You’re flailing. Starting from the end (we should bail on Ukraine) and working backwards (through inconsistent and incompatible argument paths).ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Jan 04, 2024 6:25 pm You DO want to (keep) sending anything (overwhelmingly just weapons) to Ukraine?
We’ve already sent hundreds of bajillions to Ukraine. And what do we have to show for it? Russia controls like a fifth of Ukraine, the counter-offensive gained hardly anything, and we American taxpayers are expected to just keep sending bajillions more. What we have to show for it, big picture restoration of our European relationships (and signaling to China) aside, is that Russia is so desperate and low on supplies that they are using erector-set, paper mache North Korean missiles. They’re using meat necklace conscripts. They’re on the ropes, man.
I’ve tried to make the humanity-based argument, and also the WMDs-in-Iraq based one too, to no avail. This is because there is not a good “humanity-based” argument AGAINST defending one ally directly, and many more allies indirectly, from a unilateral, unprovoked war of aggression by Putin. No amount of magical blame-shifting toward Ukraine (or us) changes this.
So let’s try the free market capitalist-based argument, maybe that of all things will resonate:
At what point do you admit that investing more and more money at an investment that is just not producing the desired returns, is maybe just a bad investment? If you want to look at it through this lens, you should probably think through where the money is actually GOING. In large part, it is going to DOMESTIC contractors, employing American workers to produce replenishments of UNITED STATES stocks and stores. You may - and clearly do - disagree that this is something that is desirable. But I am responding here to your suggestion (here and elsewhere) that we’re basically handing burlap sacks of cash to Ukrainian nazis. We are not. No amount of magical thinking makes that true.
See above.