The voices of reason (understandably) didn't want to be drafted to fight a war half-way around the world for something they neither understood nor cared about.
You want this war to end soon? Make American kids go fight it.
The voices of reason (understandably) didn't want to be drafted to fight a war half-way around the world for something they neither understood nor cared about.
In my experience, nothing focuses the American public's attention like a draft.
actually, could you please help me understand the dynamic and the mood and all during Vietnam? What exactly was so "in our faces?" Who was televising it? What sort of content was televised?Overlander wrote: ↑Mon Feb 27, 2023 2:43 pmInvaders failing.Feral wrote: ↑Mon Feb 27, 2023 1:37 pm War in 2023.
Vietnam is known as "the first televised war", and it's thought that because it was so in our face's all the time compared to previous wars, eventually the voices of reason, i.e., peace, prevailed.
That ain't nothing compared to this:
Feb 27, 2023 BURNING Russian soldiers flee destroyed tank hit by Ukrainian drone bomb in brutal battlefield footage.
This footage was released by the Ukrainian armed forces and shows a tank being targeted by an aerial attack.
This footage has not yet been verified and the location is currently unconfirmed.
The Sun newspaper brings you the latest breaking news videos and explainers from the UK and around the world...
Warning: Don't watch this:
Burning Russian soldiers flee destroyed tank hit by Ukrainian drone bomb
I hope it continues
That will end it alright. In a big, bright instant.
i’m sure there are some that feel the same way folks of the rural western US (and MTG) feel…thing is, countries have constitutions and lawsousdahl wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 10:29 am I wonder what the people of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia want for Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
I wonder if it’s even possible to know - which is to say, whether it’s even possible to hold some free and democratic election about it at this point.
It sucks that those peoples in particular are stuck in between as some sorta imperial cannon fodder.
No, actually…if it was up to me I’d just give back Texas.KUTradition wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 10:33 am if a state in northern Mexico wanted to become part of the US, would you support US military occupying and laying waste to said state until Mexico acquiesced?
What was the deaf ears part?KUTradition wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 10:32 ami’m sure there are some that feel the same way folks of the rural western US (and MTG) feel…thing is, countries have constitutions and lawsousdahl wrote: ↑Tue Feb 28, 2023 10:29 am I wonder what the people of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia want for Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
I wonder if it’s even possible to know - which is to say, whether it’s even possible to hold some free and democratic election about it at this point.
It sucks that those peoples in particular are stuck in between as some sorta imperial cannon fodder.
but, this has been explained previously, apparently to deaf ears
Qusdahl wrote: ↑Sat Feb 26, 2022 5:14 pm The Ukrainian protests of 2013-14 and subsequent coup seem to be noteworthy.
Here’s a British journalist’s take on Ukraine in 2014, a couple months after the regime change:
https://amp.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... v-conflict
It's not Russia that's pushed Ukraine to the brink of war
The attempt to lever Kiev into the western camp by ousting an elected leader made conflict certain. It could be a threat to us all
The threat of war in Ukraine is growing. As the unelected government in Kiev declares itself unable to control the rebellion in the country's east, John Kerry brands Russia a rogue state. The US and the European Union step up sanctions against the Kremlin, accusing it of destabilising Ukraine. The White House is reported to be set on a new cold war policy with the aim of turning Russia into a "pariah state".
That might be more explicable if what is going on in eastern Ukraine now were not the mirror image of what took place in Kiev a couple of months ago. Then, it was armed protesters in Maidan Square seizing government buildings and demanding a change of government and constitution. US and European leaders championed the "masked militants" and denounced the elected government for its crackdown, just as they now back the unelected government's use of force against rebels occupying police stations and town halls in cities such as Slavyansk and Donetsk.
"America is with you," Senator John McCain told demonstrators then, standing shoulder to shoulder with the leader of the far-right Svoboda party as the US ambassador haggled with the state department over who would make up the new Ukrainian government.
When the Ukrainian president was replaced by a US-selected administration, in an entirely unconstitutional takeover, politicians such as William Hague brazenly misled parliament about the legality of what had taken place: the imposition of a pro-western government on Russia's most neuralgic and politically divided neighbour.
…
After Crimeans voted overwhelmingly to join Russia, the bulk of the western media abandoned any hint of even-handed coverage. So Putin is now routinely compared to Hitler, while the role of the fascistic right on the streets and in the new Ukrainian regime has been airbrushed out of most reporting as Putinist propaganda.
So you don't hear much about the Ukrainian government's veneration of wartime Nazi collaborators and pogromists, or the arson attacks on the homes and offices of elected communist leaders, or the integration of the extreme Right Sector into the national guard, while the anti-semitism and white supremacism of the government's ultra-nationalists is assiduously played down, and false identifications of Russian special forces are relayed as fact.
…
Meanwhile, the US and its European allies impose sanctions and dictate terms to Russia and its proteges in Kiev, encouraging the military crackdown on protesters after visits from Joe Biden and the CIA director, John Brennan. But by what right is the US involved at all, incorporating under its strategic umbrella a state that has never been a member of Nato, and whose last elected government came to power on a platform of explicit neutrality? It has none, of course – which is why the Ukraine crisis is seen in such a different light across most of the world. There may be few global takers for Putin's oligarchic conservatism and nationalism, but Russia's counterweight to US imperial expansion is welcomed, from China to Brazil.
In fact, one outcome of the crisis is likely to be a closer alliance between China and Russia…
Among other thoughts - how often is a coup in some other country met with visits by the likes of John McCain and Joe Biden to voice their support?
(Of course, many lefties allege those “masked militants” were the CIA…)