power grids to the brink of blackouts this summer.
China, the world’s biggest coal consumer, is expanding production of the fuel and its use in power generation, spooked by shortages last year that caused electricity cuts and outages throughout the country, energy experts say.
India is also leaning hard on coal as energy demand increases. The nation’s coal-power generation hit a record in April, said Rahul Tongia, a senior fellow at New Delhi-based think tank the Centre for Social and Economic Progress.
Domestic coal production in China and India helped drive a 10% increase in global investment in 2021, the International Energy Agency reported last month. The IEA projects another 10% increase this year as China and India try to stave off shortages…..
….Coal use fell in many major Western countries over the past decade, displaced by cleaner forms of energy that became more cost-competitive. Natural gas became more plentiful thanks to the American fracking boom and Russian exports to Europe. Renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power also gained market share, buoyed by falling prices and government subsidies and mandates.
Still, global coal demand held strong, fueled by fast-growing energy needs in much of the rest of the world—and is on track to hit record highs this year, according to forecasts by the IEA…..
…Still, efforts to wean Western nations off Russian energy figure to strain global supplies for the foreseeable future. In April, the European Union agreed to ban imports of Russian coal. Before the war, Russia was Europe’s largest supplier of the thermal coal used in power generation, and the ban affected around 70% of the supply that European power stations require, according to Rystad Energy.
In addition to Germany, Italy, France, the U.K., the Netherlands and Austria have now said they are preparing to restart coal-fired power plants, boost their production or keep them running longer than planned. Many countries say they are trying to build up stockpiles of natural gas ahead of winter, when it is in high demand as a heating fuel.….
….China, the world’s largest greenhouse-gas emitter, already comprises around half of the world’s coal-power capacity, with plants accounting for nearly a third of global coal consumption, according to energy data trackers.
The country is still building new coal plants at a rapid clip, at risk of oversupply, “because it can’t afford a power shortage,” says Ryna Cui, co-director of the China program at the University of Maryland’s Center for Global Sustainability….
The US is the Saudi Arabia of coal. We should be taking full advantage of this. Mine baby mine.
Upon further review
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Don't think I ever had an issue selling arms to the Ukrainians...but of course the irony with that support is that now NATO stockpiles are starting to run low and the Russians keep gobbling up more territory. Go figure.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
gobbling it up and holding it are two different things.
We can outspend them. Again.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Ukraine is never getting that land back. Crimea was something like 8 years ago, it's never going back to Ukrainian hands. I'm no fan of Russia, and they're gobbling up of territory from weaker neighbors just because they can (and despite SG's insistence, there is no justification whatsoever for what Russia is doing in the Ukraine right now) is immoral and should be condemned far and wide. But unless someone is willing to put troops on the ground to move them out, that land is never going back to Ukraine. Normally you could count on an insurgency or inhabitants rising up, but Russia empties these areas of the inhabitants and replaces them with Russian civilians. It's what they do.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Yep but trying to claim that the Russians taking over eastern territories is a win is spin.GannonFan wrote:Ukraine is never getting that land back. Crimea was something like 8 years ago, it's never going back to Ukrainian hands. I'm no fan of Russia, and they're gobbling up of territory from weaker neighbors just because they can (and despite SG's insistence, there is no justification whatsoever for what Russia is doing in the Ukraine right now) is immoral and should be condemned far and wide. But unless someone is willing to put troops on the ground to move them out, that land is never going back to Ukraine. Normally you could count on an insurgency or inhabitants rising up, but Russia empties these areas of the inhabitants and replaces them with Russian civilians. It's what they do.
They aimed for Kiev to take over almost all of Ukraine or install a Putin-approved puppet but they tripped on their dick. Any victories after that fiasco might save a little face but can't hide how inept their military has shown itself to be.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
I agree, they wanted much more than they're going to end up getting, for now. And they're military has been shown to be very typically Russian - they'll win by strength of numbers and dogged persistence to keep moving forward, costs and casualties be damned.UNI88 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 06, 2022 12:41 pmYep but trying to claim that the Russians taking over eastern territories is a win is spin.GannonFan wrote:
Ukraine is never getting that land back. Crimea was something like 8 years ago, it's never going back to Ukrainian hands. I'm no fan of Russia, and they're gobbling up of territory from weaker neighbors just because they can (and despite SG's insistence, there is no justification whatsoever for what Russia is doing in the Ukraine right now) is immoral and should be condemned far and wide. But unless someone is willing to put troops on the ground to move them out, that land is never going back to Ukraine. Normally you could count on an insurgency or inhabitants rising up, but Russia empties these areas of the inhabitants and replaces them with Russian civilians. It's what they do.
They aimed for Kiev to take over almost all of Ukraine or install a Putin-approved puppet but they tripped on their dick. Any victories after that fiasco might save a little face but can't hide how inept their military has shown itself to be.
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But in the end, they'll still hold Crimea, they'll have puppet regimes set up in the Donbas, and they'll just wait another few years to restock and reposition before they try to take another piece of Ukraine. As long as what's left of the Ukraine after this is not part of the EU (and that'll take 10-15 years, if ever) and not part of NATO, they are on the chopping block and Russia will do what they did this time; launch a completely unjustified war, move/kill a bunch of Ukrainians, and seize more territory. It's just what Russia does.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Ok. I know I asked earlier in the thread and don't think I got an answer - but, what steps were being taken to make Ukraine a part of NATO?
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
SeattleGriz called it. The goods were never part of the sanctions and I found this out almost a month ago. Like how he bashes the EU. DC lying mouthpiece.SeattleGriz wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 1:25 pmThe issue, as I'm understanding it, is that Russia and Lithuania have an agreement with wording that specifies how this agreement can be severed, and this isn't how it's done. In addition, the materials being transported were not listed as items the EU was sanctioning. So now we have the EU and Lithuania changing the rules.GannonFan wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 11:27 am
Lithuania can do whatever the heck they want to do. Russia doesn't own the ground in Lithuania. They have no inherent right to have rail access through that country. If Russia wants to ship things that are on the sanctioned list (and there are plenty of things, including passengers, that aren't on the sanction list so there is plenty that can be shipped through Lithuania at this time) the Russia can put them on a boat and sail those things to Kaliningrad. No one's blockading anything, there's free access through the Baltic. But if you're going to be a belligerent nation who launches offensive wars of destruction on your neighbors in an attempt to take territory and build an empire, then you have to realize that not everyone is going to play nice with you.
It's a little extreme, but what happens when the mob determines what rules they want to make and keep?
You guys tired of being gaslit yet.
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The EU's executive body, the European Commission, announced that Lithuania must allow sanctioned Russian goods to transit between the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad and Russia proper. Sandwiched between Poland, Lithuania, and the Baltic Sea, Kaliningrad has suffered escalating economic and energy challenges over Lithuania's enforcement of the EU's sanctions that were introduced following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Those sanctions prohibited the use of EU territory for the passage of restricted Russian goods. On Wednesday, however, the European Commission invented the notion that its sanctions did not apply to Russian rail transports between the Russian mainland and Kaliningrad.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
The irony of you thinking other people are gaslighting, and not recognizing your own, is incredibly rich.
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Re: The Ukraine Crisis
Media gaslighting. It's like believing asymptomatic spread was a problem.
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