Russian Special Military Operation in the Ukraine - Mark IV: The Partitioning of Discussion

  • 🔧 At about Midnight EST I am going to completely fuck up the site trying to fix something.
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From his humanistic speech
  • Ukraine should mobilize not from 27 or 25, but also from 18 year old's
  • Ukraine should adopt the new mobilization law as fast as possible
  • Says "We need more people in the line."
  • Ukrainians should fight even without US support
Lindsey Graham may be a creepy warmonger and I hope he gets severely roughed up in Kiev, but the guy has a point.

At least this one time.

About Ukrainians doing the fighting.

Is this an existential war or not? If yes, then mobilize everyone you can, future for Ukraine be damned. If it isn’t? Then quit wasting Ukrainian lives and reach a peace deal.

Instead the kholkhols are acting like an unusually greasy clientstate, constantly zig zagging between begging for money and trying to get NATO to fight for them.
 
I've read this critical post about the election on the last remaining decent subreddit.
First of all, I’d like to draw attention to the OP’s statement about “I’m free to jerk off and watch anime, and that’s about it.”

Let’s assume what he’s saying is 100% accurate, how exactly is that different from here in the west?

This kind of idea of all these (non existent) freedoms is very typical for a certain class of young people in Russia who’ve never actually lived abroad, but still listen to enough maidan-tier propaganda to believe that they’re totally, totally missing out on all these things.
How valid is his concerns about how Strelkov was treated and the policy of squashing potential rivals to Putin.

Sure, he has a point about Strelkov. The guy got a raw deal. At the same time, he likely got numerous warnings along the way. And most importantly, it’s Russia. There are a lot of guns, a lot of people who know how to use them. Remember Prigozin? And how a protest march ended up with a shot down plane and 20 military personnel dead?

So yeah, you can’t really blame Russian authorities for shutting down a guy, who wants to go full on blazing all the way to Riga and Kiev.

In an ideal world, Strelkov and others would be free to say and do exactly what they please.

But Putin (and the leadership) are cautious and know how sky high the stakes are. Nuclear war possibly. And while western “analysts” think that democratic opposition to Putin is all gay rights and US megacorps being welcomed back, IN REALITY there are just as many, Russians who want to go full on ball to the wall against NATO, take the Baltics back and the whole shabang.

Should they also be allowed to organize? Run for elections?

My guess is that the answer to that would be a nervous “no”.

Which shows what kind of hypocrisy we’re dealing with.

What people always forget about Russia is that:

1: Russia is Russia.
2: Democrazy may develop differently in Russia, just like the US is different from Denmark.
3: Nobody in Russia claims it’s a perfect democracy. Even people like Medvedev point out that democracy is still young in Russia, and it’ll develop along whatever way RUSSIANS CHOOSE.

Now as for “squashing rivals” to Putin, there is certainly a system in place that Putin is simultaneously the head and symbol of, as well as part of. (Forget cartoonish dictator Putin, it’s impossible to lead a country like Russia without buyin and a big element of collective leadership.)

Now Putin knows he won’t live forever, and is growing a new group of worthy leaders. (Some of whom may come from the SMO!)

Eventually it’ll become more democratic not less. But remember Russia before Putin? The country was robbed blind. The leader was a drunken clown. Mobsters openly ruled.

If you look at that, is it any wonder that there in the Russian system is some caution for letting the reins go 100%?

Having said all that, and it was a lot longer than I intended, and I still didn’t even go to the political role of the Organs. There is no doubt that Russia is what an NGO might call “a hybrid system” or a “flawed NGO”.

But there’s also no doubt that Russians are overall pretty happy with their system, and Putin does represent a democratic choice.

As for why, well:

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I seriously recommend reading up on the 90ies in Russia. Old war veterans selling their medals because they wanted to eat. You know how Russia avoided starvation, yes STARVATION when the USSR collapsed? Everyone started growing their own potatoes and food because there wasn’t any other way to get it.
You worked your entire life at a nail factory, and since there’s no cash, the factory starts PAYING YOU IN NAILS so you can go out and barter for what you need.

So yeah, there are a lot of good reasons why Russians prefer the current system, even without going into (mildly russophobic) hogwash like “they like their zars!”
 
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I've seen many videos that claim that FPV drones are a promising tool of war and that the Ukrainians believe they can make up for the lack of artillery ammunition.

Personally, I think they're an effective anti-personnel weapon and can potentially hobble and destroy armoured vehicles but I really doubt they're the answer to the ammunition shortage. FPV's can't carry big payloads to destroy fortified areas and they're vulnerable to jamming. Better EW capabilities in the future will close this window of tactical edge, but for now, they're just another innovation that makes the offense very difficult to perform.
 
I seriously recommend reading up on the 90ies in Russia. Old war veterans selling their medals because they wanted to eat. You know how Russia avoided starvation, yes STARVATION when the USSR collapsed? Everyone started growing their own potatoes and food because there wasn’t any other way to get it.
You worked your entire life at a nail factory, and since there’s no cash, the factory starts PAYING YOU IN NAILS so you can go out and barter for what you need.
You don't even have to read anything. There are still publicly available interviews from the 1990s with runaway kids who became drug addicts and prostitutes around the age of 10 and formed entire communities living in sewers.

Just to give you an idea of what people celebrate when they talk about the dawn of democracy in the remains of the USSR and what Russians should expect if the US controls them again.
 
3: Nobody in Russia claims it’s a perfect democracy. Even people like Medvedev point out that democracy is still young in Russia, and it’ll develop along whatever way RUSSIANS CHOOSE.

Democracy is incompatible with freedom. Aiming for a "perfect democracy" is a fools errand. Anybody who has time I would recommend reading this recent interview with Ryszard Legutko - https://theupheaval.substack.com/p/interview-ryszard-legutko, what he has to say about the recent happenings in Poland (likely driven but what's going with Russia) is fascinating.
 
Democracy is incompatible with freedom. Aiming for a "perfect democracy" is a fools errand. Anybody who has time I would recommend reading this recent interview with Ryszard Legutko - https://theupheaval.substack.com/p/interview-ryszard-legutko, what he has to say about the recent happenings in Poland (likely driven but what's going with Russia) is fascinating.
Russia at least has its citizens proud of their nation and willing to work towards its future even if they have different cultures?

I suspect that encouraging strong patriotism is far more important then the nature of the governing system as long as the electors and decision makers are committed to the nation's future.
 
You don't even have to read anything. There are still publicly available interviews from the 1990s with runaway kids who became drug addicts and prostitutes around the age of 10 and formed entire communities living in sewers.

Just to give you an idea of what people celebrate when they talk about the dawn of democracy in the remains of the USSR and what Russians should expect if the US controls them again.
I can also point to a 1994 documentary "The Great Criminal Revolution" that was banned from TV. This shit is like a horror movie. You'll need some AI translator though.
 
Speaking of Pentagon, it just complained to the Reuters (who was then copied by US' official State Media) that after they began whining to Niger about Russia, that Nigger kicked all of US troops out of the country
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https://www.voanews.com/a/pentagon-...ties-before-junta-revoked-accord/7532728.html

After the Nigerian coup, the US convinced several African countries to put Niger under economic sanctions. That policy proved a disaster, more for the countries around Niger, than Niger itself. At the end of February, the African countries reversed course and lifted the sanctions.

In the aftermath, the Biden Administration sent a high-level state department and US military delegation to threaten Niger. The military junta that runs the country told them to go fuck themselves and to remove the US army from Niger. The US spent at least $100 million dollars to build a massive drone base in Niger. Its the key base for the entire US drone war over northern and central africa.

Its another massive foreign policy "L" for the Biden administration. They took a strategically important (Uranium) country which hosted an important US military base - and utterly destroyed their position there.

The response of the Biden state department is to pretend that the end of the military agreement with Niger didn't actually happen.
 
Personally, I think if NATO goes all in then I think the Russians will just ramp up production and who knows, maybe if things get desperate for Russia, I believe they will be forced to announce a 2nd wave of conscription.
If things become bad for Russia, then Russia will do what they did in 2022. Retreat to a defensive position and let NATO forces hit their heads against them and let NATO forces deplete their operational strength.
 
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