• @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Propaganda isn’t black and white. I forget where I read it originally, but the most discussion happens on the edge of what’s allowed by the rules - so threads like these will always be full of pros/cons for the network health as a whole.

  • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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    2 years ago

    Of note, this line:

    Putin used his speech not only to announce recognition of the separatist republics but to make a broader argument that Ukraine is not truly a separate country from Russia, that the West is responsible for this standoff, and that Ukraine will bear responsibility for any “future bloodletting.”

    For people who have dismissed accusations that Russia building an excuse for war, is this not at least ominous? This is the final sentence from the Kremlin’s transcript:

    That raises another question: why was it necessary to make such generous gifts, beyond the wildest dreams of the most zealous nationalists and, on top of all that, give the republics the right to secede from the unified state without any conditions?

    Reading over his speech, it’s hard to see him as viewing Ukraine with its own will. Instead, it is merely a breakaway nation that should be subject to Russia’s will.

    • Olive
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      12 years ago

      For people who have dismissed accusations that Russia building an excuse for war

      I’m pretty convinced at this point that a good amount of people on this site that are either Russian/Chinese propagandists, are apologists, or are just in complete denial. Every post about this has someone calling out Western media as fake news, etc, but here you go. Here is the proof. They all look like idiots with their foot in their mouths now.

      • @gun@lemmy.ml
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        -12 years ago

        Ah yes. The brilliant Russo-Chinese geopolitical strategy. Fund propagandists to spread their agenda on Lemmy of all fucking places.
        When they can’t prove you wrong on an issue, or even imagine how anyone could disagree with them, they resort to calling you a Russian bot, just like the Democrats do to everyone who disagrees with them. Apparently most of the world is Russian bots 😂
        You should be careful throwing around the word “idiot” with that line of argument 😉

        • Olive
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          12 years ago

          The thing is, your argument is just as thin. There is no point in arguing with a stupid person, because they will just bring you down to their level and win. Which is why you’re not worth it. If you really believe the BS russian propaganda, you’re so far gone it’s not worth it. Russia could nuke Kiev and you would try justify it or call it fake news or something. Take vladdy p’s cock out your mouth.

          • @TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml
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            -52 years ago

            If you really believe the BS russian propaganda, you’re so far gone it’s not worth it. Russia could nuke Kiev and you would try justify it or call it fake news or something.

            Why do you believe Western propaganda this much throughout the thread? Can you not see who is gaslighting since what is now 7 years of this repeated stuff?

            photo

            Take vladdy p’s cock out your mouth.

            You seriously need to take a breather from CIA propaganda. That stuff has made you toxic.

        • It’s not a joint strategy, necessarily. Chinese, I suspect, are simply paid in social credits for displays of fervent nationalism. But it’s certainly cheap enough to pay a room of shills to repeat your talking points of the day. Even on remote outposts like lemmy. For a country with a weak economy and military like Russia, information war is the best bang for the buck.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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      -52 years ago

      So, according to you, people of Donetsk and Luhansk don’t have the right to self determination. Interesting position to take given that this is precisely what Minsk protocol states, which Ukraine is a signatory to.

  • HMH
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    42 years ago

    Hmm, Russia Today is reporting about celebrations in Donetsk and Lugansk because of this decision: https://www.rt.com/russia/550172-donetsk-lugansk-recognition-celebrations/ meanwhile western media and leaders as well as other parts of Ukraine are condemning this move.

    From what I understand Putins’ decision is not too surprising. Ukraine has cut off the separatist controlled regions. This means for example it does not provide any pensions and apparently it’d be pretty hard to even get into other parts of Ukraine from these areas even if you wanted to. That’s why Russia recently started handing out passports. The percentage of ethnic Russians in this regions is pretty high, so a lot of Russian citizens live there now. With growing tensions and more and more armed conflicts this put Putin into a bad spot. After his previous decisions he hardly had a choice but to protect his citizens. So the first thing they tried was to evacuate them. But only few people actually left for Russia. Thus the current decision.

    This is not meant to apologize for any transgressions but merely to state that this was somewhat predictable and I can understand why Putin would act like this.

    Something that is being brought up even more frequently now is a full scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia. I do not see the point in that. What’s in it for Russia? I think Putin would be much happier with Ukraine as neutral buffer to other NATO members like Poland. Does the Ukraine have any natural resources? War is very expensive and Russia spends relatively little money on its military.

        • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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          02 years ago

          Russia’s economy never recovered from being slapped with sanctions following the theft of Crimea. You can see that both in a dip in their nominal GDP and in a dip in the Big Mac index. As that page explains, a lower index value implies that McDonald’s is pricing their burgers lower to match what local people can pay. The ruble fell against the dollar, so the price of a Big Mac relative to a US dollar fell.

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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            12 years ago

            That’s utter nonsense as the article I linked above very clearly shows. If anything, the sanctions forced Russia to start developing its domestic industry making its economy far more robust than it was previously. Russia now also has an open alliance with China meaning that anything Russia can’t produce domestically can be sourced from China. Meanwhile, BRI is creating a huge economic bloc in Eurasia that Russia is an active member of.

            I’m also not sure whom you’re claiming Crimea was stolen from given that people of Crimea are ethnically Russian and have overwhelmingly voted in favor of joining Russia after the 2014 coup. Once again, you don’t appear to care about people’s right for self determination in the slightest. It doesn’t matter to you what people who actually live in Crimea want, all you care about NATO’s geopolitical goals. Really telling on yourself there bud.

            • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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              12 years ago

              That’s utter nonsense as the article I linked above very clearly shows.

              The article shows Russia’s currency sliding in value. It dipped sharply following the annexation of Crimea, began a recovery, and then dipped sharply with the pandemic. So yes, the sanctions absolutely hurt their economy.

              If anything, the sanctions forced Russia to start developing its domestic industry making its economy far more robust than it was previously.

              This is true, the sanctions did have that effect, at least regarding making it resilient to sanctions. This is an effect we’ve seen in other economies under a heavy sanctions regime (Cuba, Iran) where they’ve developed a more internally resilient economy at the cost of overall efficiency. All that said, there are plenty of levers that the West has left to pull. If Russian oligarchs start having their London real estate confiscated, you can bet words will be had with President Putin.

        • @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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          02 years ago

          Is it ever true that an “invader gains nothing”? Or are you just (strangely) saying that there is more to lose than to gain?

          Everyone on reddit is ranting about how it will be another Afghanistan… but what if it were merely another Chechnya? If Putin believes it to be that, he might well decide to invade/annex.

          • @uthredii@lemmy.ml
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            22 years ago

            Ukraine will have strong western support so it won’t be as easy as Chechnya. Although Putin might decide to annex anyway.

            • @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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              02 years ago

              “Strong” support? What’s that mean? Sure, the bullies are beating up the nerd, but the nerd will win because you intend to cheer him on from the sidelines?

              Should have kept their nukes. Now they’re fucked.

    • Ukraine was a neutral buffer before Russia invaded. Seeing Russia dishonor Ukraine’s sovereignty will push what’s left of Ukraine into NATO. So Russia has basically forced NATO encroachment even closer than it was before. And that’s not even counting Finland.

      • @sasalzig@lemmy.ml
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        -12 years ago

        Calling Ukraine neutral after the Western-backed coup of 2014, in which the US candidate became PM and Russian-hating Neonazis got into government is some twisting of facts. The whole Maidan (which was supported massively by Western governments, press and NGOs) was about aligning with the West for fuck’s sake! The invasion only happened after that.

        • @ArchimedesTesseract@lemmy.ml
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          -12 years ago

          They’ll surely love Russia after getting invaded a second time. If alignment or invasion are their choices, Russia is really pushing them into NATO.

          • @sasalzig@lemmy.ml
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            02 years ago

            I’m not disagreeing there. Care to revise your statement that Ukraine was neutral prior to the invasion or are you just going to ignore that?

            • @ArchimedesTesseract@lemmy.ml
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              -12 years ago

              Neutral in what regard? Russia violated their sovereignty in annexing parts of their territory and in supporting militarily separatist movements. They’ve been forced into opposition by Russia’s aggression.

    • @stige@lemmy.ml
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      42 years ago

      I think the fact that this forum is rather small makes it easy for a couple of Russian agents to make it seem like they can speak for leftists here. They seek only to discredit the left and allow anti-democratic corporatocracy to reign.

      • @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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        02 years ago

        Generally speaking, the smaller the forum, the less value it has to discredit or use. If it’s small enough to be easy, it’s small enough to not matter.

        My bet is on “it’s more important to be anti-American than to be pro-left”.

        • @PP44@lemmy.ml
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          22 years ago

          I feel the same way. But I wish the arguments brought up by these “anti-american first” people were more balanced. And balanced does not mean less anti-american, but just to also keep a critical view on Russia.

          An comparison could be with capitalist companies : I deeply hate Facebook. But if it was contested by a new capitalist tech giant on its own market, I would never mindlessly support this new adversary just because I’m anti-Facebook.

          Just as I think anticapitalism should critizise any capitalist power, any country as powerful as the US or Russia should also be criticized for this kind of action.

          This really has war propaganda vibes. Either you are with us, or against us.

          • @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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            02 years ago

            This really has war propaganda vibes. Either you are with us, or against us.

            Could it be any other way? Groups/movements/ideologies that aren’t like this have lower survival odds. Thus evolution weeds them out. Self-awareness being the most limited resource in the universe, those same people are quite certain they’re in the right about it, too…

    • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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      22 years ago

      Didn’t Soviet Union dissolve and get replaced by possibly the worst imaginable version of hard capitalism?

      Basically. It’s a kleptocracy, with systemic theft from the masses going to oligarchs with Putin at the top of the heap. Also dangerous is its political structure. In a well functioning liberal democracy, power is diffused with well defined rules around transfer of power. Putin has for decades been operating without someone else there if he dies or retires. It’s why he’s built up a macho image. Putin must be healthy, or there will be political chaos with no obvious successor. In a system with more diffuse political power, the government barely blinks. Case in point: President Kennedy being assassinated had an incredibly minimal effect in terms of some sort of power struggle.

    • Ninmi
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      22 years ago

      It’s obviously not indicative of the population as a whole, but the Finnish subreddit is inundated with people calling to join NATO immediately. A lot of people saying they’ve changed their minds. The opposition is by far the lowest it has ever been (gallup before today’s news, still mostly opposed to joining) and no doubt a lot of the politicians are thinking the same things, even if only a few are saying it out loud.

      • @roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
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        12 years ago

        Finland doesn’t have a majority of ethnic Russians though. It wouldn’t make as much sense to make it part of Russia. Russia’s actions in the Ukraine are (in a way) democratic.

        • Ninmi
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          22 years ago

          In what way?

            • Ninmi
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              12 years ago

              Even if this is true, it does seem to me like any democratic process was skipped entirely.

    • Olive
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      22 years ago

      God damn, enough with the bullshit. They invaded Ukraine. Full stop.

      • @gun@lemmy.ml
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        -22 years ago

        How? NATO has claimed Russian troops are in LPR and DPR since 2014. Now they are saying Russian troops are in LPR and DPR. What changed?

    • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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      22 years ago

      That assumes that those are legitimate governments. Does every scrap of land that gets its population riled up by a neighboring country with ethnic ties get to succeed?

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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        12 years ago

        It’s strange that you keep questioning the legitimacy of those governments given that they’re supported by the people of Donbas and are recognized by Minsk agreements which I assume you have not bothered actually reading.

        • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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          22 years ago

          The Minsk protocols were violated by both sides before the ink dried. The agreement has been reduced to a joke and asking Ukraine to hold to them while its territorial integrity is violated is a matter of selective enforcement.

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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            12 years ago

            That’s utter and complete nonsense. In fact, Germany and France are insisting that Ukraine starts implementing Minsk agreement at this very moment.

            • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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              02 years ago

              And I’m sure they would be thrilled if they could do so. Germany especially would find it difficult to impose any sanctions with real teeth due to its dependency on Russian natural gas.

        • Olive
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          -12 years ago

          It’s strange that you continue to fall for this shit. It’s actually not strange, it’s kind of suspicious, but mostly comical. They could nuke Kiev and I guarantee you’d be on the lemmy post calling it fake news or trying to justify it.

      • @guojing@lemmy.ml
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        -42 years ago

        Donetsk and Lugansk have been de facto independent for 8 years now, since the US-sponsored, fascist coup in Kiev and subsequent genocide against ethnic Russians in Ukraine. And whether you like it or not, the republics are now officially recognized by Russia, and will probably be recognized soon by other countries like China. Western politicians will whine and implement their sanctions, but no one will care.

        • @Liwott@lemmy.ml
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          12 years ago

          Donetsk and Lugansk have been de facto independent for 8 years now

          A fact that was not recognized by Russia until a few hours before sending in its troops.

          • @gun@lemmy.ml
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            02 years ago

            They did not recognize that it was de facto independent? Sure they did. Everyone did. Whether you acknowledge them as de jure independent republics by right is a different question that Russia just answered today.

        • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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          12 years ago

          The “coup” where over a hundred protestors were killed by the government? That’s not a coup, that’s mass protests.

            • @pingveno@lemmy.mlOP
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              02 years ago

              Of course I have, but just because things didn’t go your way doesn’t mean it’s a coup.

            • The idea that the NATO boogieman is behind popular protests is a common Russian propaganda talking point. NATO is just not sophisticated enough to engineer a mass uprising like the Maidan Revolution. If they had, don’t you think their newly minted puppet government would have “invited” them in already, just like Russia did in Donbas?