dajo9 said:
I think they should have a ceasefire and peace along the current fighting lines
That's a reasonable offer. Russia would expect to keep hands off Crimea.
dajo9 said:
I think they should have a ceasefire and peace along the current fighting lines
Quote:
ML wrote:
There are some related benefits to Russia. As they rotate new troops in, their experience expands. They're chewing up NATO / US military resources, and this is a boon to North Korea economically and militarily.
Biden - Harris - Blinken - Sullivan are refusing to negotiate. Imagine Harris talking to Putin, cackling and talking in circles?
bearister said:
"Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin, are incredibly unpopular: 76 percent of independents think Russia is "unfriendly" or an "enemy," along with 82 percent of conservatives and 92 percent of seniors. But Trump just will not come out strong against Putin, which hamstrings his ability to hit Biden or Harris on their incompetence in Ukraine."
https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/4829749-trump-failing-campaign/
bearister said:
"Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin, are incredibly unpopular: 76 percent of independents think Russia is "unfriendly" or an "enemy," along with 82 percent of conservatives and 92 percent of seniors. But Trump just will not come out strong against Putin, which hamstrings his ability to hit Biden or Harris on their incompetence in Ukraine."
https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/4829749-trump-failing-campaign/
bearister said:
The Chinese and the Russians have historically enjoyed the sport of supplying weapons in wars where we had boots on the ground and they didn't.
bearister said:
I didn't pass judgment on the wars, just on who supplies the weapons. If an American soldier dies or is maimed for life on foreign soil, there is a good chance he was killed with weaponry provided by Russia and/or China…..so they can cry me a f@ucking river when the script flips.
bearister said:
More Russians have died than we lost in Vietnam. When I started this thread two years ago I noted, from what I had read about Ukrainian mercs, that they are f@ucking crazy people that would not be easily defeated. I would loved to have seen it end with as little loss of life as possible….but when you invade another country, regardless of how pure some allege your motives are, quagmires can result. Tip: Stay home…like a lot on BI advocate for the U.S.
Again, "give them everything they want" isn't really an answer.movielover said:
Same as two years ago, but more expensive.
- Ukraine neutrality
- recognize Crimea as Russian territory
- ceding a chunk of Ukraine to Russia which it now controls, previously noted as culturally Russian areas
- NATO and US out of Ukraine
sycasey said:Again, "give them everything they want" isn't really an answer.movielover said:
Same as two years ago, but more expensive.
- Ukraine neutrality
- recognize Crimea as Russian territory
- ceding a chunk of Ukraine to Russia which it now controls, previously noted as culturally Russian areas
- NATO and US out of Ukraine
sycasey said:Again, "give them everything they want" isn't really an answer.movielover said:
Same as two years ago, but more expensive.
- Ukraine neutrality
- recognize Crimea as Russian territory
- ceding a chunk of Ukraine to Russia which it now controls, previously noted as culturally Russian areas
- NATO and US out of Ukraine
movielover said:
It's reality, Russia is winning, and humming along w a 3% GDP growth.
The longer we wait, the more Ukrainian death, and Russia takes Odessa and a lot more.
DiabloWags said:movielover said:
It's reality, Russia is winning, and humming along w a 3% GDP growth.
The longer we wait, the more Ukrainian death, and Russia takes Odessa and a lot more.
Russia's GDP is $2.2 Trillion.
8th in the world.
Yawn.
CA is $4.0 Trillion.
DiabloWags said:movielover said:
It's reality, Russia is winning, and humming along w a 3% GDP growth.
The longer we wait, the more Ukrainian death, and Russia takes Odessa and a lot more.
Russia's GDP is $2.2 Trillion.
8th in the world.
Yawn.
CA is $4.0 Trillion.
UKRAINE: Zelensky's decision to claim that he authorized the destruction of Germany's Nord Stream pipeline was a HUGE mistake and might cost him his country. pic.twitter.com/ipaH2aJqbk
— @amuse (@amuse) August 17, 2024
Cal88 said:DiabloWags said:movielover said:
It's reality, Russia is winning, and humming along w a 3% GDP growth.
The longer we wait, the more Ukrainian death, and Russia takes Odessa and a lot more.
Russia's GDP is $2.2 Trillion.
8th in the world.
Yawn.
CA is $4.0 Trillion.
Russia has just passed Germany and Japan to become the 4th largest GDP PPP in the world.
https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.PP.CD?most_recent_value_desc=true
Energy consumption of California 259.5 TWh, Russia 979 TW/h.
Steel production California 2 million tons per year, Russia 71,5 million tons per year.
A BART ride from Berkeley to SF is around $5, in Moscow or St Petersburg a subway ride is around 60 cents. The subway system is those cities is far better than in SF, NYC, Chicago etc.
A year of college tuition in California costs between $15K and $65k. College in Russia is free.
Los Angeles homeless population: 75,000. Homeless population in all of Russia: 11,000.
Cal88 said:sycasey said:
What does it take to convince Putin that this war is not worth the effort and expense?
Abiding by Minsk I, Minsk II, the Istanbul peace agreement, and working towards a settlement that sees Ukraine as a neutral state?
The ultimate goal of this war, as clearly stated by leading NATO strategists like Brzezinski or the recent Rand Institute whitepaper on Russia ("Overextending and Unbalancing Russia"), or statements from leading European diplomats like Kaja Kalas and from EU/US think tanks, the ultimate goal is to break up Russia and get to its huge pools of resources, the world's largest.
NATO got its hands on that wealth in the 1990s, when in collusion with local oligarchs they've sucked off Russian resources and heavy industry and destroyed the Russian state, putting Yeltsin, a Biden-like decrepit figure at the top of the country and inflicting enormous misery on its people, levels of poverty and misery unprecedented in Russia since the pre-war Bolchevik genocidal reign of terror.
Jeffrey Sachs, who was in the center of that era in the 90s, as an advisor to Yeltsin and an economic planner documented that process of Russian economic and social collapse, engineered by NATO.
During these crisis times of the 1990s, Putin moonlighted as a cab driver in St Petersburg, as his fixed income KGB salary vaporized through hyperinflation. His entire outlook and policies today are geared towards preserving Russian sovereignty and economic welfare.
The mostly benevolent Marxists at @guardian have been promoting eating of insects for almost 15 years.
— 𝔻𝕒𝕨𝕟𝕋𝕁𝟡𝟘™ 🇵🇭💖🇨🇦 Climate of Dawn (@DawnTJ90) February 18, 2024
Q) Is their cafeteria offering insects for breakfast, lunch, dinner, coffee breaks?
🤔 pic.twitter.com/SFpQN1ptNy
concordtom said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:
What does it take to convince Putin that this war is not worth the effort and expense?
Abiding by Minsk I, Minsk II, the Istanbul peace agreement, and working towards a settlement that sees Ukraine as a neutral state?
The ultimate goal of this war, as clearly stated by leading NATO strategists like Brzezinski or the recent Rand Institute whitepaper on Russia ("Overextending and Unbalancing Russia"), or statements from leading European diplomats like Kaja Kalas and from EU/US think tanks, the ultimate goal is to break up Russia and get to its huge pools of resources, the world's largest.
NATO got its hands on that wealth in the 1990s, when in collusion with local oligarchs they've sucked off Russian resources and heavy industry and destroyed the Russian state, putting Yeltsin, a Biden-like decrepit figure at the top of the country and inflicting enormous misery on its people, levels of poverty and misery unprecedented in Russia since the pre-war Bolchevik genocidal reign of terror.
Jeffrey Sachs, who was in the center of that era in the 90s, as an advisor to Yeltsin and an economic planner documented that process of Russian economic and social collapse, engineered by NATO.
During these crisis times of the 1990s, Putin moonlighted as a cab driver in St Petersburg, as his fixed income KGB salary vaporized through hyperinflation. His entire outlook and policies today are geared towards preserving Russian sovereignty and economic welfare.
I was wrong.
You're not Hitler. You're a Russian propagandist.
I was in Moscow in Jan 1990. Their economy had sucked for a long time at that point. Meanwhile, you're trying to blame Russia's collapse on westerners raiding it of resources? Daaamn! Those sure are some "alternative facts" you're spewing!
Quote:
Dimitrig said:
Sounds like you should pack your bags today and go!
Cal88 said:concordtom said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:
What does it take to convince Putin that this war is not worth the effort and expense?
Abiding by Minsk I, Minsk II, the Istanbul peace agreement, and working towards a settlement that sees Ukraine as a neutral state?
The ultimate goal of this war, as clearly stated by leading NATO strategists like Brzezinski or the recent Rand Institute whitepaper on Russia ("Overextending and Unbalancing Russia"), or statements from leading European diplomats like Kaja Kalas and from EU/US think tanks, the ultimate goal is to break up Russia and get to its huge pools of resources, the world's largest.
NATO got its hands on that wealth in the 1990s, when in collusion with local oligarchs they've sucked off Russian resources and heavy industry and destroyed the Russian state, putting Yeltsin, a Biden-like decrepit figure at the top of the country and inflicting enormous misery on its people, levels of poverty and misery unprecedented in Russia since the pre-war Bolchevik genocidal reign of terror.
Jeffrey Sachs, who was in the center of that era in the 90s, as an advisor to Yeltsin and an economic planner documented that process of Russian economic and social collapse, engineered by NATO.
During these crisis times of the 1990s, Putin moonlighted as a cab driver in St Petersburg, as his fixed income KGB salary vaporized through hyperinflation. His entire outlook and policies today are geared towards preserving Russian sovereignty and economic welfare.
I was wrong.
You're not Hitler. You're a Russian propagandist.
I was in Moscow in Jan 1990. Their economy had sucked for a long time at that point. Meanwhile, you're trying to blame Russia's collapse on westerners raiding it of resources? Daaamn! Those sure are some "alternative facts" you're spewing!
It's hard to argue with you because deep down you mean well, but are hopelessly naive and poorly informed on matters like the evolution of the post-Soviet Russian economy.Quote:
Dimitrig said:
Sounds like you should pack your bags today and go!
You first, as you're the one with Slavic/Orthodox roots here, based on your handle...
My point is, Russia is doing better economically today than at any point in the past 110 years. Their standard of living and purchasing power have been rising constantly, they have no debt, no unemployment and their huge social problems from the 1990s largely resolved. While this doesn't fit the neocon, jingoistic narrative of Russia as a failed state, it is the truth.
concordtom said:Cal88 said:concordtom said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:
What does it take to convince Putin that this war is not worth the effort and expense?
Abiding by Minsk I, Minsk II, the Istanbul peace agreement, and working towards a settlement that sees Ukraine as a neutral state?
The ultimate goal of this war, as clearly stated by leading NATO strategists like Brzezinski or the recent Rand Institute whitepaper on Russia ("Overextending and Unbalancing Russia"), or statements from leading European diplomats like Kaja Kalas and from EU/US think tanks, the ultimate goal is to break up Russia and get to its huge pools of resources, the world's largest.
NATO got its hands on that wealth in the 1990s, when in collusion with local oligarchs they've sucked off Russian resources and heavy industry and destroyed the Russian state, putting Yeltsin, a Biden-like decrepit figure at the top of the country and inflicting enormous misery on its people, levels of poverty and misery unprecedented in Russia since the pre-war Bolchevik genocidal reign of terror.
Jeffrey Sachs, who was in the center of that era in the 90s, as an advisor to Yeltsin and an economic planner documented that process of Russian economic and social collapse, engineered by NATO.
During these crisis times of the 1990s, Putin moonlighted as a cab driver in St Petersburg, as his fixed income KGB salary vaporized through hyperinflation. His entire outlook and policies today are geared towards preserving Russian sovereignty and economic welfare.
I was wrong.
You're not Hitler. You're a Russian propagandist.
I was in Moscow in Jan 1990. Their economy had sucked for a long time at that point. Meanwhile, you're trying to blame Russia's collapse on westerners raiding it of resources? Daaamn! Those sure are some "alternative facts" you're spewing!
It's hard to argue with you because deep down you mean well, but are hopelessly naive and poorly informed on matters like the evolution of the post-Soviet Russian economy.Quote:
Dimitrig said:
Sounds like you should pack your bags today and go!
You first, as you're the one with Slavic/Orthodox roots here, based on your handle...
My point is, Russia is doing better economically today than at any point in the past 110 years. Their standard of living and purchasing power have been rising constantly, they have no debt, no unemployment and their huge social problems from the 1990s largely resolved. While this doesn't fit the neocon, jingoistic narrative of Russia as a failed state, it is the truth.
Correct. I'm not well informed on matters like the evolution of the post-Soviet Russian economy.
But I do know that Russia has been accused of being in a population death spiral, which portends bad things in its future.
Few kids being born.
Low life expectancy.
Death by alcoholism, or war.
High emigration by the best and brightest.
Low immigration by outsiders.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/10/1/russians-drink-less-live-longer-who-report-saysQuote:
a new report by the World Health Organization (WHO) shows their alcohol consumption has dropped by more than 40 percent from its peak in the early 2000s. The United Nations' health agency attributed the decline (n alcohol consumption) to a series of measures brought in since sport-loving President Vladimir Putin took office in 2000, including restrictions on alcohol sales and the promotion of healthy lifestyles.
🇷🇺👶 "Partially as a result of the raft of pronatalist policies put in place in the 2000s Russian TFR rose from 1.3 in 2006 to ~1.78 by 2015. Births climbed from ~1.480M in 2006 to a post Soviet high of 1.942M in 2014.
— SIMPLICIUS Ѱ (@simpatico771) January 26, 2024
This sets Russia apart from countries like Japan, Korea,… pic.twitter.com/gn4JNFSZGy
Didn’t see this one coming. pic.twitter.com/QDPlnYUKKb
— David Sacks (@DavidSacks) February 26, 2024