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muy_thaiguy wrote:Seems a lot of the civilians (at least in Kiev) don't want to be closely tied to Russia, but would rather have closer ties to the Western Part of Europe. Military action by others looks doubtful, but sanctions certainly seem to be close to happening. Story seems similar to the Egyptian protests/riots as well. Started off with peaceful protesting, and then something set it off and so far at least 100 people have been killed and many more wounded.
Thoughts on what will happen in Ukraine?
oVo wrote:I'm not sure what to think, but it seems that the fourteen years of rule by the current leaders may end.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
muy_thaiguy wrote:Seems a lot of the civilians (at least in Kiev) don't want to be closely tied to Russia, but would rather have closer ties to the Western Part of Europe. Military action by others looks doubtful, but sanctions certainly seem to be close to happening. Story seems similar to the Egyptian protests/riots as well. Started off with peaceful protesting, and then something set it off and so far at least 100 people have been killed and many more wounded.
Thoughts on what will happen in Ukraine?
GoranZ wrote:Most likely the near outcome will be 2 or 3 since EU(without any significant help of US) is by no match equal to Russia.
saxitoxin wrote:oVo wrote:I'm not sure what to think, but it seems that the fourteen years of rule by the current leaders may end.
Que? Ukraine has been governed by 5 different Prime Ministers from 4 different political parties in the last 14 years. In the same period, the U.S. has been governed by 2 different parties.
Not a single thing that may or may not have happened in Ukraine is even in the same orbit as the treatment of the Palestinian people that the U.S. - while it's crying crocodile tears over events in Kiev - has enabled through its gun-running to the Israeli mafia state. Or the known pedophile who runs Saudi Arabia, for that matter.2011 - 93 Bahraini civilians (out of pop. of 1 million) killed by U.S.-armed GCC troops, U.S. sends out a press release expressing "concern" - obedient U.S. media run a few stories below the latest headlines on Honey Boo Boo
You can't complain your neighbor didn't rake the leaves off the sidewalk while you're running a radioactive horse meat factory in your backyard.
2014 - 24 Ukrainian "civilians" allegedly killed (out of pop. of 44 million), U.S. goes into overdrive expressing shock and horror - CNN turns to non-stop Ukraine coverage to whip Americans into a frenzy
GoranZ wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:Seems a lot of the civilians (at least in Kiev) don't want to be closely tied to Russia, but would rather have closer ties to the Western Part of Europe. Military action by others looks doubtful, but sanctions certainly seem to be close to happening. Story seems similar to the Egyptian protests/riots as well. Started off with peaceful protesting, and then something set it off and so far at least 100 people have been killed and many more wounded.
Thoughts on what will happen in Ukraine?
How do you know what civilians in Kiev want? I doubt you are/were there recently and probably you don't have magical crystal ball
If you getting your conclusions from Western media then you can watch Russia Today so everything will be mixed up in your head![]()
What can happen in Ukraine?
1. The country splits(hopefully peacefully), and prorussian part will merge with Russia, while the western Ukraine will advance towards EU but its economy will suffer badly at the beginning.
2. Undecided, the country will hardly have any advance for some time.
3. Ukraine as a whole straightens its ties with Russia... or better said Russia is fully back on track.
There are no similarities between the motives in Ukrainian and Egyptian protesters... Egypt was split between Islamist and Secular while Ukraine is split between ProUkrainian and ProRussian part. So in Egypt there was religious conflict and in Ukraine its national one, and in Egypt the population with different religious believes is mixed almost everywhere opposite from Ukraine where you have 2 almost non mixed parts.
Most likely the near outcome will be 2 or 3 since EU(without any significant help of US) is by no match equal to Russia.
DoomYoshi wrote:According to that one guy, all these revolutions are connected.
muy_thaiguy wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:According to that one guy, all these revolutions are connected.
DaGip? Or Xtratabasco? Or jay?
saxitoxin wrote:oVo wrote:I'm not sure what to think, but it seems that the fourteen years of rule by the current leaders may end.
Que? Ukraine has been governed by 5 different Prime Ministers from 4 different political parties in the last 14 years. In the same period, the U.S. has been governed by 2 different parties.
Not a single thing that may or may not have happened in Ukraine is even in the same orbit as the treatment of the Palestinian people that the U.S. - while it's crying crocodile tears over events in Kiev - has enabled through its gun-running to the Israeli mafia state. Or the known pedophile who runs Saudi Arabia, for that matter.2011 - 93 Bahraini civilians (out of pop. of 1 million) killed by U.S.-armed GCC troops, U.S. sends out a press release expressing "concern" - obedient U.S. media run a few stories below the latest headlines on Honey Boo Boo
You can't complain your neighbor didn't rake the leaves off the sidewalk while you're running a radioactive horse meat factory in your backyard.
2014 - 24 Ukrainian "civilians" allegedly killed (out of pop. of 44 million), U.S. goes into overdrive expressing shock and horror - CNN turns to non-stop Ukraine coverage to whip Americans into a frenzy
GoranZ wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:Seems a lot of the civilians (at least in Kiev) don't want to be closely tied to Russia, but would rather have closer ties to the Western Part of Europe. Military action by others looks doubtful, but sanctions certainly seem to be close to happening. Story seems similar to the Egyptian protests/riots as well. Started off with peaceful protesting, and then something set it off and so far at least 100 people have been killed and many more wounded.
Thoughts on what will happen in Ukraine?
How do you know what civilians in Kiev want? I doubt you are/were there recently and probably you don't have magical crystal ball
If you getting your conclusions from Western media then you can watch Russia Today so everything will be mixed up in your head![]()
What can happen in Ukraine?
1. The country splits(hopefully peacefully), and prorussian part will merge with Russia, while the western Ukraine will advance towards EU but its economy will suffer badly at the beginning.
2. Undecided, the country will hardly have any advance for some time.
3. Ukraine as a whole straightens its ties with Russia... or better said Russia is fully back on track.
There are no similarities between the motives in Ukrainian and Egyptian protesters... Egypt was split between Islamist and Secular while Ukraine is split between ProUkrainian and ProRussian part. So in Egypt there was religious conflict and in Ukraine its national one, and in Egypt the population with different religious believes is mixed almost everywhere opposite from Ukraine where you have 2 almost non mixed parts.
Most likely the near outcome will be 2 or 3 since EU(without any significant help of US) is by no match equal to Russia.
patches70 wrote:The only reason why the Ukraine matters to anyone other than Ukranians, in one easy picture-
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
mrswdk wrote:Ukraine is a democracy and would be able to vote said individual out once they had fulfilled their role as the person who leads Ukraine into the EU.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:If anyone remembers back in 2004 when Ukraine had a "revolution" (the so-called "Orange Revolution" which led to a U.S.-approved government seizing power via street protests, only to be immediately defeated at the next election), the Belarus president Alexander Lukashenko had a poignant quote ...These aren’t “color” revolutions—they’re banditry under the guise of democracy . . .this banditry is imposed and paid for from outside, is carried out to benefit individuals who don’t care about their countries and peoples, and interests only those who have imperialist ambitions and are trying to conquer new markets.
All these people who cry about the 1% so happily and blindly march off to cheer the one-percent's bought and paid-for revolutions when it's neatly packaged and marketed with a false David vs. Goliath storyline, as in Iraq or Libya or Syria. It's been two weeks since the U.S. ASOS was recorded discussing who the U.S. was going to choose to run Ukraine when it was all done. Any legitimate, semi-intelligent protesters would have packed up and gone home once that recording was released. The only ones who didn't are idiots and professionals; the ones who are getting their meal tickets punched by throwing molotov cocktails.
mrswdk wrote:That said, I don't believe voting for a representative once every 4/5 years means that your government has licence to do whatever it pleases.
The document provided for a government of ostensible checks and balances (but really, of all checks and no balances), and at the same time guaranteed the utmost freedom, unchecked and unbalanced, to propertied interests. In short, the government itself was tightly laced into a strait jacket, while private economic enterprise was given unprecedented freedom to establish and develop a strong informal government outside the bounds of formal government - a de facto rgime beyond and behind the government de jure. The result is a modern government that is about five times as inflexible, and much less democratic, than the government of Great Britain.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
BigBallinStalin wrote:revolutions aren't popular uprisings.
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