31 missiles launched into Kyiv today.
Maternity ward hit in Vilniansk.
Russia launches more strikes at Ukrainian civilians and energy grid (yahoo.com)
Nikol Pashinyan refused to sign a declaration following the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) summit.
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) November 24, 2022
In fact, it means that the CSTO has collapsed completely.
Putin dropped his pen, Lukashenko is shocked. pic.twitter.com/lqPwusW4Gi
🇷🇺 - Sanctions against Russia are very much working [updated with latest data]
— Agathe Demarais (@AgatheDemarais) November 24, 2022
• Real GDP, retail trade and vehicle manufacturing are all dropping off a cliff
• Russia is heading towards ~4% recession in 2022 and in 2023, complicating financing of war in Ukraine pic.twitter.com/Tdm3bMkU4z
Unit2Sucks said:
Russia is in free fall. Has no friends and economy is rapidly approaching the cliff. Even state propaganda has lost faith, but some Putin apologists are holding to their ridiculous positions.Nikol Pashinyan refused to sign a declaration following the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) summit.
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) November 24, 2022
In fact, it means that the CSTO has collapsed completely.
Putin dropped his pen, Lukashenko is shocked. pic.twitter.com/lqPwusW4Gi🇷🇺 - Sanctions against Russia are very much working [updated with latest data]
— Agathe Demarais (@AgatheDemarais) November 24, 2022
• Real GDP, retail trade and vehicle manufacturing are all dropping off a cliff
• Russia is heading towards ~4% recession in 2022 and in 2023, complicating financing of war in Ukraine pic.twitter.com/Tdm3bMkU4z
golden sloth said:Unit2Sucks said:
Russia is in free fall. Has no friends and economy is rapidly approaching the cliff. Even state propaganda has lost faith, but some Putin apologists are holding to their ridiculous positions.Nikol Pashinyan refused to sign a declaration following the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) summit.
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) November 24, 2022
In fact, it means that the CSTO has collapsed completely.
Putin dropped his pen, Lukashenko is shocked. pic.twitter.com/lqPwusW4Gi🇷🇺 - Sanctions against Russia are very much working [updated with latest data]
— Agathe Demarais (@AgatheDemarais) November 24, 2022
• Real GDP, retail trade and vehicle manufacturing are all dropping off a cliff
• Russia is heading towards ~4% recession in 2022 and in 2023, complicating financing of war in Ukraine pic.twitter.com/Tdm3bMkU4z
Regardless of what happens in Ukraine with the additional deployment of russian troops, Russia has already lost the war.
Their international position has been weakened as evidenced by Armenia no longer trusting Russia to be their security guarantor per the CSTA. No one believes Russia can project power anymore as all their military force is being directed to Ukraine or has been spent.
On the economic front, its does not matter how much money Russia has if they cant use that money to acquire or produce the weapons and materials they need to wage war. Russia's economy has proven it is unable to produce the necessary defense materials.
Further Russia's perceived adversaries have gotten stronger as sweden and Finland joined NATO, and america reconfirmed their commitment to the alliance. Russia has become China's puppet on the international stage, reiterating Chinese positions as they are dependent upon their income and markets for any sense of normalcy.
Point being Russia's position before the war will be stronger than their position after, regardless of what happens in Ukraine. Therefore, they have already lost.
In Russia, government say "Don't do the crime if you can't face the front line."tequila4kapp said:
Non-US, non-traditional news sources tell the story of some pretty intense fighting in eastern Ukraine with hot fronts in the north, south and middle. Some reports indicate some fairly terrible practices by Russia, such as having prisoners on the front lines, established military further back with orders to shoot deserters. Further reports indicate Russia is sending those troops into full frontal assaults of established / entrenched Ukrainian positions and suffering massive losses.
tequila4kapp said:
Non-US, non-traditional news sources tell the story of some pretty intense fighting in eastern Ukraine with hot fronts in the north, south and middle. Some reports indicate some fairly terrible practices by Russia, such as having prisoners on the front lines, established military further back with orders to shoot deserters. Further reports indicate Russia is sending those troops into full frontal assaults of established / entrenched Ukrainian positions and suffering massive losses.
Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
Cal88 said:tequila4kapp said:
Non-US, non-traditional news sources tell the story of some pretty intense fighting in eastern Ukraine with hot fronts in the north, south and middle. Some reports indicate some fairly terrible practices by Russia, such as having prisoners on the front lines, established military further back with orders to shoot deserters. Further reports indicate Russia is sending those troops into full frontal assaults of established / entrenched Ukrainian positions and suffering massive losses.
It`s exactly what Ukraine has been doing, that`s how they managed to push back Russians from the right bank in Kherson. In every battle Russia was facing the prospect of being outnumbered and taking large losses, they have retreated in order to limit their casualties. That`s how Ukraine managed to take large chunks of land in short periods, they were the party that was throwing the kitchen sink into the fray.
Ukrainian KIAs are much higher than Russia`s. Notice that official Ukrainian figures for those aren`t being widely published. The only recent somewhat reliable data point we have was from a recent declaration by Milley, who said that the Russians and Ukrainians both lost around 100,000 men. This should be interpreted as a wartime statement, an absolute floor for Ukrainian KIAs, and a ceiling for Russians KIA. I think the actual figures are around 50k-60k for Russia and 125k for Ukraine. As well for the Russians, the Donbass armies have borne a disproportionate percentage of their losses.
The Russian philosophy for waging mobile war is to trade land for troops, conceding territory in order to limit losses whenever they are outnumbered or outgunned. It`s a strategy that`s straight out of Mongol military doctrine, based on the steppe landscape and sheer massive size of their land. They`ve used this tactic successfully in order to defeat the largest and most powerful armies from the 19th and 20th century, Napoleon`s and Hitler`s.
Ukraine also has a very large number of MIAs, in good part because their state doesn`t have to compensate MIA widows and families at the same level as those officially widowed, and some of the that money can be siphoned off by corrupt high-level military administrators, the same circuits that resell western weaponry on the black market. A CBS documentary, which was yanked off, estimated that up to 70% of weapons shipped to Ukraine don`t make it to the front, finding their way to places like Azerbaijan, Libya or Syria.
Indications are that Russia has around 550,000 troops that are going to be split on the 3 main fronts (N, E and S) to launch a major big arrow offensive campaign mid-winter after the ground is frozen, and after a bombing campaign focused on destroying Ukrainian infrastructure and massed troops. The threat here is for Russia to cut off the Ukrainian army on the left bank of the Dniepr by bombing all bridges, they would outnumber Ukrainian troops, which would be left without reinforcements.
This is a good rundown of the ongoing campaign of attrition:
Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
oski003 said:dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
It is a known fact that western sources are pro Nato propaganda and many non-Western sources are pro Russia propaganda. Is this news to you?
dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
Cal88 said:dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
My bias is driven by reality, yours, by a kind of misguided form of nationalism that is promoted in wartime. Perhaps a few years from now this will be seen as the useless war that it is, a proxy war against Russia using Ukrainians as fodder, the same way most people have changed their views on the Iraq war today.
Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
sycasey said:Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
The Donbas war started when Russia funded a bunch of separatist groups to cause trouble because they didn't like that their guy got thrown out of office.
This is how I explain the 8 year war in Donbass to my British friends. I find it a pretty good analogy. Imagine if an English nationalist gov took power in London. And announced the suppression of Scottish culture…. Like ukr did to its Russian pop in 2014. What would happen?
— Johnny miller (@johnnyjmils) November 22, 2022
Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
The Donbas war started when Russia funded a bunch of separatist groups to cause trouble because they didn't like that their guy got thrown out of office.
Somehow these groups held out against the 2nd largest standing army in Europe for 8 years?!?
The only reason the Donbass rebels were able to hold out is that they represented local aspirations, and because their rebellion was very harshly repressed by the central government, causing the great majority of local conscripts to defect. That`s why since then the great majority of troops stationed in russophone cities like Mariupol or Odessa are made up of conscripts and militias from central and western Ukraine.
This is how it all started, and why it went on, described by an independent British journalist. His take is the same as that of other European independent journalists who were present in Ukraine earlier last decade:This is how I explain the 8 year war in Donbass to my British friends. I find it a pretty good analogy. Imagine if an English nationalist gov took power in London. And announced the suppression of Scottish culture…. Like ukr did to its Russian pop in 2014. What would happen?
— Johnny miller (@johnnyjmils) November 22, 2022
thread:
"The Scots would take to the streets in protest. And then what if the English Defence League started pulling down Scottish statues with the acquiescence of the government? That's what happened in Ukraine.
And then if English nationalists killed dozens of Scottish protestors with no recriminations from the authorities, like what happened in Odessa. Scottish people/authorities would get scared/angry and rise up.
And then if the British army went north to quell the uprising, met resistance and started bombing Edinburgh and Glasgow, like what Ukraine did to Donestk and Luhansk….
Find this analogy unbelievable? That's how Donbass people felt when Ukraine started bombing them in 2014. I was here. They couldn't believe it! "Why is our own government bombing us!" It's the same disbelief Scots would feel!
After this bombing even most pro-unionists would turn against the union, Scots in the army would defect and you would have civil war. That's what happened in Donbass.
An interesting side note. Glasgow is like Donetsk. If you think that even a modern English army would easily conquer Scotland, then you haven't been to Glasgow. Fierce people!
Scots would be motivated to fight and defend their land. English wouldn't. Most English people, particularly in the north wouldn't want to go and fight their brotherly Scottish people. That's a major reason why Donbass was able to hold out for eight years.
The propagandists scream Russia, but it was extremism and ultra-nationalism, fuelled by outside forces that was the embryo of this war. "
Cal88 said:dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
My bias is driven by reality, yours, by a kind of misguided form of nationalism that is promoted in wartime. Perhaps a few years from now this will be seen as the useless war that it is, a proxy war against Russia using Ukrainians as fodder, the same way most people have changed their views on the Iraq war today.
My brother was in Ukraine last week, helped part of his extended family, including his wife`s 90yo aunt from Dnipropetrosk get out of the country. They are bracing for a very difficult winter.
dajo9 said:Cal88 said:dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
My bias is driven by reality, yours, by a kind of misguided form of nationalism that is promoted in wartime. Perhaps a few years from now this will be seen as the useless war that it is, a proxy war against Russia using Ukrainians as fodder, the same way most people have changed their views on the Iraq war today.
My brother was in Ukraine last week, helped part of his extended family, including his wife`s 90yo aunt from Dnipropetrosk get out of the country. They are bracing for a very difficult winter.
You just said a more accurate view than yours would be a shift towards mainstream media. That doesn't sound like reality to me.
My views about the Iraq War have never changed.
sycasey said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
The Donbas war started when Russia funded a bunch of separatist groups to cause trouble because they didn't like that their guy got thrown out of office.
Somehow these groups held out against the 2nd largest standing army in Europe for 8 years?!?
The only reason the Donbass rebels were able to hold out is that they represented local aspirations, and because their rebellion was very harshly repressed by the central government, causing the great majority of local conscripts to defect. That`s why since then the great majority of troops stationed in russophone cities like Mariupol or Odessa are made up of conscripts and militias from central and western Ukraine.
This is how it all started, and why it went on, described by an independent British journalist. His take is the same as that of other European independent journalists who were present in Ukraine earlier last decade:This is how I explain the 8 year war in Donbass to my British friends. I find it a pretty good analogy. Imagine if an English nationalist gov took power in London. And announced the suppression of Scottish culture…. Like ukr did to its Russian pop in 2014. What would happen?
— Johnny miller (@johnnyjmils) November 22, 2022
thread:
"The Scots would take to the streets in protest. And then what if the English Defence League started pulling down Scottish statues with the acquiescence of the government? That's what happened in Ukraine.
And then if English nationalists killed dozens of Scottish protestors with no recriminations from the authorities, like what happened in Odessa. Scottish people/authorities would get scared/angry and rise up.
And then if the British army went north to quell the uprising, met resistance and started bombing Edinburgh and Glasgow, like what Ukraine did to Donestk and Luhansk….
Find this analogy unbelievable? That's how Donbass people felt when Ukraine started bombing them in 2014. I was here. They couldn't believe it! "Why is our own government bombing us!" It's the same disbelief Scots would feel!
After this bombing even most pro-unionists would turn against the union, Scots in the army would defect and you would have civil war. That's what happened in Donbass.
An interesting side note. Glasgow is like Donetsk. If you think that even a modern English army would easily conquer Scotland, then you haven't been to Glasgow. Fierce people!
Scots would be motivated to fight and defend their land. English wouldn't. Most English people, particularly in the north wouldn't want to go and fight their brotherly Scottish people. That's a major reason why Donbass was able to hold out for eight years.
The propagandists scream Russia, but it was extremism and ultra-nationalism, fuelled by outside forces that was the embryo of this war. "
LOL. "Iran state-affiliated media." Great source!
They were able to hold out because the Russian government was propping them up. Pretty simple.
Cal88 said:dajo9 said:Cal88 said:dajo9 said:Cal88 said:Big C said:
Cal88, to get an accurate sense of Russia's general situation, I am going to take your assessment and that of the US mainstream media and draw a line right down the middle between the two. I bet that will not be far off.
That`s a fair assessment.
Cal88 admitting he has a pro Russia bias
My bias is driven by reality, yours, by a kind of misguided form of nationalism that is promoted in wartime. Perhaps a few years from now this will be seen as the useless war that it is, a proxy war against Russia using Ukrainians as fodder, the same way most people have changed their views on the Iraq war today.
My brother was in Ukraine last week, helped part of his extended family, including his wife`s 90yo aunt from Dnipropetrosk get out of the country. They are bracing for a very difficult winter.
You just said a more accurate view than yours would be a shift towards mainstream media. That doesn't sound like reality to me.
My views about the Iraq War have never changed.
You support the current US occupation of 1/3 of Syria, the war in Syria is pretty much the Iraq war repackaged. We have to go in because there is a bad guy gassing his people, so we go in, carpet-bomb cities like Raqqa in order to save them, and we take the oil, burn the crops. My Lai, agent orange, repackaged as a human rights mission.
Most people especially on the Dem side today (party which has recently taken the pro-war mantle from the Reps) have a hard time imagining that the MSM reporting on Ukraine could be completely biased to the point where it essentially boils down to wartime propaganda, that's the context of my post above.
These items posted above are false, in fact most of these apply to Ukrainian govt/army:
-Russia is specifically targeting civilians, bombing maternity wards etc
-Russia has Stalin-style enforcers shooting soldiers reluctant to fight in the back
-Russia is "throwing bodies" into the front
-Russia is running out of weapons
-Russia is isolated in the world community, and its economy is collapsing
-Russia is occupying the Donbass, Crimea against the will of the local population
Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
The Donbas war started when Russia funded a bunch of separatist groups to cause trouble because they didn't like that their guy got thrown out of office.
Somehow these groups held out against the 2nd largest standing army in Europe for 8 years?!?
The only reason the Donbass rebels were able to hold out is that they represented local aspirations, and because their rebellion was very harshly repressed by the central government, causing the great majority of local conscripts to defect. That`s why since then the great majority of troops stationed in russophone cities like Mariupol or Odessa are made up of conscripts and militias from central and western Ukraine.
This is how it all started, and why it went on, described by an independent British journalist. His take is the same as that of other European independent journalists who were present in Ukraine earlier last decade:This is how I explain the 8 year war in Donbass to my British friends. I find it a pretty good analogy. Imagine if an English nationalist gov took power in London. And announced the suppression of Scottish culture…. Like ukr did to its Russian pop in 2014. What would happen?
— Johnny miller (@johnnyjmils) November 22, 2022
thread:
"The Scots would take to the streets in protest. And then what if the English Defence League started pulling down Scottish statues with the acquiescence of the government? That's what happened in Ukraine.
And then if English nationalists killed dozens of Scottish protestors with no recriminations from the authorities, like what happened in Odessa. Scottish people/authorities would get scared/angry and rise up.
And then if the British army went north to quell the uprising, met resistance and started bombing Edinburgh and Glasgow, like what Ukraine did to Donestk and Luhansk….
Find this analogy unbelievable? That's how Donbass people felt when Ukraine started bombing them in 2014. I was here. They couldn't believe it! "Why is our own government bombing us!" It's the same disbelief Scots would feel!
After this bombing even most pro-unionists would turn against the union, Scots in the army would defect and you would have civil war. That's what happened in Donbass.
An interesting side note. Glasgow is like Donetsk. If you think that even a modern English army would easily conquer Scotland, then you haven't been to Glasgow. Fierce people!
Scots would be motivated to fight and defend their land. English wouldn't. Most English people, particularly in the north wouldn't want to go and fight their brotherly Scottish people. That's a major reason why Donbass was able to hold out for eight years.
The propagandists scream Russia, but it was extremism and ultra-nationalism, fuelled by outside forces that was the embryo of this war. "
LOL. "Iran state-affiliated media." Great source!
They were able to hold out because the Russian government was propping them up. Pretty simple.
You're not going to hold a job at CNN, Fox, BBC or Sky if you report on what is actually went on in the Donbass. I could provide other independent sources who aren't affiliated in any way to any state-funded news agencies.
sycasey said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
The Donbas war started when Russia funded a bunch of separatist groups to cause trouble because they didn't like that their guy got thrown out of office.
Somehow these groups held out against the 2nd largest standing army in Europe for 8 years?!?
The only reason the Donbass rebels were able to hold out is that they represented local aspirations, and because their rebellion was very harshly repressed by the central government, causing the great majority of local conscripts to defect. That`s why since then the great majority of troops stationed in russophone cities like Mariupol or Odessa are made up of conscripts and militias from central and western Ukraine.
This is how it all started, and why it went on, described by an independent British journalist. His take is the same as that of other European independent journalists who were present in Ukraine earlier last decade:This is how I explain the 8 year war in Donbass to my British friends. I find it a pretty good analogy. Imagine if an English nationalist gov took power in London. And announced the suppression of Scottish culture…. Like ukr did to its Russian pop in 2014. What would happen?
— Johnny miller (@johnnyjmils) November 22, 2022
thread:
"The Scots would take to the streets in protest. And then what if the English Defence League started pulling down Scottish statues with the acquiescence of the government? That's what happened in Ukraine.
And then if English nationalists killed dozens of Scottish protestors with no recriminations from the authorities, like what happened in Odessa. Scottish people/authorities would get scared/angry and rise up.
And then if the British army went north to quell the uprising, met resistance and started bombing Edinburgh and Glasgow, like what Ukraine did to Donestk and Luhansk….
Find this analogy unbelievable? That's how Donbass people felt when Ukraine started bombing them in 2014. I was here. They couldn't believe it! "Why is our own government bombing us!" It's the same disbelief Scots would feel!
After this bombing even most pro-unionists would turn against the union, Scots in the army would defect and you would have civil war. That's what happened in Donbass.
An interesting side note. Glasgow is like Donetsk. If you think that even a modern English army would easily conquer Scotland, then you haven't been to Glasgow. Fierce people!
Scots would be motivated to fight and defend their land. English wouldn't. Most English people, particularly in the north wouldn't want to go and fight their brotherly Scottish people. That's a major reason why Donbass was able to hold out for eight years.
The propagandists scream Russia, but it was extremism and ultra-nationalism, fuelled by outside forces that was the embryo of this war. "
LOL. "Iran state-affiliated media." Great source!
They were able to hold out because the Russian government was propping them up. Pretty simple.
You're not going to hold a job at CNN, Fox, BBC or Sky if you report on what is actually went on in the Donbass. I could provide other independent sources who aren't affiliated in any way to any state-funded news agencies.
Okay, good luck with that.
Look, I can readily admit that Western media may be biased. But the problem with you guys is that when you provide your "alternative" sources it's almost ALWAYS someone on the payroll of another authoritarian government: Russia, China, Iran, Syria, whatever. Those sources aren't any better, in fact they're worse.
Don't you ever get tired of the bootlicking?
Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Cal88 said:
The Donbass war started in 2014 with the Maidan coup. Before Vlad rolled into Ukraine in February, there were 14,000 deaths already.
This escalation was entirely preventable.
The Donbas war started when Russia funded a bunch of separatist groups to cause trouble because they didn't like that their guy got thrown out of office.
Somehow these groups held out against the 2nd largest standing army in Europe for 8 years?!?
The only reason the Donbass rebels were able to hold out is that they represented local aspirations, and because their rebellion was very harshly repressed by the central government, causing the great majority of local conscripts to defect. That`s why since then the great majority of troops stationed in russophone cities like Mariupol or Odessa are made up of conscripts and militias from central and western Ukraine.
This is how it all started, and why it went on, described by an independent British journalist. His take is the same as that of other European independent journalists who were present in Ukraine earlier last decade:This is how I explain the 8 year war in Donbass to my British friends. I find it a pretty good analogy. Imagine if an English nationalist gov took power in London. And announced the suppression of Scottish culture…. Like ukr did to its Russian pop in 2014. What would happen?
— Johnny miller (@johnnyjmils) November 22, 2022
thread:
"The Scots would take to the streets in protest. And then what if the English Defence League started pulling down Scottish statues with the acquiescence of the government? That's what happened in Ukraine.
And then if English nationalists killed dozens of Scottish protestors with no recriminations from the authorities, like what happened in Odessa. Scottish people/authorities would get scared/angry and rise up.
And then if the British army went north to quell the uprising, met resistance and started bombing Edinburgh and Glasgow, like what Ukraine did to Donestk and Luhansk….
Find this analogy unbelievable? That's how Donbass people felt when Ukraine started bombing them in 2014. I was here. They couldn't believe it! "Why is our own government bombing us!" It's the same disbelief Scots would feel!
After this bombing even most pro-unionists would turn against the union, Scots in the army would defect and you would have civil war. That's what happened in Donbass.
An interesting side note. Glasgow is like Donetsk. If you think that even a modern English army would easily conquer Scotland, then you haven't been to Glasgow. Fierce people!
Scots would be motivated to fight and defend their land. English wouldn't. Most English people, particularly in the north wouldn't want to go and fight their brotherly Scottish people. That's a major reason why Donbass was able to hold out for eight years.
The propagandists scream Russia, but it was extremism and ultra-nationalism, fuelled by outside forces that was the embryo of this war. "
LOL. "Iran state-affiliated media." Great source!
They were able to hold out because the Russian government was propping them up. Pretty simple.
You're not going to hold a job at CNN, Fox, BBC or Sky if you report on what is actually went on in the Donbass. I could provide other independent sources who aren't affiliated in any way to any state-funded news agencies.
Okay, good luck with that.
Look, I can readily admit that Western media may be biased. But the problem with you guys is that when you provide your "alternative" sources it's almost ALWAYS someone on the payroll of another authoritarian government: Russia, China, Iran, Syria, whatever. Those sources aren't any better, in fact they're worse.
Don't you ever get tired of the bootlicking?
There are independent journalists like Anne-Laure Bonnel from France or Alina Lipp from Germany who not only are not on a government payroll, but also have borne a very heavy personal cost for their reporting. Lipp's parents in Germany had their bank account frozen, and were harassed by the current German equivalent of STASI. They detained Lipp and threatened her with 3 years in jail for her reporting on the Donbass showing daily bombing of civilians by the Ukrainian army.
https://thegrayzone.com/2022/07/13/video-germany-criminalizes-journalist-for-exposing-ukrainian-war-crimes/
Bonnel was fired from her job at the University of Paris she had for 15 years for her reporting of Ukrainian war crimes, was fired via email telling her that "she no longer conforms to the values of the university":.
Anne-Laure Bonnel's documentary on the Donbass from 2015 (french with english subtitles)
Quote:
But then something happened. We don't know exactly what it was. All we know for certain is that in December 2015, Blumenthal traveled to Moscow all expenses paid by the Kremlin to attend a gala dinner, hosted by Vladimir Putin himself, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of RT, the international TV network owned by the Russian government. When he returned to the U.S., his position on Bashar al-Assad and on U.S. intervention in Syria had turned around completely.
Only a month after the RT bash, Blumenthal founded something called "The Grayzone Project," which describes itself as "a news and politics website dedicated to original investigative journalism and analysis on war and empire." Basically, however, Grayzone is a one-stop propaganda shop, devoted largely to pushing a pro-Assad line on Syria, a pro-regime line on Venezuela, a pro-Putin line on Russia, and a pro-Hamas line on Israel.
sycasey said:
Max Blumenthal and Grayzone are almost certainly taking money from those authoritarian regimes too.
https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2019/08/max-blumenthals-progression-from-israel-hater-to-putin-shill/Quote:
But then something happened. We don't know exactly what it was. All we know for certain is that in December 2015, Blumenthal traveled to Moscow all expenses paid by the Kremlin to attend a gala dinner, hosted by Vladimir Putin himself, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of RT, the international TV network owned by the Russian government. When he returned to the U.S., his position on Bashar al-Assad and on U.S. intervention in Syria had turned around completely.
Only a month after the RT bash, Blumenthal founded something called "The Grayzone Project," which describes itself as "a news and politics website dedicated to original investigative journalism and analysis on war and empire." Basically, however, Grayzone is a one-stop propaganda shop, devoted largely to pushing a pro-Assad line on Syria, a pro-regime line on Venezuela, a pro-Putin line on Russia, and a pro-Hamas line on Israel.
These are not reliable sources either, as I expected.
Here's a further account of Blumenthal being directly paid by RT:Cal88 said:sycasey said:
Max Blumenthal and Grayzone are almost certainly taking money from those authoritarian regimes too.
https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2019/08/max-blumenthals-progression-from-israel-hater-to-putin-shill/Quote:
But then something happened. We don't know exactly what it was. All we know for certain is that in December 2015, Blumenthal traveled to Moscow all expenses paid by the Kremlin to attend a gala dinner, hosted by Vladimir Putin himself, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of RT, the international TV network owned by the Russian government. When he returned to the U.S., his position on Bashar al-Assad and on U.S. intervention in Syria had turned around completely.
Only a month after the RT bash, Blumenthal founded something called "The Grayzone Project," which describes itself as "a news and politics website dedicated to original investigative journalism and analysis on war and empire." Basically, however, Grayzone is a one-stop propaganda shop, devoted largely to pushing a pro-Assad line on Syria, a pro-regime line on Venezuela, a pro-Putin line on Russia, and a pro-Hamas line on Israel.
These are not reliable sources either, as I expected.
Of course Mosaic Magazine, the kind of zionist outlet for whom anybody who is slightly to the left of Nethanyahu is a rabid genocidal antisemite. You`re using the same smear tactics on Max Blumenthal that they are, there is no proof that he is funded by Russia or any other foreign government, as if this could happen without the knowledge of US intelligence agencies..
By all means, continue dying on this hill.Quote:
In December 2015, I was invited by a man named David McCormack, whose title was "Account Director, Ogilvy Media Influence for Ogilvy Public Relations," to go to Moscow in order to attend a conference celebrating RT's tenth anniversary. This was the occasion at which RT famously paid Michael Flynn $45,000 to speak. I had never paid attention to RT before, and while I knew that Flynn had occupied important roles in the U.S. national-security bureaucracy, I was not yet up to speed on his role with Trump, whom I still had trouble taking seriously. I do, however, recall being shocked at how crazy Flynn sounded, especially on the topic of Hillary Clinton. Frequent RT guest and Flynn's fellow conspiracy theorist Max Blumenthal was also a paid speaker, as was the British cheerleader for Hamas and Saddam Hussein George Galloway. Julian Assange appeared by video. Green Party presidential candidate and 2016 election spoiler Jill Stein, who appears in the famous photo at dinner with Flynn and Putin, spoke as well. The word "****show" repeatedly came to mind.
sycasey said:Here's a further account of Blumenthal being directly paid by RT:Cal88 said:sycasey said:
Max Blumenthal and Grayzone are almost certainly taking money from those authoritarian regimes too.
https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2019/08/max-blumenthals-progression-from-israel-hater-to-putin-shill/Quote:
But then something happened. We don't know exactly what it was. All we know for certain is that in December 2015, Blumenthal traveled to Moscow all expenses paid by the Kremlin to attend a gala dinner, hosted by Vladimir Putin himself, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of RT, the international TV network owned by the Russian government. When he returned to the U.S., his position on Bashar al-Assad and on U.S. intervention in Syria had turned around completely.
Only a month after the RT bash, Blumenthal founded something called "The Grayzone Project," which describes itself as "a news and politics website dedicated to original investigative journalism and analysis on war and empire." Basically, however, Grayzone is a one-stop propaganda shop, devoted largely to pushing a pro-Assad line on Syria, a pro-regime line on Venezuela, a pro-Putin line on Russia, and a pro-Hamas line on Israel.
These are not reliable sources either, as I expected.
Of course Mosaic Magazine, the kind of zionist outlet for whom anybody who is slightly to the left of Nethanyahu is a rabid genocidal antisemite. You`re using the same smear tactics on Max Blumenthal that they are, there is no proof that he is funded by Russia or any other foreign government, as if this could happen without the knowledge of US intelligence agencies..
https://prospect.org/politics/my-adventures-with-rt-putin-russia/By all means, continue dying on this hill.Quote:
In December 2015, I was invited by a man named David McCormack, whose title was "Account Director, Ogilvy Media Influence for Ogilvy Public Relations," to go to Moscow in order to attend a conference celebrating RT's tenth anniversary. This was the occasion at which RT famously paid Michael Flynn $45,000 to speak. I had never paid attention to RT before, and while I knew that Flynn had occupied important roles in the U.S. national-security bureaucracy, I was not yet up to speed on his role with Trump, whom I still had trouble taking seriously. I do, however, recall being shocked at how crazy Flynn sounded, especially on the topic of Hillary Clinton. Frequent RT guest and Flynn's fellow conspiracy theorist Max Blumenthal was also a paid speaker, as was the British cheerleader for Hamas and Saddam Hussein George Galloway. Julian Assange appeared by video. Green Party presidential candidate and 2016 election spoiler Jill Stein, who appears in the famous photo at dinner with Flynn and Putin, spoke as well. The word "****show" repeatedly came to mind.
Yes, he was a paid speaker there and then miraculously changed his positions on geopolitical issues to support the same positions Putin does.oski003 said:sycasey said:Here's a further account of Blumenthal being directly paid by RT:Cal88 said:sycasey said:
Max Blumenthal and Grayzone are almost certainly taking money from those authoritarian regimes too.
https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2019/08/max-blumenthals-progression-from-israel-hater-to-putin-shill/Quote:
But then something happened. We don't know exactly what it was. All we know for certain is that in December 2015, Blumenthal traveled to Moscow all expenses paid by the Kremlin to attend a gala dinner, hosted by Vladimir Putin himself, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of RT, the international TV network owned by the Russian government. When he returned to the U.S., his position on Bashar al-Assad and on U.S. intervention in Syria had turned around completely.
Only a month after the RT bash, Blumenthal founded something called "The Grayzone Project," which describes itself as "a news and politics website dedicated to original investigative journalism and analysis on war and empire." Basically, however, Grayzone is a one-stop propaganda shop, devoted largely to pushing a pro-Assad line on Syria, a pro-regime line on Venezuela, a pro-Putin line on Russia, and a pro-Hamas line on Israel.
These are not reliable sources either, as I expected.
Of course Mosaic Magazine, the kind of zionist outlet for whom anybody who is slightly to the left of Nethanyahu is a rabid genocidal antisemite. You`re using the same smear tactics on Max Blumenthal that they are, there is no proof that he is funded by Russia or any other foreign government, as if this could happen without the knowledge of US intelligence agencies..
https://prospect.org/politics/my-adventures-with-rt-putin-russia/By all means, continue dying on this hill.Quote:
In December 2015, I was invited by a man named David McCormack, whose title was "Account Director, Ogilvy Media Influence for Ogilvy Public Relations," to go to Moscow in order to attend a conference celebrating RT's tenth anniversary. This was the occasion at which RT famously paid Michael Flynn $45,000 to speak. I had never paid attention to RT before, and while I knew that Flynn had occupied important roles in the U.S. national-security bureaucracy, I was not yet up to speed on his role with Trump, whom I still had trouble taking seriously. I do, however, recall being shocked at how crazy Flynn sounded, especially on the topic of Hillary Clinton. Frequent RT guest and Flynn's fellow conspiracy theorist Max Blumenthal was also a paid speaker, as was the British cheerleader for Hamas and Saddam Hussein George Galloway. Julian Assange appeared by video. Green Party presidential candidate and 2016 election spoiler Jill Stein, who appears in the famous photo at dinner with Flynn and Putin, spoke as well. The word "****show" repeatedly came to mind.
You miraculously refuted all of his sources as funded by Russia because one of them was paid by RT to speak at a conference in 2015. Looks like the ultimate gotcha moment.
This article is written by Christelle Neant and originally posted to her website Donbass Insider. I'd never heard of this person and so tried to find some info about her background. This didn't take long:Cal88 said:
They're reliable enough to be actively persecuted by their governments. They have also actually travelled and lived in eastern Ukraine and the Donbass, doing actual journalism.
They`re also not on the payroll of any foreign government. You`ve asserted that my sources were all paid by foreign dictatorships, I`ve provided with examples of independent journalists who not only aren`t on the take, but are also being persecuted and finaancially stifled by NATO governments.
https://mronline.org/2022/06/23/julian-assange-alina-lipp-and-anne-laure-bonnel-when-truth-becomes-a-crime-in-the-west/
https://ukraineworld.org/articles/infowatch/amplifiersQuote:
- Christelle Neant worked as a reporter for the pro-Russian news agency DONI in 2016, then founded Donbass Insider;
So once again, we have a Cal88 source that's being funded by Russia. What a surprise!Quote:
The general narrative of the posts published on the Facebook page for Donbass Insider is anti-Ukrainian, anti-Western and pro-Russian. As indicated in its 'about' section, the page represents a media outlet which operates a website by the same name. The self-proclaimed news agency operates in English, Russian and French. It purports to cover issues related to Donbass, Ukraine and Russia, as well as about connected conflicts like Syria and Libya. No information about the location of the agency or its founders is available. Additionally, the website says that it only operates based on crowdfunding.
Information about the site's domain reveals that the website is registered in Moscow, Russia under the Russian domain name registrar company: JSC "RU-CENTER".