#2281

Edited by cars ()

#2282
wow; whoa, wondering if anyone's tried to contain Moscow with a billion-Reichsmark militarization of Germany before... the "enormous potential" of "smaller countries in Central and Eastern Europe" "leaning on" "German combat readiness" sounds like exactly the sort of Hyperloop® style innovation ve vant in zee Europa space



Larger und More Capable... Defeat nicht Deterrence... things are looking bright for democracy in Europe!!
#2283
đź‘Ź German đź‘Ź combat đź‘Ź readiness
#2284

drwhat posted:

place your bets,



i shalt bet five Epic manbabies on these foreigners' blood, fwiggin goon sire

#2285

cars posted:

wow; whoa, wondering if anyone's tried to contain Moscow with a billion-Reichsmark militarization of Germany before... the "enormous potential" of "smaller countries in Central and Eastern Europe" "leaning on" "German combat readiness" sounds like exactly the sort of Hyperloop® style innovation ve vant in zee Europa space



Larger und More Capable... Defeat nicht Deterrence... things are looking bright for democracy in Europe!!


there's been a massive push in anti-russia and anti-ussr stuff in german media like dw, over and above the usual, for about a year now, including ww2 revisionism and stuff about Ukraine basically prepping them for this kind of turn

#2286

cars posted:

drwhat posted:

place your bets,

i shalt bet five Epic manbabies on these foreigners' blood, fwiggin goon sire


you got me, i literally meant we should bet, i love gooning it up and can only process world events through references to american tv shows and memes and i wasn't just half-heartedly starting my middle of the night post trying to grapple rationally with tanks rolling through the towns my immediate family somewhat recently left due to previous wars and my extended family still tries to live in with a tiny sliver of lame levity so it wasn't just crying and raging. next time i'll make it a star trek reference so you aren't as bothered

#2287
what happened to all the 2006 "its just their culture" liberals?
#2288
seems russia/ukraine is the issue that finally broke stephen gowans
#2289

tears posted:

also i should point out that it is pretty fucked up that ukraine has accelerated into the nazi germany in retreat phase of barbarism where armbanded deputies with guns are setting up checkpoints and hunting for "saboteurs" blasting away at EMTs and executing people who speak with an accent.


now reached the stage of executing their own negotiators. wehrmacht energy

#2290

tears posted:

what happened to all the 2006 "its just their culture" liberals?


very carefully

#2291

"say what you want about zelenskyy, at least he kept the trains running on time"
#2292
McDonalds, Starbucks and CIA-Cola Set to Leave Russia, Russian Life Expectancy Shoots Up 83%
#2293
honestly i feel that every country should attack ukraine if that's all you have to do to get the top 10 most evil companies to leave your territory
#2294
Red salute to drwhat for crashing the site for his cousins in Azov Battalion.
#2295
they're telling me it's Azov Regiment now. Sorry to drwhat's cousins (who barely number 600 if any) and a very Heil Hitler.
#2296
Speaking of the cousins, the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians (who have been consistently condemning the US, UK and Canada's ratcheting up of the conflict this whole time) sent out a press release targeted at liberal types. I personally question the value in pursuing that avenue but under the circumstances I understand going for it. There's a lot of tiptoeing around any points that would get them immediately dismissed as a KGB psyop or whatever, which constrains what they can say and imho effectively cedes victory to the propaganda but... Well what do ya do.

I think the list of demands does help illustrate the contradictions of the West's "help" in a way that directly confronting people sometimes can't: getting people to consider for themselves why none of what they're asking for will happen even though it's entirely reasonable. Maybe there's value in that?

#2297
Ukraine's East-West divide was literally public school curriculum in the U.S. shortly after the fall of the USSR, that was completely memory-holed during "Euromaidan", the average white global-Westerner now believes that Donetsk and Luhansk are the products of mind control and secret Russian dilution of proud Euro-Ukro blood, which is why Western newscasters get so panicky when anyone shows how many Ukraine refugees headed into Russia rather than away from it.

NATO's fantasy-land Fourth Reich version of politics can't actually produce working policies in Ukraine, which doesn't matter to NATO, they don't give a fuck if 50% of people in Ukraine die so long as it sends a message and NATO still has enough Nazis left over to run Gladio there for the next 10-20 years. NATO's aim is to install a weak, right-nationalist puppet government in Moscow, controlled from Brussels by all-strings-attached loans through "integrated" finance, the same way they did in Kiev.

So, NATO has no use for Ukrainians who aren't Nazis and actually suggest ideas of what might bring peace to the country, and to most of the people putting Ukrainian flags in their Twitter names, what Ukrainians have to say about their country sounds like they're speaking High Martian. Why would Donetsk and Luhansk need autonomy? Clearly United $naKKKe$ can just arm enough Nazis and they'll shoot all the Russian soldiers and then all the people who thought they opposed the Maidan coup will blink twice and become good Big Mac whiteys again.
#2298

cars posted:

NATO's aim is to install a weak, right-nationalist puppet government in Moscow,


part of what makes them so comically angry is that this is the deal they thought they were getting with Putin. they keep trusting chauvinistic nationalists to prioritize washington's interests over their own clearly stated goals and the perpetual confusion when it blows up in their faces every single time is incredible

#2299
This is another one of those moments where Western governments exploit the carefully-inculcated belief among their constituents that only Western parliamentary-capitalist cracker magic creates a government responsive to popular will, and governments elsewhere in the world somehow operate without concern for the opinions of the masses (which wasn't even true for medieval monarchies). Initiating a second Cold War as the next stage in a "bipartisan" project serves U.S. politicians in shoring up support among their constituencies in a lot of obvious ways. And the ways it serves those politicians among voters aren't hidden at all in the U.S. press right now, because they're presented as some uniquely American virtue of patriotic unity, that everyone in United $naKKKe$ can all hate the bestial Russkie together and reelect their local Congressional incumbent on the same xenophobic-imperialist platform regardless of party, just like old times.

Meanwhile, Washington has deployed something we've discussed before on here: the cultivated confusion of U.S. propaganda audiences over Russia as a rival parliamentary-capitalist state—how can Russia be an anti-capitalist autocratic dictatorship, but also host private polling companies openly reporting rising and falling support for the country's president, tracking as anyone would expect, with every dip in support constantly re-purposed by the West as anti-Moscow propaganda...? That carefully compartmentalized confusion has now been weaponized over Donetsk and Luhansk and Moscow's policy concerning them. It defends against one of the bigger problems the U.S. bourgeoisie might face while hyper-militarizing Europe against Russia in the year to come: the risk that, in the eyes of voters wary to risk economic stability over shades of gray, Moscow's motives might start to make sense.

Because eastern Ukraine in 2014 was always going to fight back against the 2014 coup in Kiev, and Russian voters were always going to support that resistance overwhelmingly, because those on both sides of the Russia/Ukraine border saw themselves, accurately, as one and the same. The government in Moscow would have committed political suicide domestically if it had failed to recognize those areas as autonomous regions de facto (and later de jure, if Kiev's coup government lasted). Any hesitation would have been perceived by most Russian voters as United Russia abandoning their obligations to the literal kin of their voter base, and whichever fake Make-Russia-Great-Again movement secured swift financial backing from outside the country, cough cough, could mount a real challenge to United Russia by combining a "Who lost Crimea?" anti-platform with all that foreign money. (Election optional but not preferred.)

That was almost certainly part of the motivation behind the West funding and arming the "Maidan" coup, to put the Russian government in 2014 in the position of either (a) taking sides in the fracturing of post-coup Ukraine or (b) empowering by inaction some Maidan-like Western-funded opposition movement to seize power in Russia. The ideal result for Washington would have been (and still is) two new, weak, ostensibly "nationalist" satrap governments in Moscow and Kiev, played against each other through squabbles over rival mini-fascist ideologies and corresponding "Greater" territories in the East, but cynically controlled by a single power center to the West.

...Which is L i t e r a l l y the Nazi playbook from World War II for Eastern Europe—disappear the nationalists, prop up the "nationalists", and recast national feuds between your satrapies as shadow plays that don't interfere with their masters' wider goals. It's why there's been such a desperate attempt by Washington, London, Brussels, etc., to fake-it-till-they-make-it with Navalny, who is just the latest in a long line of quasi-"Russian nationalist" Nazi NATO Muppets to disappoint his paymasters by remaining, at least to this point, roundly despised by the Russian nation.
#2300
it all sucks. please excuse my outburst earlier.
#2301

drwhat posted:

it all sucks. please excuse my outburst earlier.



#2302
Syrians and Central Africans going to Ukraine…the JDPON is coming
#2303

cars posted:

Because eastern Ukraine in 2014 was always going to fight back against the 2014 coup in Kiev, and Russian voters were always going to support that resistance overwhelmingly, because those on both sides of the Russia/Ukraine border saw themselves, accurately, as one and the same. The government in Moscow would have committed political suicide domestically if it had failed to recognize those areas as autonomous regions de facto (and later de jure, if Kiev's coup government lasted). Any hesitation would have been perceived by most Russian voters as United Russia abandoning their obligations to the literal kin of their voter base



speak of the Devil...........

Western propaganda is now moving directly to preempt the above from becoming part of the conversation:





..........very clumsy implementation here though, slapping together "Put-Insane is killing his own people" with "Even Hitler's glorious Reich was defending pure Germanic blood," which, as you can see, got this post extremely Ratioed. (They always try for that second one, "Even Hitler...", for Saddam Hussein, for Bashar al-Assad, etc., and it never works, and they always have to walk it back in public.)

So it's an own goal for the West's propaganda here, but they'll probably keep trying for "Putin is in Ukraine to kill Russians," because eventually, know-it-alls in the Western press will start bringing up how most Russians want Putin to intervene to defend what they see as Russians in Ukraine, people in Ukraine who see THEMSELVES as Russians, and that particular propaganda line heads that off at the pass.

#2304
these days, the only way a western head can say someone is bad is by simultaneously saying hitler was actually good. the living will envy the dead.
#2305
you have to hand it to Hitler etc
#2306
shouldn't be surprised since the average online person lives in harry potter world but how do so many people think that ukraine is winning this war? or even inflicting significant losses on the russian army? russian army has stalled? stalled against what? an aggressive counterattack? counter encirclement? break-outs and repositions?

online is captivated by footage of broken down vehicles, molotov making classes and various shoulder mounted attacks on tanks. how can they be so naive. like.... have you seen what armoured warfare with artillery and air support is like?
#2307
disturbing reports that oriental despot Vladimir Putin is hiring a Dirlewanger brigade of swarthy musselmen to unleash upon the women of ukraine
#2308

tears posted:

shouldn't be surprised since the average online person lives in harry potter world but how do so many people think that ukraine is winning this war? or even inflicting significant losses on the russian army? russian army has stalled? stalled against what? an aggressive counterattack? counter encirclement? break-outs and repositions?

online is captivated by footage of broken down vehicles, molotov making classes and various shoulder mounted attacks on tanks. how can they be so naive. like.... have you seen what armoured warfare with artillery and air support is like?



You are correct on all points, but I think e.g. western military experts expected Russia to do better. The Georgia war set a pretty high bar.

#2309
it took the US weeks to topple Iraq and they opened with a strategic bombing campaign attacking factories, power plants, military installations, and hospitals. Russia has kept their gloves on, though im at a loss as to why. maybe domestic resistance to civilian deaths? lots of interpersonal ties between ukraine and russia. its certainly not for western PR, since the west doesnt give two shits about the lack of civilian deaths
#2310
They actually want to occupy it for more than some semiautonomous material extraction, they have ethnic solidarity, this invasion is not part of a Holy Crusade Against Only The Bad Muslims, etc.
#2311

tears posted:

shouldn't be surprised since the average online person lives in harry potter world but how do so many people think that ukraine is winning this war? or even inflicting significant losses on the russian army? russian army has stalled? stalled against what? an aggressive counterattack? counter encirclement? break-outs and repositions?

online is captivated by footage of broken down vehicles, molotov making classes and various shoulder mounted attacks on tanks. how can they be so naive. like.... have you seen what armoured warfare with artillery and air support is like?


people are only seeing the ukrainian/western side of things, and also don't know anything about armoured warfare or that it might take a little while to subdue a country of 40 million people, would be my guess.

#2312

lo posted:

tears posted:

shouldn't be surprised since the average online person lives in harry potter world but how do so many people think that ukraine is winning this war? or even inflicting significant losses on the russian army? russian army has stalled? stalled against what? an aggressive counterattack? counter encirclement? break-outs and repositions?

online is captivated by footage of broken down vehicles, molotov making classes and various shoulder mounted attacks on tanks. how can they be so naive. like.... have you seen what armoured warfare with artillery and air support is like?

people are only seeing the ukrainian/western side of things, and also don't know anything about armoured warfare or that it might take a little while to subdue a country of 40 million people, would be my guess.


thinking about writing a normal answer but instead writing more fuel for the importance of domain specific knowledge knowledge in reasoning and understanding, over harry potter world's domain general intelligence as a dominant factor.

#2313
Abby Martin, Chris Hedges, Lee Camp, and Oliver Stone are all having their works deleted by Google/YouTube. mostly for ties to RT, whether its their shows, interviews, whatever, but Oliver Stone seems to have only lost his anti-maidan documentary
#2314
Everything is very simple in war, but the simplest thing is difficult. These difficulties accumulate and produce a friction, which no man can imagine exactly who has not seen war. Suppose now a traveller, who, towards evening, expects to accomplish the two stages at the end of his day's journey, four or five leagues, with post horses, on the high road—it is nothing. He arrives now at the last station but one, finds no horses, or very bad ones; then a hilly country, bad roads; it is a dark night, and he is glad when, after a great deal of trouble, he reaches the next station, and finds there some miserable accommodation. So in war, through the influence of an infinity of petty circumstances, which cannot properly be described on paper, things disappoint us, and we fall short of the mark. A powerful iron will overcomes this friction, it crushes the obstacles, but certainly the machine along with them. We shall often meet with this result. Like an obelisk, towards which the principal streets of a place converge, the strong will of a proud spirit, stands prominent and commanding, in the middle of the art of war.

Friction is the only conception which, in a general way, corresponds to that which distinguishes real war from war on paper. The military machine, the army and all belonging to it, is in fact simple; and appears, on this account, easy to manage. But let us reflect that no part of it is in one piece, that it is composed entirely of individuals, each of which keeps up its own friction in all directions. Theoretically all sounds very well; the commander of a battalion is responsible for the execution of the order given; and as the battalion by its discipline is glued together into one piece, and the chief must be a man of acknowledged zeal, the beam turns on an iron pin with little friction. But it is not so in reality, and all that is exaggerated and false in such a conception manifests itself at once in war. The battalion always remains composed of a number of men, of whom, if chance so wills, the most insignificant is able to occasion delay, and even irregularity. The danger which war brings with it, the bodily exertions which it requires, augment this evil so much, that they may be regarded as the greatest causes of it.

This enormous friction, which is not concentrated, as in mechanics, at a few points, is therefore everywhere brought into contact with chance, and thus facts take place upon which it was impossible to calculate, their chief origin being chance, As an instance of one such chance, take the weather. Here, the fog prevents the enemy from being discovered in time, a battery from firing at the right moment, a report from reaching the general; there, the rain prevents a battalion from arriving, another from reaching in right time, because, instead of three, it had to march perhaps eight hours; the cavalry from charging effectively because it is stuck fast in heavy ground.

These are only a few incidents of detail by way of elucidation, that the reader may be able to follow the author, for whole volumes might be written on these difficulties. To avoid this, and still to give a clear conception of the host of small difficulties to be contended with in war, we might go on heaping up illustrations, if we were not afraid of being tiresome. But those who have already comprehended us will permit us to add a few more.

Activity in war is movement in a resistant medium. Just as a man in water is unable to perform with ease and regularity the most natural and simplest movement, that of walking, so in war, with ordinary powers, one cannot keep even the line of mediocrity. This is the reason that the correct theorist is like a swimming master, who teaches on dry land movements which are required in the water, which must appear grotesque and ludicrous to those who forget about the water. This is also why theorists, who have never plunged in themselves, or who cannot deduce any generalities from their experience, are unpractical and even absurd, because they only teach what every one knows—how to walk.
#2315
war: is it badass or is it tragic? we may never know
#2316
personally, as a tragic badass, I think that
#2317
Russia pretty much banned most common digital-camera devices among its armed forces years ago while they're on active duty, because Moscow didn't want those devices to be used by NATO as forms of surveillance. Levine and Ames think this was a mistake for Moscow because of "information warfare" compared to Kiev, which has actively staged propaganda photos and videos in a war zone. I'm not sure it was a mistake, though. Media companies in NATO countries have been nervously locking down sources perceived as Russian, Russia-friendly or even Russia-neutral as quickly as they can identify them anyway. And YouTube propaganda doesn't win real-life battles.
#2318
In any case, the sole perception of what's going on in Ukraine among Western news sources is exactly the same as it has been in Syria: only NATO-courting propaganda sources are allowed, or sought out, by "the news", which will necessarily present the dual message of "We need more guns, bombs, etc., or we'll be overwhelmed by NATO's enemies" and "We've been surprisingly effective against NATO's enemies, so it's wise to invest in us".
#2319
Fun fact it is now impossible for me (ISP related?) to navigate to www.rt.com via google chrome (403 errors) but firefox works fine
#2320
It works in chrome for me.