concordtom said:
This sucks.Russian Warship: "I suggest you lay down your arms and surrender, otherwise you'll be hit."
— Calvin (@calvinrobinson) February 25, 2022
Ukrainian Outpost: "Russian warship, go f#ck yourself."
All 13 servicemen on Snake Island were killed.
I pray for this level of courage. 🙏 pic.twitter.com/EwKsfJU7cf
BearForce2 said:concordtom said:
This sucks.Russian Warship: "I suggest you lay down your arms and surrender, otherwise you'll be hit."
— Calvin (@calvinrobinson) February 25, 2022
Ukrainian Outpost: "Russian warship, go f#ck yourself."
All 13 servicemen on Snake Island were killed.
I pray for this level of courage. 🙏 pic.twitter.com/EwKsfJU7cfThere are reports suggesting the incident which absolutely lit up social media -- Ukrainian soldiers telling a Russian warship to "Fuck off" and then being killed -- were false, and the soldiers surrendered. Should be obvious that omni-directional propaganda right now is extreme
— Michael Tracey (@mtracey) February 26, 2022
Ukrainian government officials are STILL disputing US claims about the purportedly "imminent" invasion. The same "invasion" we've been told has already been launched? Or maybe it hasn't? Quite the paradox pic.twitter.com/J7u7aq5FuN
— Michael Tracey (@mtracey) February 23, 2022
Sebastabear said:
As we watch this unfold I think it's now pretty obvious Putin expected Ukraine to go down almost immediately and is shocked by the fact that he's got the entire citizenry mixing up Molotov cocktails in their bathtubs to toss at his soldiers. He must have legitimately believed the nonsense he's been spewing about Zelensky and his government being a bunch of Neo-Nazi drug addicts and that the average Ukrainian would be delighted to be liberated from them. By the way, how out of it do you have to be to think the neo-Nazi's have a Jewish leader? He seems to be a fan of history (or at least a distorted version of it). He may want a refresher on how the Nazis felt about the children of Abraham.
But it does once again illustrate the problem with autocrats. At some point they insulate themselves to such an extent that they start to believe their own musings are fact. If you kill or drive off everyone who ever tells you "no" then whatever you want to be "yes" becomes the truth in your own mind. Stalin absolutely couldn't imagine a world where everyone didn't love him and so he'd shoot whoever sat down first in the Politburo after his standing ovations, because the only explanation was that they were a traitor. Saddam Hussein absolutely believed his troops would engage America in the mother of all battles and I'm sure was amazed to see them trying to surrender to CNN cameras. And I'm sure Putin's mind is blown by grandmothers grabbing kalashnikovs to fight him rather than throwing flowers at the feet of their "liberators."
Why the ancient Romans had the right idea. During the Republic when the general returned from a campaign and was given a triumphal parade he'd always be accompanied by a slave whose sole job was to repeatedly whisper to him "Memento mori" - or "Remember that you will die." He needed to be kept grounded and humbled even (or maybe especially) at the moment when all of Rome was telling him he was loved.
Which in conclusion I'll say is why Cal fans are the most grounded people in the world. Whenever there's a fleeting moment of good news half our fan base (at least) is always there to whisper "Memento mori . . ."
Switzerland, which is traditionally a neutral country, will "very likely" join other countries in sanctioning Russia, president says
— BNO News (@BNONews) February 27, 2022
+1000going4roses said:
Big C said:Sebastabear said:
As we watch this unfold I think it's now pretty obvious Putin expected Ukraine to go down almost immediately and is shocked by the fact that he's got the entire citizenry mixing up Molotov cocktails in their bathtubs to toss at his soldiers. He must have legitimately believed the nonsense he's been spewing about Zelensky and his government being a bunch of Neo-Nazi drug addicts and that the average Ukrainian would be delighted to be liberated from them. By the way, how out of it do you have to be to think the neo-Nazi's have a Jewish leader? He seems to be a fan of history (or at least a distorted version of it). He may want a refresher on how the Nazis felt about the children of Abraham.
But it does once again illustrate the problem with autocrats. At some point they insulate themselves to such an extent that they start to believe their own musings are fact. If you kill or drive off everyone who ever tells you "no" then whatever you want to be "yes" becomes the truth in your own mind. Stalin absolutely couldn't imagine a world where everyone didn't love him and so he'd shoot whoever sat down first in the Politburo after his standing ovations, because the only explanation was that they were a traitor. Saddam Hussein absolutely believed his troops would engage America in the mother of all battles and I'm sure was amazed to see them trying to surrender to CNN cameras. And I'm sure Putin's mind is blown by grandmothers grabbing kalashnikovs to fight him rather than throwing flowers at the feet of their "liberators."
Why the ancient Romans had the right idea. During the Republic when the general returned from a campaign and was given a triumphal parade he'd always be accompanied by a slave whose sole job was to repeatedly whisper to him "Memento mori" - or "Remember that you will die." He needed to be kept grounded and humbled even (or maybe especially) at the moment when all of Rome was telling him he was loved.
Which in conclusion I'll say is why Cal fans are the most grounded people in the world. Whenever there's a fleeting moment of good news half our fan base (at least) is always there to whisper "Memento mori . . ."
It is interesting to try and imagine what must've been going on in Putin's mind the last month or so, because to almost all observers, attacking Ukraine didn't seem like it could end well at all for Russia, in any respect. In fact, it's a lose-lose for everybody concerned, so what's the point? Was it hubris? Some sort of insanity?
And then, of course, there's whatever is going on in his mind now and into the immediate future. This is where it gets scary.
I can't believe in the year 2022 I am watching a PSA on what to do in the event of a nearby nuclear strike. Shocking. More shocking of course is that it actually seemed like it had some valuable information. Wouldn't have guessed the thing about hair conditioner for example. I think we really have to revisit this military structure where a madman can wake up one day and decide to wipe out the human race . . . and actually do it.going4roses said:
..this essay was apparently written for a scenario where Russian armed forces had taken over Kyiv and subjugated the country...Which didn't actually happen. So, what did state news agency do? They deleted the article, as if the plan had never been published in the first place.
— Christo Grozev (@christogrozev) February 27, 2022
Ok, one can assume this was just an editorial mistake that was caught early, and the essay did not reflect the State view..EXCEPT.. this same essay was carried on other state-run channels too, like @SputnikInt : https://t.co/ZSGKumbl46
— Christo Grozev (@christogrozev) February 27, 2022
Maybe they were auditioning for Russian state TV all along… pic.twitter.com/IA7mMRR1LP
— The Recount (@therecount) February 27, 2022
Technical skill points: O
— Beau of The Fifth Column (@BeauTFC) February 28, 2022
Style points: all of them. https://t.co/xmLhUnsvoJ
Putin has sent 400 mercenaries with the ‘Wagner Group’ - a Russian private paramilitary company - into Ukraine to track down and assassinate Zelensky. https://t.co/U88aXO07sI
— Ron Filipkowski (@RonFilipkowski) February 28, 2022
Unit2Sucks said:
Starting to look like Putin played himself. Couldn't happen to a nicer guy. Sends a good message to Xi as well.
Please re-watch some old nuclear holocaust films.dimitrig said:dimitrig said:
This is rapidly devolving into a proxy war between Russia and the West. That is something Russia can't win given the relative sizes of the economies and the lack of appetite for war among the Russian populace.
It is interesting how Russia has approached this invasion completely differently from how the US has done this. The US would typically have days of cruise missile strikes and air raids in order to establish air superiority before sending a single soldier in.
Russia has either chosen not to do that or simply can't.
I do think Russia is trying to hold back some of their military strength in order to avoid civilian casualties which will harm their argument but so far nothing Russia has done should cause NATO any worry about all - at least militarily.
Russia will probably take the kid gloves off soon but then they will be sunk politically and economically. NATO is already openly admitted to sending weapons into Ukraine. They aren't even being coy about it.
It is ironic that is an attempt to prevent Ukraine from joining NATO Putin will end up fighting NATO.
I do understand his position which is that it is better to fight now than later after the ink is dry. It makes a lot of strategic sense. However, I think he really miscalculated how much tolerance the West has for his bull*****
China is right is that he was backed into a corner but he really made a mistake here under pressure.
If he wants to use his nuclear arsenal he will be making an even bigger mistake and that is something I wish Biden would push more on publicly.
Putin wants to threaten nuclear war?
US response should be "Don't even think about it, ****head."
I realize that we have a lot more to lose in that exchange but at some point we need to point out that every loser with a nuke can't be dictating terms to us.