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Play posted:Biden just accidentally said 'the Iranian people' instead of the Ukrainian people lmao. Right at what was supposed to be the finale of that section. Whoops Watch him get mixed up again when he announces the Iran Deal is back in place.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:03 |
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# ? May 30, 2024 23:43 |
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jmnmu posted:If Russia bothered to make their propaganda even half believable it might actually do something. So far it seems outside of Russian people that seemingly only get their information from TV, literally no one is buying the bullshit visible from outer space being spewed by Russia. Admittedly it's pretty ridiculous at this point since it's as if they were trying to annex the US by saying "you had an alt right rally last year so it's denazification" I guess they could have stuck to trying to blame NATO but that wasn't working much better anyway mystes fucked around with this message at 04:05 on Mar 2, 2022 |
# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:03 |
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MOVIE MAJICK posted:The time for no-fly zone is now It is extremely not.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:03 |
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khwarezm posted:Out of curiosity, how does the supply of arms to Ukraine from the west compare against other proxy wars in the past, particularly Soviet assistance to the Chinese and North Koreans in the Korean war or Chinese and Soviet assistance to the Vietnamese during the war in Vietnam? Like I don't believe they were situations where America could reasonably claim that it was a hostile provocation that could be met with nukes. It is apples and oranges, but Soviet support during the Korean war was instrumental: they supplied guns, tanks, fighters, fighter pilots (who flew under both the Chinese and North Korean flag) etc. Something like 1/3rd of the North Korean air force--nice shiny mig-15s at that--was given to them by the Soviet Union. The US and EU, as far as I know, have only supplied more modest weapon systems along with food, medicine, and intelligence. That said, those modest weapons are very effective, easy to use, and relatively easy to transport, and as most of NATO does not share weapons platforms with Ukraine, handing over planes and tanks would not be a great idea.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:05 |
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jmnmu posted:If Russia bothered to make their propaganda even half believable it might actually do something. So far it seems outside of Russian people that seemingly only get their information from TV, literally no one is buying the bullshit visible from outer space being spewed by Russia.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:06 |
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Youth Decay posted:The Russian Embassy no-longer-in Canada with some "Mooom, he started it" along with the usual Nazi finger-pointing. Oh geez, my bad. Not targeting civilians, and only striking military installations. How embarrassing for me, I’ve been telling people the opposite is happening all this time. Egg on my face, here, fellas.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:08 |
Well, if their goal is to destroy Ukraine's military, perhaps they should focus on that instead of driving down the road in single file.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:09 |
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jmnmu posted:If Russia bothered to make their propaganda even half believable it might actually do something. So far it seems outside of Russian people that seemingly only get their information from TV, literally no one is buying the bullshit visible from outer space being spewed by Russia. Normally they just signal boost local bullshit, which is a lot more effective than bluntly announcing to the world that Mecha Hitler has a Steppe Fortress. There are reports of Zelensky moving around the area on horseback!
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:09 |
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Despera posted:Wheres SANCTIONS EXPLAINER when you need him? It works for NSA Wizard sometimes, lemme try: FINANCE CASH BONDS INSTRUMENT EXCHANGE DERIVATIVE YIELD T-BOND NET ASSET VALUE ROI GROSS PROFIT DEFAULT SWAP FUND
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:09 |
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And they're going to blame this on boomers again, and I'm sick of it.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:10 |
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The idea behind the sanctions, in part at least, is that they will cause the Russian people to rise up against Putin. We've tried it before and it's never worked, but that's the theory. That becomes significantly harder to imagine working if other countries get involved on Ukraine's side. At that point this whole thing stops being Putin's adventurism, and starts to look more like a war Russia must win if they want to keep being a country. If NATO starts shooting at Russian soldiers, then it becomes very easy to present this as an existential threat to Russia. And people are way less likely to shoot their horse midstream in that situation.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:13 |
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Youth Decay posted:The Russian Embassy no-longer-in Canada with some "Mooom, he started it" along with the usual Nazi finger-pointing. As a Canadian, I'm grossed out that this hot garbage is being broadcast in my country. Think it's time to turn this little piece of Ottawa into new off-market housing. Also here's hoping the right-wingers that have been sucking off Putin in the US and Canada shut up quickly as the well runs dry.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:13 |
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some kinda jackal posted:Oh geez, my bad. Not targeting civilians, and only striking military installations. How embarrassing for me, I’ve been telling people the opposite is happening all this time. We received reports the Ukrainian Nazis were operating out of the children's cancer hospital. They were using it as a refueling depot for the sarin gas guns Where's Russia's havannah syndrome devices in this conflict? Can't they unwrangle Kyiv by projecting the brown note?
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:13 |
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And they’re correct there were obviously no plans for this aggression.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:14 |
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The drops have started in Kharkiv. I don't know how much info we'll be seeing out of the city itself until tomorrow. https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1498859158644436996?t=G9pNZPk2TFtcEHQVkwuaAA&s=19
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:15 |
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Flesnolk posted:This is more of a general Ukrainian history question, but I think relevant to the war at hand. Ukraine is rich in natural resources like coal, iron, titanium and uranium, has a lot of heavy industry (steel and aluminium production in particular), arguably has the most fertile soil in Europe and is a huge food exporter accordingly, and potentially has a lot of natural gas deposits itself. With all this stuff going for it, how is it one of the poorest countries in Europe? This is a very good question! Ukraine is not only the poorest country in Europe, it's also poorer than it was in 1990, just before the dissolution of Soviet. This is pretty unique among former USSR republics: Ukraine had the roughest time of all the countries after the Soviet era ended, with severe hyperinflation and an awful decline in GDP per capita. While a lot of the USSR republics were either rich in natural resources (Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan for instance) or were very industrialized (Russia and Belarus), exports of manufactured goods from the constituent republics tended to be very heavily specialized with the exception of Russia which did everything. Ukraine's industrial place in the USSR system was generally to take raw materials and convert them to finished goods in relatively inefficient industries. When the soviet union collapsed, those domestic industries struggled to export. In addition Ukraine is colloquially known as "europe's breakbasket" and still exports a lot of agricultural products such as corn and wheat, much more than iron ore or iron intermediate goods (about the only economically significant natural resource it has an industry for). The sure-fire way to rapid GDP growth is industrialization, which generally means export-led growth in manufactured goods. Unfortunately for Ukraine the productivity growth/value-added is quite low in the agricultural sector. Generally countries with a massive agricultural base that has successfully industralized has done so by exporting agricultural goods to build foreign reserves with which to buy capital goods. Basically sell as much of your food produce as possible for dollars, and then use the dollars to buy machines abroad to build an industrial base. Ukraine for a variety of reasons did not do this in the post-soviet era, and it also had very low levels of foreign direct investment in manufacturing compared to the baltics for instance. The reasons for Ukraine choosing this path is probably complicated and it's difficult to determine casual relationships, but a general answer is that this was an institutional failure driven by local oligarchs securing control of the domestic manufacturing industry in Ukraine and not being interested in competition for these economic rents. Eventually Ukraine and Russia's relationship soured. This caused the end of subsidized natural gas for Ukraine - which further crippled it's domestic manufacturing. In general having oligarchs eat up your industries when Soviet collapsed has proven to be quite bad: https://twitter.com/BrankoMilan/status/428890985569857536?s=20&t=KK8cNplAyvgeKQrwSJEy8g Tomberforce posted:Yeah to be honest I'm not quite sure why arming Ukraine to the extent we have been isn't considered more of an escalation by Russia? At this point it's looking like hundreds of their vehicles have been destroyed by western supplied munitions and the Russians don't seem to be frantically threatening to nuke the west as long as it's a Ukrainian pulling the trigger? Dante fucked around with this message at 04:26 on Mar 2, 2022 |
# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:15 |
Gripweed posted:The idea behind the sanctions, in part at least, is that they will cause the Russian people to rise up against Putin. We've tried it before and it's never worked, but that's the theory. AT this point the sanctions are fairly unprecedented; there hasn't been anything like this scale of international sanctions implemented on anyone since the ww2 era, and the world and world trade is very different now from what it was then.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:16 |
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Should start taking all this captured armor, pretend to be fellow Russians and surprise attack them when they ain’t looking.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:16 |
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Mr. Fall Down Terror posted:the colt was designed in the 1940s, but they are still manufactured today. its a useful platform for all sorts of applications. think of it like a flying van. militaries always have a need for light utility aircraft you can use to move small groups of people around, or to take the mail places, etc. The US used the OV-10 forever, and, I think, considered using it against ISIS. Some old poo poo just works.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:16 |
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a sexual elk posted:Should start taking all this captured armor, pretend to be fellow Russians and surprise attack them when they ain’t looking. VBIED.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:17 |
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a sexual elk posted:Should start taking all this captured armor, pretend to be fellow Russians and surprise attack them when they ain’t looking. Big problem is armor might actually be more of a curse than a blessing: Need to fuel it, maintain it, be trained on it. Its probably better to either leave it to the Ukrainian military or destroy it.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:17 |
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It's the little things. What I'd give for a hunk of that bread. https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1498859754600419328?s=20&t=a6Lw8FyouM0LYbJEFSiSuA https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1498859603806855175?s=20&t=a6Lw8FyouM0LYbJEFSiSuA https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1498860217010122754?s=20&t=a6Lw8FyouM0LYbJEFSiSuA Don't know who that is
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:18 |
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CommieGIR posted:Big problem is armor might actually be more of a curse than a blessing: Need to fuel it, maintain it, be trained on it. Its probably better to either leave it to the Ukrainian military or destroy it. A tank can be very good for blocking roads and other tasks. Like an immobile turret, a bomb shelter, taking the ammo and making ieds, hell you could throw a Russian speaker in it and use it to ambush foolish Russian conscripts in street to street fighting
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:19 |
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WAR CRIME GIGOLO posted:A tank can be very good for blocking roads and other tasks. Like an immobile turret, a bomb shelter, taking the ammo and making ieds, hell you could throw a Russian speaker in it and use it to ambush foolish Russian conscripts in street to street fighting Oh for sure
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:20 |
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Mr. Fall Down Terror posted:they have to say things like this, its not like they can say "we are aware NATO is giving our enemy shitloads of rockets and honestly, we're cool with it. fair's fair. we'd do the same thing" Yeah I guess I was just saying Russia was at least blustering about it, not that they necessarily can or will do something about it
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:20 |
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Charlotte Hornets posted:How "easy" is it to break the wire pair doing too jerky corrections? I've seen some successful hits from Syrian TOW ATGM videos and there seemed to be lots of let's say sharp X or Y adjustments on the flight path. 3000-3700 meters at 300m/s doesn't leave a lot of time for corrections, that said they aren't cheap and I served during peace time so I only had a handful of live fires, obviously someone who's getting to fire a lot of them are going to have a better feel for the tolerance, experience being the best teacher. Also the last time I fired one was in 1994. I was dual MOS so half my enlistment I was security forces where I spent a lot more time training for CQB and small arms or bored staring at a treeline.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:20 |
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Gripweed posted:The idea behind the sanctions, in part at least, is that they will cause the Russian people to rise up against Putin. We've tried it before and it's never worked, but that's the theory. That becomes significantly harder to imagine working if other countries get involved on Ukraine's side. At that point this whole thing stops being Putin's adventurism, and starts to look more like a war Russia must win if they want to keep being a country. If NATO starts shooting at Russian soldiers, then it becomes very easy to present this as an existential threat to Russia. And people are way less likely to shoot their horse midstream in that situation. Well that and it paralyzes the economy, and grinds complex logistical networks in about every sector to a halt. Useful for long term being in being able to degrade a country’s ability to manufacture the weapons of war, or loving televisions. Which ever.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:26 |
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Any word of Kharkiv? The airborne drop is underway
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:30 |
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The idea for the sanctions is to moderate his behavior. Period. He backs down and they go away. Of course the reputational hit they've taken in the markets will gently caress them financially for a decade. But Europe, I'm convinced surprised themselves. Now that they've gotten over the shock of projecting power, they've realized this is an opportunity to reset Europe as a polity.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:31 |
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Gripweed posted:It is extremely not.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:33 |
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WAR CRIME GIGOLO posted:Any word of Kharkiv? The airborne drop is underway by way of the Kyiv independent, the Ukrainians are fighting off the attackers. No other news yet.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:34 |
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the popes toes posted:The idea for the sanctions is to moderate his behavior. Period. He backs down and they go away. Of course the reputational hit they've taken in the markets will gently caress them financially for a decade. Exactly. By degrading the economic ability of a country to make war, or build cars, televisions, consumer goods. Which ever. The pain of this is supposed to moderate behavior. quote:But Europe, I'm convinced surprised themselves. Now that they've gotten over the shock of projecting power, they've realized this is an opportunity to reset Europe as a polity. It is pretty awesome to watch, isn’t it?
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:34 |
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Mariupol appears to be through the worst of it at the moment - the reporting is that electricity is back on, the source is the city mayor https://twitter.com/The_IntelHub/status/1498860859166113797?t=q8hPlkelOeAreJ4UP4KGQQ&s=19 Nothing new on Kharkiv, the video floating around right now is from last night
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:35 |
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zone posted:by way of the Kyiv independent, the Ukrainians are fighting off the attackers. No other news yet. Good news possibly. If they soundly defeat the airborne at this juncture there will probably be no more airborne assaults.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:35 |
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ZombieLenin posted:Well that and it paralyzes the economy, and grinds complex logistical networks in about every sector to a halt. Does Russia even manufacture televisions? I think there is like four companies that can manufacture tv panels then every tv brand is butying those and gluing them in a frame
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:36 |
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ZombieLenin posted:It is pretty awesome to watch, isn’t it? No! This is very bad to watch!
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:36 |
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KitConstantine posted:Mariupol appears to be through the worst of it at the moment - the reporting is that electricity is back on, the source is the city mayor They're turning all the grain into bread as fast as possible to keep stomachs full in case of the encirclement by the Nazi menace.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:36 |
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Gripweed posted:The idea behind the sanctions, in part at least, is that they will cause the Russian people to rise up against Putin. We've tried it before and it's never worked, but that's the theory. That becomes significantly harder to imagine working if other countries get involved on Ukraine's side. At that point this whole thing stops being Putin's adventurism, and starts to look more like a war Russia must win if they want to keep being a country. If NATO starts shooting at Russian soldiers, then it becomes very easy to present this as an existential threat to Russia. And people are way less likely to shoot their horse midstream in that situation.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:37 |
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Update on possible losses. https://twitter.com/EnglishUkraine/status/1498865006267580418?s=20&t=ixWJudvomvyIP3W87Ik1aA That other guy/twitter account counting Russian losses gave up because it's too much.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:38 |
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# ? May 30, 2024 23:43 |
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ZombieLenin posted:Exactly. By degrading the economic ability of a country to make war, or build cars, televisions, consumer goods. Which ever. It should also be used as a carrot as well. I hope Europe and friends have made it clear through back channels which sanctions are on the table to be lifted if even a simple ceasefire can be arranged right now. The Ukrainians cannot possibly hope to win an indefinite war. The faster we both prod and bribe Putin to bargain meaningfully at the table, the sooner Ukrainians stop dying.
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# ? Mar 2, 2022 04:39 |