Previous to this, clearly desperate Ukraine was asking the USA for cluster bombs.
I would think Ukraine, the USA and NATO would lose more international support if they stoop to these desperate measures.
Bill Gates: โUkrainian government is one of the worst in the world. Corrupt and controlled by a few rich people.โ
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) January 26, 2023
He also likes Ukrainian farmland โฆ ๐ pic.twitter.com/jXTnA5BXEY
Look at Lavrov and Medvedev in the back. ๐ pic.twitter.com/897t5Torjl
— Trollstoy (@Trollstoy88) March 21, 2023
Russiaโs Investigative Committee said on Monday that "it has opened a criminal case against the prosecutor and judges of the International Criminal Court (ICC) who issued a warrant for the arrest of Russian President Vladimir Putin".
— Trollstoy (@Trollstoy88) March 20, 2023
Medvedev threatened the court in The Hague with a Russian hypersonic missile.
— Trollstoy (@Trollstoy88) March 20, 2023
"Alas, gentlemen, everyone walks under God and missiles. It is quite possible to imagine the targeted use of the hypersonic Onyx from the North Sea from a Russian ship against the Hague courthouse. pic.twitter.com/DyTZ1szx0y
๐บ๐ธ๐บ๐ฆ๐ท๐บThe US decided to transfer an older version of Abrams tanks to Ukraine to speed up their deliveries - Pentagon
— AZ ๐ฐ๐๐๐ (@AZgeopolitics) March 21, 2023
Unit2Sucks said:
LOL at Russia pretending it's a tough guy. We're 13 months into their 3 day war with neighboring Ukraine and they still think they're capable of intimidating anyone?
At this point ML is competing with Putin88 for spreading the Kremlin gospel firehose of falsehoods and it would be impossible for anyone to keep up or attempt to respond with facts. And it appears that I'm one of a very small number of people who bothers to check this thread since it's primarily straight Kremlin BS.
I think it's really funny how ML's consumption of propaganda has changed as he has become more radicalized. It started last year with fox news guests like McGregor, Ritter, etc. who have "reasons" to claim they are independent observers, even though it has become clear that these Putin defenders have some questionable allegiances.
It's morphed into direct consumption and amplification of Russian propaganda in the form of obvious Kremlin-linked accounts like that bebo one and trollstoy. Next it will be TotallyNotPaidByKremlin. The fact that Elno is selling blue checks to anyone probably helps useful idiots think they are following someone other than a government sponsored account but it's pretty obvious what's going on.
I'm still going to come in and post stuff once in a while for any normal person who is still interested but there is no point to fact-checking or responding to Kremlin propaganda - particularly when it comes in by the dozen. Just as I've put Putin88 on ignore, it's clear that I need to do the same for ML in this thread. He's incapable of responding to anything substantive (see Minsk as an example) and is no longer even entertaining.
Unit2Sucks said:
LOL at Russia pretending it's a tough guy. We're 13 months into their 3 day war with neighboring Ukraine and they still think they're capable of intimidating anyone?
At this point ML is competing with Putin88 for spreading the Kremlin gospel firehose of falsehoods and it would be impossible for anyone to keep up or attempt to respond with facts. And it appears that I'm one of a very small number of people who bothers to check this thread since it's primarily straight Kremlin BS.
Unit2Sucks said:
LOL at Russia pretending it's a tough guy. We're 13 months into their 3 day war with neighboring Ukraine and they still think they're capable of intimidating anyone?
movielover said:
Logical. He seems sincere in wanting to stop the bloodshed.
On yesterday's podcast he explained how certain items are handled by different individuals. Did Jake Sullivan reject a cease fire / peace talks? I know very little about the Bay of Pigs, interesting to note President Kennedy wasn't given all the risks and weaknesses of the plan. And he notes how the military command, including Pompeo, wanted a 'strike package' for Iran which President Trump said "No!" after a series of simple, common sense questions. (President Trump was focused on economic growth, not military conflicts.)
Ukrainian channels are complaining that the head of the Ukrainian national bank bought himself a new rolls Royce.
— Levi (@Levi_godman) March 21, 2023
Sponsored by your tax money ๐ฝ pic.twitter.com/5RPhffgZLr
blungld said:
Two keyboards beat as one...
does the US have equivalently colonial oversight over government operations in any other nation in the world beside Ukraine? Serious question. Most countries would bristle. Is this because of Ukraine's ongoing insolvency long and addiction to US funding before this war? https://t.co/iB96nRgQUk
— Stephen McIntyre (@ClimateAudit) March 22, 2023
A little bit. The US is so far behind on domestic manufacturing of semiconductors that a quick Chinese invasion of Taiwan would be a pretty big blow.Big C said:
Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
sycasey said:A little bit. The US is so far behind on domestic manufacturing of semiconductors that a quick Chinese invasion of Taiwan would be a pretty big blow.Big C said:
Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
Cal88 said:
What is your opinion on the use of depleted uranium shells in Ukraine?
Big C said:
I am in favor of the US having a strong, but reasonable defense. Sure, let's help Ukraine and Taiwan, but they are not part of our sphere of vital interests. Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
movielover said:Big C said:
I am in favor of the US having a strong, but reasonable defense. Sure, let's help Ukraine and Taiwan, but they are not part of our sphere of vital interests. Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
At the end of President Trumps term, TSMC announced a new massive chip plant in Arizona. It was quickly expanded possibly before they even broke ground,
over $40 Billion into two plants.
This development is key, and has therefore brought in some major subcontractors / suppliers, which will be needed for these facilities. Last I read the facilities will generate over 80,000 jobs.
I'm not up on all the details, but I believe Congress and Biden have continued the focus. These plants may be producing low to midrange chips.
The next step - can we produce the higher end
chips?
We used to have cheap and plentiful energy, but we're shooting ourselves in the foot there. Maybe Mexico will make a move, who knows.
BTW, I've read articles that say there will never be a war over Taiwan. If there was, we could immediately starve China of raw materials, and the massive reduction in trade would cripple them. Limited energy, raw materials, food... it wouldn't be pretty. Maybe in a few decades when they create routes through Russia, but not now.
I worked for intel back in the early 00s, they had wafer plants here (San Jose). A few years after I left, I saw they moved their wafer production to I think Israel. In 90s we made 38% of all chips here in the US. In 2021 I think we make 12%. Looks like Intel is retooling chip manufacturing in Arizona soon.Big C said:
It bothered me to see Putin and Xi Jinping practically making out the other day on TV. Looks like we're going back to Cold War days, but with a slightly different alignment (pretty close though, actually).
Saw 60 Minutes last Sunday (I'm not quite that old, but I always used to watch it with my dad, so it's sort of a tradition): Segment on how we absolutely need to really, really build up our naval forces because China/Taiwan. Total propaganda for, what, the defense industry and neo-cons? This stuff is crazy. Leadership is absolutely crazy. The vast, vast majority of people in any of these countries don't want these nutty wars and don't care who Ukraine and Taiwan "belong to".
I am in favor of the US having a strong, but reasonable defense. Sure, let's help Ukraine and Taiwan, but they are not part of our sphere of vital interests. Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
MinotStateBeav said:I worked for intel back in the early 00s, they had wafer plants here (San Jose). A few years after I left, I saw they moved their wafer production to I think Israel. In 90s we made 38% of all chips here in the US. In 2021 I think we make 12%. Looks like Intel is retooling chip manufacturing in Arizona soon.Big C said:
It bothered me to see Putin and Xi Jinping practically making out the other day on TV. Looks like we're going back to Cold War days, but with a slightly different alignment (pretty close though, actually).
Saw 60 Minutes last Sunday (I'm not quite that old, but I always used to watch it with my dad, so it's sort of a tradition): Segment on how we absolutely need to really, really build up our naval forces because China/Taiwan. Total propaganda for, what, the defense industry and neo-cons? This stuff is crazy. Leadership is absolutely crazy. The vast, vast majority of people in any of these countries don't want these nutty wars and don't care who Ukraine and Taiwan "belong to".
I am in favor of the US having a strong, but reasonable defense. Sure, let's help Ukraine and Taiwan, but they are not part of our sphere of vital interests. Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/new-us-fabs-everything-we-know
I don't know, but it is a national security issue. I know a few years ago, the panic about it was hitting the media pretty hard, so the government was aware.Big C said:MinotStateBeav said:I worked for intel back in the early 00s, they had wafer plants here (San Jose). A few years after I left, I saw they moved their wafer production to I think Israel. In 90s we made 38% of all chips here in the US. In 2021 I think we make 12%. Looks like Intel is retooling chip manufacturing in Arizona soon.Big C said:
It bothered me to see Putin and Xi Jinping practically making out the other day on TV. Looks like we're going back to Cold War days, but with a slightly different alignment (pretty close though, actually).
Saw 60 Minutes last Sunday (I'm not quite that old, but I always used to watch it with my dad, so it's sort of a tradition): Segment on how we absolutely need to really, really build up our naval forces because China/Taiwan. Total propaganda for, what, the defense industry and neo-cons? This stuff is crazy. Leadership is absolutely crazy. The vast, vast majority of people in any of these countries don't want these nutty wars and don't care who Ukraine and Taiwan "belong to".
I am in favor of the US having a strong, but reasonable defense. Sure, let's help Ukraine and Taiwan, but they are not part of our sphere of vital interests. Microchips? I'm pretty sure we can make our own. Am I being naive today?
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/new-us-fabs-everything-we-know
I believe the government is encouraging / partnering with Intel on that, correct? We should: It's a national security issue. We need to identify areas of manufacturing, mining, etc. in which we can't just cede everything to foreign countries, even if it costs us extra.
sycasey said:
IMO the problem with this thread right now is that not very much has changed in the Ukraine War all winter, as many of us could have predicted would be the case in the cold season. That leaves the floor open for a lot of supposition and guesswork, which the likes of 88 and ML are more than happy to provide.
My attitude is to wait and see what happens in the spring. Maybe we'll have a situation where it's better to cut a deal and let Putin keep the Donbas (however distasteful that may be). Or maybe we won't. None of us really know.
And yes, it's pretty clear that Russia is getting a lot less than what they wanted here. The remaining question is how much less.
dajo9 said:
In 2022, the Democratic Congress passed and Biden signed the CHIPS Act which will boost semiconductor capacity in the U.S. The majority of Republicans voted against it in both chambers of Congress.
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/public-and-social-sector/our-insights/the-chips-and-science-act-heres-whats-in-it
oski003 said:sycasey said:
IMO the problem with this thread right now is that not very much has changed in the Ukraine War all winter, as many of us could have predicted would be the case in the cold season. That leaves the floor open for a lot of supposition and guesswork, which the likes of 88 and ML are more than happy to provide.
My attitude is to wait and see what happens in the spring. Maybe we'll have a situation where it's better to cut a deal and let Putin keep the Donbas (however distasteful that may be). Or maybe we won't. None of us really know.
And yes, it's pretty clear that Russia is getting a lot less than what they wanted here. The remaining question is how much less.
ML and Cal88 advocated for the US allowing Ukraine to accept ceding the Donbass to Russia to avoid bloodshed months ago.