Sounds mostly like a fukked-up way to conscript laborers and students.
They've obviously given up on tourism contributing anything to their economy for the duration.
While you designate yourself to be the moral arbiter of war, I'm taking the teleological approach of enjoying seeing Russia get their shyt pushed in for thinking they can run roughshod over their neighbour
This post isn't as deep a dive into moral philosophy as you think it is
Ukraine.
So now you are the voice of the Ukrainian people?
Were we predicting he was going to continue his push into Ukraine after Crimea?
By "Ukraine", what you actually mean is "the military leaders of Ukraine". As for Russia and as in nearly all militaristic approaches, they make unilateral decisions for everyone else. Neither the Ukrainian military nor the Russian military gives a shyt what the people of Crimea or eastern Ukraine feel about the approach taken.
In the hypothetical scenario that Putin offered a peace deal tomorrow, and a significant bulk of the people living in active conflict areas right now wanted to accept it, would you argue that their voices matter? Or would you put the sole determinant of their lives in the hands of the military leaders alone?
Never said that, I said I was speaking up for the victims of war. Most people here just want to see Putin get his shyt pushed in and don't particularly care what happens to everyone else in the process.
What was that you were saying about what the people want?
Where are you getting this lack of empathy towards civilians from and why are you projecting it on us?
I'll ask again - if Putin offered a peace deal tomorrow, do you think the people who are in active conflict regions should get the say of whether that deal is accepted or not?
lol - are we reading the same thread? Every mention of crimes against civilians is immediately deployed as a reason to go harder against Russia, and anyone who expresses concern about their lives independently of that is attacked.
Any end to the war that would mean an immediate end to civilian casualties is mocked as not being hard enough on Putin.
It's obvious that for most posters here, the negative parts of war are simply an arguing tool for getting the ends that they want. The means justify the ends and all that, like the other poster just said.
Sure. From what I've seen in formerly occupied regions the Ukrainian forces have been greeted as liberators and the civilian population wants them to keep going.
If you can show me evidence to the contrary then please do so, otherwise you are asking me to consider the opinions of imaginary people in your head.
You get shyt on because you are attempting to twist empathy for civilians into complying with Putin.
Occupiers can and do continue to reign terror after conflicts are resolved. Nobody wants to be occupied for the sake of "peace".
You are proposing appeasement (means) in exchange for peace (ends).
I think that's awesome.
What conflict historically can you name where a foreign power invaded another country and the attacked country after achieving superiority on the battlefield allowed the reeling aggressor country to keep occupied territory?Your own link (which was a single poll over two months old) suggested that only half of the East and South wanted Ukraine to keep going until they had retaken the entire region. Those #'s were higher among men and lower among women. And that's a hypothetical poll about a unrealized option - when war and suffering has continued for months and you actually have the opportunity to end the war right in front of you the considerations become a lot different. So obviously a substantial portion of those populations, likely the majority, would consider a peace deal acceptable.
Notice that you constantly have to drop bullshyt claims like this in order to try to warp the conversation.
You've known me on here for five years. There is zero chance you actually believe this is what I'm doing. But you don't mind slandering someone in order to get your way in an argument.
They "can", but the overwhelming trend of world history is that the likelihood and intensity of atrocities (both during and after the conflict) increases the longer that war goes on. You claimed that you do history, right?
And the vast majority of world governments were originally an occupier of at least part of their territory, including your own. If the war ended tomorrow with Ukraine in control of all of Donbas and Crimea, many of those residents would view Ukraine as the occupier. Long before any of this happened there were plenty of reports of atrocities committed by Ukraine within that region. Personally, I would prefer Ukrainian occupation to Russian occupation because of how I feel about Putin and the invasion, and I'm guessing most Ukrainians (outside of Crimea) would agree. But to suggest that there's only a single way forward is ahistorical.
Once again using emotional catch phrases to argue. If you go all the way back to my very first posts in the thread after the invasion started, I have NEVER been in favor of appeasing Putin. That's not even a word real people use in discussion outside of the hope of exploiting Godwin's Law in a debate. Your society has conditioned you to believe that aggressive war is literally the only way to combat war-mongerers. Why not arm Palestine, Chiapas, Tibet, and Kashmir while we're at it? How about arming the Hmong again, since that worked out so well the first time (arming the Afghans to kick out Russia worked out for them even better by your standards, amiright?), and the Rohingya and the Catalonians too. Is wanting anything other than war in Kurdistan and Somalia mere "appeasement" as well?
In terms of means and ends, I think nonviolence should be the means and the ends. I'm very consistent on that. And I think the means (nonviolent resistance) can continue to be employed after any diplomatic negotiations if the population desires to keep pushing. I really don't expect you to consider that argument seriously at all or do the least bit of research towards its validity, with your pro-violence cultural conditioning and all.
Of course you do.
If the war ended tomorrow with Ukraine in control of all of Donbas and Crimea, many of those residents would view Ukraine as the occupier.
Dunno about the Chiapas but yes to the rest especially Palestine.Why not arm Palestine, Chiapas, Tibet, and Kashmir while we're at it?
In terms of means and ends, I think nonviolence should be the means and the ends.
You are essentially just kicking the can down the road for another generation to deal with.
Also how exactly would non-violence discourage the Putin regime?
"did they vote on it" bruh come on lol
Notice that you constantly have to drop bullshyt claims like this in order to try to warp the conversation.
You've known me on here for five years. There is zero chance you actually believe this is what I'm doing. But you don't mind slandering someone in order to get your way in an argument.
What conflict historically can you name where a foreign power invaded another country and the attacked country after achieving superiority on the battlefield allowed the reeling aggressor country to keep occupied territory?
Also, the vast majority of conflicts throughout history where there is an uneasy armistice usually erupts into a greater conflict later down the line, WW1 being the greatest example. You are essentially just kicking the can down the road for another generation to deal with.
Regardless governments are typically granted special war powers during wartime to prosecute war to the best of a countries capabilities without distraction. I don’t know how direct democracy during wartime would even work.
Also how exactly would non-violence discourage the Putin regime?
So far as knowing you on here for five years...honestly, I don't recall interacting with you until this thread. I could be wrong but
@Rhakim is kinda just popping up on my radar within the past 6 months or so do to seeing his posts in the russia thread.
no disrespect intended, it's just that i'm relatively new the HL.
i only started seriously posting here because of trump getting into politics.
that being said, from what i have read he is a solid poster and worth paying attention to.
i look forward to seeing what he has to say in the future.
@Rhakim
congrats, i look forward to reading more or your posts in the future and need to read your history threads....gotta catch up on your older ones and i suggest everyone does as well.