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2dimes wrote:Are they getting waffle tacos?
mrswdk wrote:As I was reading the news-feed about Crimea a few minutes ago tears came unbidden to my eyes, something that surprises me more than anyone, as it's a very very rare thing for me. In a way, that in itself makes me sad because the people of Crimea are hardly the only ones suffering out there, and I don't exactly sit every morning and shed tears for the people of numerous counties in Africa or France that deserve them just as much or more. But ofc, that is understandable, for if one was to continually reflect over the atrocities of the world, then one would not have time for much else than tears.
Whatever the case, it would seem the people of Crimea are going to get their will through, to some degree anyway. And it is a truly fantastic thing to see democracy at work. And I don't mean elections, that sort of democracy is simply the best we have, but oh so flawed. I mean the people taking to the streets as if it was the 18th century and demanding that their will be obliged, risking injury or death.
I sincerely hope that if the day should come in China that I have the courage to face the flying stars.
People of Crimea, I salute you!
The Bison King wrote:mrswdk wrote:As I was reading the news-feed about Crimea a few minutes ago tears came unbidden to my eyes, something that surprises me more than anyone, as it's a very very rare thing for me. In a way, that in itself makes me sad because the people of Crimea are hardly the only ones suffering out there, and I don't exactly sit every morning and shed tears for the people of numerous counties in Africa or France that deserve them just as much or more. But ofc, that is understandable, for if one was to continually reflect over the atrocities of the world, then one would not have time for much else than tears.
Whatever the case, it would seem the people of Crimea are going to get their will through, to some degree anyway. And it is a truly fantastic thing to see democracy at work. And I don't mean elections, that sort of democracy is simply the best we have, but oh so flawed. I mean the people taking to the streets as if it was the 18th century and demanding that their will be obliged, risking injury or death.
I sincerely hope that if the day should come in China that I have the courage to face the flying stars.
People of Crimea, I salute you!
With all do respect, wtf are you talking about? specifically?
Dukasaur wrote:A new Crimean War sounds like a blast!
Special memorandum to British Expeditionary Force: Cavalry charging up a narrow valley with enemy Gatling guns on both sides is a non-starter, tactically speaking.
patches70 wrote:The Bison King wrote:mrswdk wrote:As I was reading the news-feed about Crimea a few minutes ago tears came unbidden to my eyes, something that surprises me more than anyone, as it's a very very rare thing for me. In a way, that in itself makes me sad because the people of Crimea are hardly the only ones suffering out there, and I don't exactly sit every morning and shed tears for the people of numerous counties in Africa or France that deserve them just as much or more. But ofc, that is understandable, for if one was to continually reflect over the atrocities of the world, then one would not have time for much else than tears.
Whatever the case, it would seem the people of Crimea are going to get their will through, to some degree anyway. And it is a truly fantastic thing to see democracy at work. And I don't mean elections, that sort of democracy is simply the best we have, but oh so flawed. I mean the people taking to the streets as if it was the 18th century and demanding that their will be obliged, risking injury or death.
I sincerely hope that if the day should come in China that I have the courage to face the flying stars.
People of Crimea, I salute you!
With all do respect, wtf are you talking about? specifically?
Haha, the Crimean peninsula is an autonomous Republic within the Ukraine. Crimea is a substantial population that are Russian, the largest demographic on the peninsula.
Anyway, these are the people who stormed and took over the Crimean parliament building in Simferopol. The new government in Kiev, you know, the people who took over the government by storming the government capitol? The new government is pretty pissed and are calling those who stormed the Crimean parliament "criminals". The Crimea is pretty much pro Russia, the new government in Kiev is pro EU/western. So you've got some friction there.
On top of that, Russia maintains a naval base in the Crimea and have just sent a ton of troops into the Crimea as well. So the government in Kiev is kind of powerless to do anything about the criminals in Crimea who stormed the parliament.
The police in Crimea couldn't, or wouldn't, eject the people who stormed the parliament, might have something to do with how well armed the stormers are, but the police instead just stood around watching.
Then large groups of pro Russian crowds started gathering at the parliament building chanting something about a Crimean referendum and chanting stuff like to the effect that Crimea makes her own decisions and don't want Kiev telling them what to do.
NATO of course gets it's nose involved. Warns the Russians who seem to be ignoring said warnings. Pretty much like how Russia ignores Obama, Rice and the rest of the US administration.
If Kiev wants the Crimea they'll have to fight for it, so it appears. This of course means civil war and actual invasion from Russia, which Kiev wouldn't survive, the new government at least.
The OP is sarcastic (I think) and in effect condemning the latest happenings there in Crimea. Except I'm not sure how what the people in Crimea did is any different than what the people in Kiev did. But apparently the people in Kiev are freedom fighters while the people in Crimea are criminals.
Not sure how all that works, but it's a messy business in the Ukraine right now. So break out the popcorn, Russia just might give yet another lesson like they did back in the South Ossetia war when they charged over the border and beat the crap out of Georgia while the McCain's in the US government watched on helplessly. In that little affair, though, the Georgians deserved to get the snot kicked out of them for what they were doing. IMO.
And to think, if McCain had had his way the Ukraine and Georgia would both be members of Nato and we'd have gone to war with Russia over Georgia (and the Ukraine if it comes to it). I have to ask, is it worth it for the US to be dragged into an actual shooting war with Russia over Georgia or the Ukraine?
I don't think so. But people will yell "Democracy, Rwaor!" and not bother asking that question.
patches70 wrote:
And to think, if McCain had had his way the Ukraine and Georgia would both be members of Nato and we'd have gone to war with Russia over Georgia (and the Ukraine if it comes to it). I have to ask, is it worth it for the US to be dragged into an actual shooting war with Russia over Georgia or the Ukraine?
I don't think so. But people will yell "Democracy, Rwaor!" and not bother asking that question.
Dukasaur wrote:A new Crimean War sounds like a blast!
Special memorandum to British Expeditionary Force: Cavalry charging up a narrow valley with enemy Gatling guns on both sides is a non-starter, tactically speaking.
BigBallinStalin wrote:patches70 wrote:
And to think, if McCain had had his way the Ukraine and Georgia would both be members of Nato and we'd have gone to war with Russia over Georgia (and the Ukraine if it comes to it). I have to ask, is it worth it for the US to be dragged into an actual shooting war with Russia over Georgia or the Ukraine?
I don't think so. But people will yell "Democracy, Rwaor!" and not bother asking that question.
A war between the US and Russia is highly unlikely cuz nukes.
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Dukasaur wrote:A new Crimean War sounds like a blast!
Special memorandum to British Expeditionary Force: Cavalry charging up a narrow valley with enemy Gatling guns on both sides is a non-starter, tactically speaking.
Yes, but it gave us The Trooper, so it's all good.
-TG
AndyDufresne wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:patches70 wrote:
And to think, if McCain had had his way the Ukraine and Georgia would both be members of Nato and we'd have gone to war with Russia over Georgia (and the Ukraine if it comes to it). I have to ask, is it worth it for the US to be dragged into an actual shooting war with Russia over Georgia or the Ukraine?
I don't think so. But people will yell "Democracy, Rwaor!" and not bother asking that question.
A war between the US and Russia is highly unlikely cuz nukes.
Mmhm. Wars really between any powers seems unlikely nowadays. All the powers mostly seem to go to war with lower tier powers. It's like varsity only ever wants to play the JV now.
--Andy
GoranZ wrote:
American... always intentionally missing what matters the most.
Crimean peninsula was Russian for almost 2 centuries until Soviets gifted it to Ukraine in 1954 as token of friendship between Ukrainian and Russian nations... Thats why majority of the population is from Russian origin. Now if Ukraine wants to turn their back on Russia they should return the gift, at least that's how Russian eyes see the current situation.
BBS wrote:A war between the US and Russia is highly unlikely cuz nukes.
Dukasaur wrote:I'm surprised nobody corrected me. It was cannon, not Gatling guns.![]()
patches70 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:I'm surprised nobody corrected me. It was cannon, not Gatling guns.![]()
Ha! I quoted the "Cannons to the left of us" part of the poem in my response to your post, but I wasn't going to go correcting you. Gatling guns, cannons, doesn't matter, the Light Brigade got chewed up like hamburger and it's called "courageous". I got another word for it, and it rhymes with Cupid.
Hahaha.
DoomYoshi wrote:patches70 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:I'm surprised nobody corrected me. It was cannon, not Gatling guns.![]()
Ha! I quoted the "Cannons to the left of us" part of the poem in my response to your post, but I wasn't going to go correcting you. Gatling guns, cannons, doesn't matter, the Light Brigade got chewed up like hamburger and it's called "courageous". I got another word for it, and it rhymes with Cupid.
Hahaha.
Lupid?
patches70 wrote:GoranZ wrote:
American... always intentionally missing what matters the most.
Crimean peninsula was Russian for almost 2 centuries until Soviets gifted it to Ukraine in 1954 as token of friendship between Ukrainian and Russian nations... Thats why majority of the population is from Russian origin. Now if Ukraine wants to turn their back on Russia they should return the gift, at least that's how Russian eyes see the current situation.
I'm not sure what your first sentence means, I was just telling The Bison King what was going on is all, cause he asked. I'm not missing anything.
Sure, if Crimea doesn't want to be part of the Ukraine, then the Ukraine should let them go. If the Ukraine wants to go with the EU, more power to them I say. I don't care. If Crimea wants to be part of Russia, good on them, if they want to be independent, that's just fine and dandy as well as far as I care.
Who does care is our politicians and apparently a bunch of useful idiots. The Ukranians storm the capitol in Kiev but then get all pissy when the Crimeans do the exact same thing in Simferopol and they are apparently criminals according to the new "democratic" government in Kiev. Democracy doesn't mean so much to the people who took power in explicitly undemocratic fashion.
Hell, Crimea has their own Constitution from Ukraine. If anybody has the right to say "screw the government in Kiev" it's the Crimeans. But apparently to the new bosses in Kiev that ain't gonna fly, except they can't do a damn thing about it unless someone else steps in for them (hint hint: the US).
But he, the point is, from this American's point of view, is it's none of the United States' business at all. Ukraine, Crimea and Russia can work it out all on their own.
Russia sees the situation as protecting their own interests, of which they have plenty of actual interest in, unlike the US.
But black is white and up is down in this new normal of a world we live in where our Sec of State called the Egyptian military coup "Restoring democracy".BBS wrote:A war between the US and Russia is highly unlikely cuz nukes.
Ahh, nukes or not, if any Nato nation gets invaded by Russia for any reason we are treaty bound to defend them militarily. I know it was a long time ago, way way back during Bush Jr's term, but there was a serious push to get Georgia and the Ukraine as full members of Nato. Something Georgia was keen on, that's why they sent troops to Iraq and Afghanistan to help old Bush Jr in his "War on Terror".
They want to be under the protection of the US. (we even promised Georgia that they'd get in as full members way back in 2008, that was before their ill advised aggression toward Ossetia and the ass whooping they took from Russia. Since then we've been quietly rebuffing their advances.)
That's all fine and dandy and it was one McCain who was loudest in the call for Georgia especially. Then the South Ossetian war happened. People started asking, "If Georgia was a member of Nato, what would that have meant?" The answer was pretty clear, we (the US) would have been technically at war with Russia.
I can't blame Georgia from wanting to be in Nato, after all, they face a clear threat from Russia who has troops in official Georgian territory to this very day.
Nato isn't a fucking social club as some would try to make other believe, it's a military alliance. Georgia and the Ukraine both have valid and pressing reasons for wanting to join Nato, but the US has to think about the entanglement that such agreements make.
The senators who every year try to push this always receive lobby money to push this, but smarting heads have thus far prevailed. Georgia for instance won't be allowed to join Nato until they clean up their messes. But later this year yet another round of attempts by them are scheduled. Those attempts will fail yet again because the risk for the US is too great and the reward for having said country in the alliance is too minimal.
Ukraine is in the exact same boat. I can see from certain politician's eyes as well, they seek to hedge in Russia. The problem is that the Cold war is over, or so we were told. Nato is a dinosaur and it should be gotten rid of, disbanded because the purpose of Nato no longer exists.
It's been warped, in fact Nato which is a supposed defensive alliance was used to launch a war of aggression against Iraq, if we remember to back then. Nato's role has to change since the fall of Soviet Russia we were told. Bullshit is all it is. And have Georgia in it? Which actually started the war against a nuclear armed power if we haven't forgotten. Ha! Only an idiot would let Georgia and Ukraine join Nato.
As for the idiots who would do such a thing, I give you John McCain, Bush Jr and, people forget this one, Paul Ryan. Ryan even received a crap load of money from Georgian lobby groups way back in 2007-2008, before Georgia's unfortunate experience with Russia.
Besides, boxing in Russia is like boxing in a raccoon in a cave. Spelunkers know, you always check for raccoon tracks in caves. Your ass be crawling on your belly through tight fits and come face to face with a raccoon who by hell will claw the living shit out of your face while your hands are all stuck between you and the cave wall. It's a bad experience for the caver and the raccoon let me tell ya!
(yeah, I used to go caving when I was a lot younger, sue me, it's fun as hell).
So, war is unlikely between the US and Russia, but if the wrong buttons keep being pushed, well, wars have been started for lesser reasons.
I'm just saying people need to think a little bit more about consequences, risk assessment and have some general common sense. And have a clear understanding what our actual national interests are. Those who think it's our job to save the freaking world or be world police got a lot of thinking to do
patches70 wrote:BBS wrote:A war between the US and Russia is highly unlikely cuz nukes.
Ahh, nukes or not, if any Nato nation gets invaded by Russia for any reason we are treaty bound to defend them militarily. I know it was a long time ago, way way back during Bush Jr's term, but there was a serious push to get Georgia and the Ukraine as full members of Nato. Something Georgia was keen on, that's why they sent troops to Iraq and Afghanistan to help old Bush Jr in his "War on Terror".
They want to be under the protection of the US. (we even promised Georgia that they'd get in as full members way back in 2008, that was before their ill advised aggression toward Ossetia and the ass whooping they took from Russia. Since then we've been quietly rebuffing their advances.)
That's all fine and dandy and it was one McCain who was loudest in the call for Georgia especially. Then the South Ossetian war happened. People started asking, "If Georgia was a member of Nato, what would that have meant?" The answer was pretty clear, we (the US) would have been technically at war with Russia.
patches70 wrote:I can't blame Georgia from wanting to be in Nato, after all, they face a clear threat from Russia who has troops in official Georgian territory to this very day.
Nato isn't a fucking social club as some would try to make other believe, it's a military alliance. Georgia and the Ukraine both have valid and pressing reasons for wanting to join Nato, but the US has to think about the entanglement that such agreements make.
The senators who every year try to push this always receive lobby money to push this, but smarting heads have thus far prevailed. Georgia for instance won't be allowed to join Nato until they clean up their messes. But later this year yet another round of attempts by them are scheduled. Those attempts will fail yet again because the risk for the US is too great and the reward for having said country in the alliance is too minimal.
Ukraine is in the exact same boat. I can see from certain politician's eyes as well, they seek to hedge in Russia. The problem is that the Cold war is over, or so we were told. Nato is a dinosaur and it should be gotten rid of, disbanded because the purpose of Nato no longer exists.
It's been warped, in fact Nato which is a supposed defensive alliance was used to launch a war of aggression against Iraq, if we remember to back then. Nato's role has to change since the fall of Soviet Russia we were told. Bullshit is all it is. And have Georgia in it? Which actually started the war against a nuclear armed power if we haven't forgotten. Ha! Only an idiot would let Georgia and Ukraine join Nato.
As for the idiots who would do such a thing, I give you John McCain, Bush Jr and, people forget this one, Paul Ryan. Ryan even received a crap load of money from Georgian lobby groups way back in 2007-2008, before Georgia's unfortunate experience with Russia.
Besides, boxing in Russia is like boxing in a raccoon in a cave. Spelunkers know, you always check for raccoon tracks in caves. Your ass be crawling on your belly through tight fits and come face to face with a raccoon who by hell will claw the living shit out of your face while your hands are all stuck between you and the cave wall. It's a bad experience for the caver and the raccoon let me tell ya!
(yeah, I used to go caving when I was a lot younger, sue me, it's fun as hell).
So, war is unlikely between the US and Russia, but if the wrong buttons keep being pushed, well, wars have been started for lesser reasons.
I'm just saying people need to think a little bit more about consequences, risk assessment and have some general common sense. And have a clear understanding what our actual national interests are. Those who think it's our job to save the freaking world or be world police got a lot of thinking to do
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Sure, sure. I don't see why NATO should stop pushing to get Ukraine in--from their logic. It's not like Russia is going to nuke anybody.
BBS wrote:If Georgia was in the NATO, then Russia wouldn't have been pushing so hard. The US and Russia have had their fair share of proxy wars through their allies, but those means haven't led to a nuclear war yet..
BigBallinStalin wrote:I estimate the risk of nuclear war with Russia to be extremely improbable.
The two closest times were the Cuban Missile Crisis (with our bone-headed Chiefs wanting to bomb Cuba to start a nuclear war) and Reagan's nuclear armament program.
patches70 wrote:Now in that instance I can see why we'd have been a little spooked, having Russian nukes ready to fire just off our shore is bad news.
But do you remember what it was that had the Russians so spooked that they felt they had the need to risk full scale nuclear war with the US?
Dukasaur wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:I estimate the risk of nuclear war with Russia to be extremely improbable.
The two closest times were the Cuban Missile Crisis (with our bone-headed Chiefs wanting to bomb Cuba to start a nuclear war) and Reagan's nuclear armament program.
You ignored his question.
Probably inadvertently, but nonetheless...patches70 wrote:Now in that instance I can see why we'd have been a little spooked, having Russian nukes ready to fire just off our shore is bad news.
But do you remember what it was that had the Russians so spooked that they felt they had the need to risk full scale nuclear war with the US?
I hate people talking past each other, so I'll answer.
The US had just reached an agreement with Turkey to place nuclear missiles there. The Russians were scared shitless. They knew that putting missiles in Cuba was going to be trouble, but they felt they had no choice. It was the only counter to the prospect of American missiles in Turkey. Turkey was just too close to home, with missile flight times under 10 minutes to major Russian cities, and what's worse, it has a lot of really brutal mountain terrain where the missiles could be hidden in such a way as to make them almost invisible to satellites and spy planes.
When the Russians agreed to pull their missiles out of Cuba, the Americans agreed to cancel the agreement with Turkey. That is one of the little details American propaganda rarely mentions about the causes and/or effects of the Cuban missile crisis.
BBS wrote:I estimate the risk of nuclear war with Russia to be extremely improbable.
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