• @[email protected]
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    -3118 days ago

    Yeah, Russia’s bad and is clearly the aggressor. They’re also going to win eventually. Ukraine is their backyard, thus why Obama sheepishly just let them take what they did in 2014. So the question is how many Ukrainians you’re willing to throw into the meat grinder en route to a negotiated peace. Seems like “all of them” is the answer.

    • @[email protected]
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      4118 days ago

      As long as Ukraine wants to defend themselves against Russia I support their choice to do so and wish my government would provide even more support for them to do so.

      • @[email protected]
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        -2918 days ago

        And this is why we never have any money for investing in domestic programs to improve anything. If it’s not Korea, it’s Vietnam, if not Vietnam, it’s Kosovo, if not Kosovo, it’s Iraq, if not Iraq it’s Afghanistan, if not Afghanistan, it’s Ukraine. Have you ever questioned why there’s always a new crisis that makes Raytheon execs rich, but mysteriously leaves nothing to spend on civilians here at home?

        • @[email protected]OP
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          2518 days ago

          Have you ever questioned why there’s always a new crisis that makes Raytheon execs rich, but mysteriously leaves nothing to spend on civilians here at home?

          Imagine thinking that’s why we don’t have well-funded social services.

        • @[email protected]
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          2417 days ago

          In 2020, when corporations that had just received three years of outrageously large tax cuts and stock buybacks were frightened of losing revenue, the Repub government fabricated trillions of dollars in handouts to pass around with little to no oversight.

          It is not the spending on Raytheon that is preventing spending on citizens at home. It is that half the country has oppositional defiant disorder about any service or policy that would help poor people.

          • @[email protected]
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            -1617 days ago

            Yes, all of these handouts to our ruling class are also why we can’t have nice things, but I’d argue engineering marvels that literally murder large numbers of human beings are worse than a direct handout. Maybe we just need welfare for Lockheed Martin. Also, if you want to get super technical about the economics, taxes in a fiat currency economy of our size is actually a purely inflation-management mechanism. There’s no dollar-to-dollar relationship between income and expenditure, really, so a tax cut isn’t really “spending” in the same way, you’re just egging on inflation by failing to remove dollars from the economy (not to be pro-tax cut, obviously inflation is bad and regressive taxation of its own, but its important not to play into the right’s misconceptions of how the economy works).

          • @[email protected]
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            -1917 days ago

            You got me, there is no war machine. I’m making it up. Eisenhower was lying when he warned us about this.

            • @[email protected]
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              817 days ago

              Never said there wasn’t.

              I’m just pointing out that you don’t even know how your own government works, that is, if you’re even American.

              • @[email protected]
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                -817 days ago

                You should use this keen awareness of how the government really works for the benefit of mankind. I do like going straight to the Russian bot thing, always a winner.

                • @[email protected]
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                  17 days ago

                  Gee, I didn’t know not being American means you’re automatically Russian. Either way, you’re intentionally missing the entire point of my replies. You don’t know how your own government works. Helping Ukraine in no way is draining tax payer money, ya dunce.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -917 days ago

                    I’m all about modern monetary theory, so I get that taxes do not 1-1 equate to spending, taxation is an arbitrary anti-inflationary mechanism while spending is an arbitrary inflationary mechanism when you’re a large country with a big economy people want to business in while printing ‘me’ bucks – and I get the argument that “it’s creating American jobs,” but mostly it’s making defense company execs rich, which is overall inflationary, which is a regressive tax on us all in the end… so… every $100 billion we spend there like it’s nothing isn’t entirely non-impactful on our economy. Also, now that treasury bonds aren’t at effectively 0% anymore this is producing net drag on the budget, insofar as how congress sees it, and they do the budgeting, ergo the $x billion we’re paying on the $y billion we’ve sent to Ukraine is reducing funding to something domestic in budget negotiations, or will eventually when the interest compounds back into the debt and the GOP goes all “Austerity forever!” the next time they’re out of power, which in your ideal world will be next year.

        • @[email protected]
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          317 days ago

          And this is why we never have any money for investing in domestic programs to improve anything. If it’s not Korea, it’s Vietnam, if not Vietnam, it’s Kosovo, if not Kosovo, it’s Iraq, if not Iraq it’s Afghanistan, if not Afghanistan, it’s Ukraine. Have you ever questioned why there’s always a new crisis that makes Raytheon execs rich, but mysteriously leaves nothing to spend on civilians here at home?

          It’s absolutely not the reason lol. The reason you can’t invest in domestic programs like universal healthcare or post-secondary education financing reform is because half of your fellow Americans oppose it, and vote accordingly. Convincing others matters.

    • @[email protected]
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      2218 days ago

      You know, every time this topic comes up I just sit back and remember how well appeasement worked last time. You remember, with that toothbrush mustache guy? Boy, I’m sure glad capitulating led to nothing happening after that!

        • @[email protected]OP
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          1818 days ago

          Good thing Ukraine isn’t Russia, then, and that the war is happening in Ukraine. Afghanistan, ahoy!

          • @[email protected]
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            -617 days ago

            Ukraine isn’t mountainous terrain that’s hard to navigate both on foot and with even modern aircraft. It isn’t a subsistence economy that has been at war for a thousand years. It isn’t home to people who made a life raiding into India for women and livestock, fierce mountain vikings, even before becoming the graveyard of empire as they cut their teeth on three world powers in a row, getting stronger with each they drove out, generation by generation. These are farmers and programmers and project managers, who are dying in trenches on a flat field as surely as the Flemmish before Germans in WWI, and yes, the line can hold forever, but it takes X lives every day to make that happen, and there’s no endgame where Russia gives in, because it needs the fresh water from the non-Crimea shit to hold Crimea, which has no rivers, and their whole Black Sea naval operation is out of there, and they’re not going to cede the whole Black Sea.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              417 days ago

              Ukraine isn’t mountainous terrain that’s hard to navigate both on foot and with even modern aircraft. It isn’t a subsistence economy that has been at war for a thousand years. It isn’t home to people who made a life raiding into India for women and livestock, fierce mountain vikings, even before becoming the graveyard of empire as they cut their teeth on three world powers in a row, getting stronger with each they drove out, generation by generation. These are farmers and programmers and project managers, who are dying in trenches on a flat field as surely as the Flemmish before Germans in WWI, and yes, the line can hold forever, but it takes X lives every day to make that happen, and there’s no endgame where Russia gives in, because it needs the fresh water from the non-Crimea shit to hold Crimea, which has no rivers, and their whole Black Sea naval operation is out of there, and they’re not going to cede the whole Black Sea.

              What absolutely bizarre hagiography.

              • @[email protected]
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                -417 days ago

                The funniest thing about you neolibs is the casual islamophobia from the DEI set… not even islamophobia here, I suppose, since they were Buddhists for half the history above… anti-Pashtun accomplishment? Afghanistan is literally known as the graveyard of empire for good reason. You can’t point to them as equivalent to Ukraine, a very post-industrial country, with no specific multi-generational warrior culture, on a flat plain where the primary obstacle for oncoming tanks is mud. The Russians will not be caught in Ukraine forever, they’ll gain mile by mile until we negotiate a worse peace than we could have had a 100,000+ dead ago.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -517 days ago

                    I don’t think it’s hard to understand that people who have been raised for generations with the constant presence of war and weapons from a subsistence economy would be better at doing endless war than IT consultants used to having iPhones and electricity, but I guess I’m wrong? Also, do you not get how mountains work?

        • @[email protected]
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          717 days ago

          Yeah I’m sure the West is planning a massive land invasion of Russia in the middle of winter, you figured it out.

          • @[email protected]
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            -617 days ago

            You got me. I’ve been trying for years (presumably unsuccessfully) to hide it, but you nailed me. SAD.

    • @[email protected]
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      317 days ago

      Russia might think they will win, but it will rather be NATO against Russia than Ukraine losing.

    • catsarebadpeople
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      117 days ago

      Win eventually? Lol. Russia already lost. Their 2 week battle plan to take over Ukraine and dissuade other countries from joining NATO has turned into a two year conflict that has caused multiple neighboring countries to submit NATO applications. The absolute best Russia can do at this point is get a bit of dirt.

      Their military has already been downgraded from a near peer to a peer at this point. It used to be The US, China and Russia. Now it’s just The US and China. Their economy is in shambles and they’ve resorted to cooking the books to pretend it’s not. Russia already lost.

      Think about this in the future when this war is over and you start claiming that it was a great victory for Daddy Putin because they end up being able to annex a few kilometers of unusable land.