tough to do that while also winning every golf tourney.Overlander wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2024 4:13 pm 15 billion is sales?
Biden is gonna take salesman of the quarter.
At least, until Trump names himself Supreme Salesman of the Century.
Let’s have a war!
Re: Let’s have a war!
Just Ledoux it
- KUTradition
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Re: Let’s have a war!
The alliance's 32 member states agreed on Wednesday to start planning for a greater role in coordinating military aid to Ukraine to help it battle Russia in Europe's biggest conflict since World War Two and show its unity…KUTradition wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2024 12:08 pm https://www.axios.com/2024/04/01/truman ... nniversary#
said another way, the free world can no longer rely on US leadership
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: Let’s have a war!
Yea, hopefully the leadership of the free world can lead some free-world-agreeable end to the Ukraine war.
(Hopefully that was phrased well enough to not be knee-jerked as a Putin parrot again)
Back to the other big “war” being proxy-fought by the free world leadership:
Trad, what do you think of Biden salesmanning more and more weapons to an ally who’s using them to bomb foreign embassies and aid kitchens staffed by U.S. civilians?
I mean holy hell could you imagine the reaction if it was Russia perping that shit?!
(Hopefully that was phrased well enough to not be knee-jerked as a Putin parrot again)
Back to the other big “war” being proxy-fought by the free world leadership:
Trad, what do you think of Biden salesmanning more and more weapons to an ally who’s using them to bomb foreign embassies and aid kitchens staffed by U.S. civilians?
I mean holy hell could you imagine the reaction if it was Russia perping that shit?!
Re: Let’s have a war!
no doubt nato. or the united nations. or whatever kangaroo court this 32 member alliance is. will get the big jobs done. i feel better now knowing the 32 member alliance is on the job.
of course the United States will pay for it. the United States will provide all the support. but. just knowing the 32 members are talking about it. gives me security.
of course the United States will pay for it. the United States will provide all the support. but. just knowing the 32 members are talking about it. gives me security.
Re: Let’s have a war!
Perhaps I over-snipped the other day. I will trim it down.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 8:29 am Yea, hopefully the leadership of the free world can lead some free-world-agreeable end to the Ukraine war.
(Hopefully that was phrased well enough to not be knee-jerked as a Putin parrot again)
Back to the other big “war” being proxy-fought by the free world leadership:
Trad, what do you think of Biden salesmanning more and more weapons to an ally who’s using them to bomb foreign embassies and aid kitchens staffed by U.S. civilians?
I mean holy hell could you imagine the reaction if it was Russia perping that shit?!
https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.c ... dium=email[The] strategy that matters most for the Kremlin is not the military strategy, but rather the spread of disinformation that causes the West to back away and allow Russia to win. That disinformation operation echoes the Russian practice of getting a population to believe in a false reality so that voters will cast their ballots for the party of oligarchs. In this case, in addition to seeding the idea that Ukraine cannot win and that the Russian invasion was justified, the Kremlin is exploiting divisions already roiling U.S. politics.
It is, for example, playing on the American opposition to sending our troops to fight “forever” wars, a dislike ingrained in the population since the Vietnam War. But the U.S. is not fighting in Ukraine. Ukrainians are asking only for money and matériel, and their war is not a proxy war—they are fighting for their own reasons—although their victory could well prevent U.S. engagement elsewhere in the future. The Kremlin is also playing on the idea that aid to Ukraine is too expensive as the U.S. faces large budget deficits, but the U.S. contribution to Ukraine’s war effort in 2023 was less than 0.5% of the defense budget.
Russian propaganda is also changing key Western concepts of war, suggesting, for example, that Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence. The authors note that Russia is using Americans’ regard for peace, life, American interests, freedom of debate, and responsible foreign relations against the U.S.
Re: Let’s have a war!
While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
Last edited by ousdahl on Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:49 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Let’s have a war!
i agree. America first. if we chopped the aid in half. we could rebuild that bridge in Baltimore.
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Re: Let’s have a war!
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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Re: Let’s have a war!
why would i engage you?ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
so you can just turn around and deliberately misrepresent my stance down the road in an effort to try and establish some sort of twisted moral high ground?
you’ve proven yourself incapable a well-meaning, nuanced discussion on these topics
i thought i made myself abundantly clear previously, but apparently not
and spare me the hollow apologies
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: Let’s have a war!
You are missing (or avoiding) the point.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
The issue is not that people are failing to recognize that "there's some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held anti-war positions."
It is that you are failing to recognize that "sincerely-held anti-war positions" are being exploited by Russian disinformation.
Re: Let’s have a war!
Ding! They likely had a large part in the 7 Oct planning and probably even the Crocus attacks. These distractions are helpful when you are losing a war.
Re: Let’s have a war!
So what’s the remedy then?jfish26 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 12:10 pmYou are missing (or avoiding) the point.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
The issue is not that people are failing to recognize that "there's some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held anti-war positions."
It is that you are failing to recognize that "sincerely-held anti-war positions" are being exploited by Russian disinformation.
Just scrap any sort of anti-war anything in favor of a blank check for the war machine?
That seems risky, especially considering our two biggest proxy allies are also currently being investigated for genocide…or is the IOC too to be shrugged off as Russian disinformation too?
Re: Let’s have a war!
Yup, you’re def holding a grudge.KUTradition wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:54 amwhy would i engage you?ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
so you can just turn around and deliberately misrepresent my stance down the road in an effort to try and establish some sort of twisted moral high ground?
you’ve proven yourself incapable a well-meaning, nuanced discussion on these topics
i thought i made myself abundantly clear previously, but apparently not
and spare me the hollow apologies
How tragic.
Re: Let’s have a war!
The first remedy is critical thinking about where you are getting your information from, and what you are doing with it.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:35 pmSo what’s the remedy then?jfish26 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 12:10 pmYou are missing (or avoiding) the point.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
The issue is not that people are failing to recognize that "there's some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held anti-war positions."
It is that you are failing to recognize that "sincerely-held anti-war positions" are being exploited by Russian disinformation.
Just scrap any sort of anti-war anything in favor of a blank check for the war machine?
That seems risky, especially considering our two biggest proxy allies are also currently being investigated for genocide…or is the IOC too to be shrugged off as Russian disinformation too?
For example, this "currently being investigated for genocide" rebop has been asked/answered,* and yet here you are STILL using it without regard whatsoever for context.
* viewtopic.php?p=382826&hilit=genocide#p382826 and its responses.
Re: Let’s have a war!
well. the ioc did approve breakdancing as an event for the paris olympics this summer. so there is that.
Re: Let’s have a war!
So the New York Times too is putin propaganda?jfish26 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:40 pmThe first remedy is critical thinking about where you are getting your information from, and what you are doing with it.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:35 pmSo what’s the remedy then?jfish26 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 12:10 pm
You are missing (or avoiding) the point.
The issue is not that people are failing to recognize that "there's some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held anti-war positions."
It is that you are failing to recognize that "sincerely-held anti-war positions" are being exploited by Russian disinformation.
Just scrap any sort of anti-war anything in favor of a blank check for the war machine?
That seems risky, especially considering our two biggest proxy allies are also currently being investigated for genocide…or is the IOC too to be shrugged off as Russian disinformation too?
For example, this "currently being investigated for genocide" rebop has been asked/answered,* and yet here you are STILL using it without regard whatsoever for context.
* viewtopic.php?p=382826&hilit=genocide#p382826 and its responses.
What sources do you recommend otherwise?
And, HOW DO YOU CONTINUE TO IGNORE THE FACT YOUR AND MY TAX DOLLARS ARE BUYING WEAPONS TO KILL U.S. CIVILIANS?!?!?!?!!??!!!
excuse the all caps, but I mean, the silence is deafening.
Re: Let’s have a war!
I cannot keep track of each and every one of your non-specific panic attacks.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:46 pmSo the New York Times too is putin propaganda?jfish26 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:40 pmThe first remedy is critical thinking about where you are getting your information from, and what you are doing with it.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:35 pm
So what’s the remedy then?
Just scrap any sort of anti-war anything in favor of a blank check for the war machine?
That seems risky, especially considering our two biggest proxy allies are also currently being investigated for genocide…or is the IOC too to be shrugged off as Russian disinformation too?
For example, this "currently being investigated for genocide" rebop has been asked/answered,* and yet here you are STILL using it without regard whatsoever for context.
* viewtopic.php?p=382826&hilit=genocide#p382826 and its responses.
What sources do you recommend otherwise?
And, HOW DO YOU CONTINUE TO IGNORE THE FACT YOUR AND MY TAX DOLLARS ARE BUYING WEAPONS TO KILL U.S. CIVILIANS?!?!?!?!!??!!!
excuse the all caps, but I mean, the silence is deafening.
If you are, once again, referring to the article you linked in the post I linked, I would refer you, once again, back to the post I linked and the responses stemming from it.
It is not "ignoring" anything to address one panic attack at a goddamn time. Where you get yourself into trouble on these subjects, over and over again, is endless mixing and matching of claims and evidence and arguments and defenses.
The specific error you continue to make on this NYT/genocide thing, over and over, is illustrative of exactly what I mean when I say that "sincerely-held anti-war positions" are being exploited by Russian disinformation.
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Re: Let’s have a war!
what’s tragic is your hollow apologies and lack of self-awarenessousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:36 pmYup, you’re def holding a grudge.KUTradition wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:54 amwhy would i engage you?ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
so you can just turn around and deliberately misrepresent my stance down the road in an effort to try and establish some sort of twisted moral high ground?
you’ve proven yourself incapable a well-meaning, nuanced discussion on these topics
i thought i made myself abundantly clear previously, but apparently not
and spare me the hollow apologies
How tragic.
a grudge would indicate that i care…i do not, which is why i’m done engaging with you
message received?
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: Let’s have a war!
JFC, this has been explained to you multiple times. Ukraine is not being "investigated for genocide". The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has ruled that parts of Ukraine’s case against Russia arguing that Moscow baselessly accused Kyiv of genocide to justify the 2022 invasion can move forward. This means that UKRAINE has asked for the opportunity to make their case that Russian claims of genocide are baseless. "Being investigated for genocide" is far different than "asking for a baseless claim of genocide to be investigated".ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:35 pmSo what’s the remedy then?jfish26 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 12:10 pmYou are missing (or avoiding) the point.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:44 am While I think Russian disinformation is indeed a concern, I still think there’s some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held ant-war positions - and, even, the valid criticisms of U.S. militarism that comes with. (Heck, that article goes so far as to suggest concerns about U.S. budget deficits are actually just more Russian propaganda too!)
That compare/contrast with Vietnam seems flimsy too, since 1. For the longest time the U.S. wasn’t technically the ones fighting in Vietnam either, 2. The U.S., as DCHawq1 has pointed out, indeed IS fighting in Ukraine. (Among other reasons)
And sure Ukraine is indeed fighting for their own reasons. But to point to that as evidence it is NOT a proxy war, and the U.S. is NOT party to the conflict for reasons of our own, all seems misleading.
And it also may be misleading to state as some foregone conclusion that “Ukrainian surrender will bring peace when, in fact, the end of fighting will simply take away Ukrainians’ ability to protect themselves against Russian violence.” Seems kinda like oversimplified good guy bad guy rhetoric, again.
Now quick, somebody call me a Putin parrot! While also ignoring all the other inconvenient truths that don’t jive with your world views!
(Still waiting on trad’s take regarding U.S. weapons to allies bombing embassies and humanitarian workers, but if you’d like to chime in, fish, please do!)
The issue is not that people are failing to recognize that "there's some gray area between Russian disinformation, and sincerely-held anti-war positions."
It is that you are failing to recognize that "sincerely-held anti-war positions" are being exploited by Russian disinformation.
Just scrap any sort of anti-war anything in favor of a blank check for the war machine?
That seems risky, especially considering our two biggest proxy allies are also currently being investigated for genocide…or is the IOC too to be shrugged off as Russian disinformation too?
Re: Let’s have a war!
I would like to officially nominate Jfish for some sort of Nobel prize for exhibiting copious amounts of patience throughout this thread.
Just Ledoux it