Please no needless rudeness, thancc. Also you forgot to respond to the absolute only thing I actually care about (the "Russia can't match Ukraine" while Russia controls their war goals contradiction), while talking a lot about a bunch tangential stuff I explicitly mentioned is besides the point. Could you properly address that bit rather than focusing on unrelated morality questions?
Are you fucking serious. “Was it ever a Ukrainian demand to stop the genocide of Ukrainian people”. Are you listening to yourself. Have you touched grass recently.
I have, just this morning in fact. The blades of grass sadly don't bring news about European wars. You might not be aware, but the world outside cares very little about this one war. Please answer the question or ignore it, but there's no need to be this aggressive for a basic curious question. If you care so much about Ukraine, you could provide the info you have rather than attack me for asking. And if you think this answer is so obvious, instead provide me a link.
People who had it happening to them don’t call it “evacuation”. Evacuations also don’t tend to be by force, or end in internment camps.
You seem to misunderstand what I said there. I am not advocating for the Russian forces to "evacuate" Ukrainians from the warzone, but rather for the Ukraine government to evacuate all civilians who can't or don't wish to contribute to the war to their western allies in Europe. That is not happening right now, and could possibly save many lives. Could even use those NATO transports. It's not good for the war cause, yes, but it would save lives.
You claim to be “oh so neutral” and yet you’re regurgitating Kremlin propaganda 1:1. I have no idea who you’re trying to convince, here.
No idea what that is about. Sadly I don't know Russian and get most of my news from popular European and Unitedstadian outlets, so I find it hard to believe I'm getting it from the Kremlin. If that is just a knee-jerk reaction to the previous misunderstanding, I apologise I guess.
That’s wounded, not killed. Killed we have about 70k Russians, maybe 20k Ukrainian soldiers. Not counting civilians (which are overwhelmingly Ukrainian, anyway).
Thank you for the correction. In either case, it's a lot of people dead, specially on the Russian side. I think the point still stands there.
Obviously, Russia throwing more soldiers into the grinder to die has not proven effective in advancing its war goals, so why aren’t they fucking off to their side of the border? This kind of logic always cuts both ways and you applying it to one side only betrays your bias.
I don't see any Russians here advocating for the continuation of the war, do you? If they were I'd equally push back at their ideas. But the reality here is that they control some regions, and kindly asking a military to forgo all of its conquests will mean that the war was for nothing. Meanwhile, Zelensky's administration in conjunction with NATO seems intent on dragging this war out until either Russia loses all conquests or every able-bodied Ukrainian is dead. Now which sounds more viable as a peace talk demand, for Russia to forgo every conquest they've spent Russian lives, labour and capital on, and also pay a bunch of reparations on top of their sanctions, or for Ukraine to accept its current de facto domain and work within it to safeguard the lives of Ukrainians in all lands without having to send more troops on counter-offensive after counter-offensive? Neither is a pleasant choice, but there are no pleasant choices in war.
“We” doesn’t matter. Ukraine will fight until it’s free, Russia until it’s exhausted. That’s what’s going to happen, that’s how war works, no matter your preference, war is and will always be unaesthetic: It continues until the parties have an agreement on what can be achieved by both sides, and with Russia being unrealistic (because jingoist and superiority complex and валяй, ебёна мать!1) it’s dragging out. Russia’s mind about its own goals cannot currently be changed by any other means but on the battlefield, that’s why that’s where negotiations take place.
And then I guess we circle back to the old point where Russia has already pretty much achieved its goal and is just fighting to keep what land they grabbed at this point. I think it's just a matter of opinion on what is "unrealistic", as I also find it very unrealistic to believe some invading army would just give up on its conquests, specially if they believe their own rhetoric (and I'm pretty sure a bunch of them do) of trying to prevent NATO encroachment and protecting the Russians in the now annexed lands. Could the same case for "unrealistic" not be applied to Ukrainians who demand such capitulation? If "Ukraine will fight until it's free", it's safe to assume that the war will go on until either every able-bodied Ukrainian (who hasn't fled illegally) is dead or victory is achieved. I would certainly not support some government in marshal law that puts in practice such a plan.
I subscribe to the same philosophy as Linus Torvalds in these matters. You can rest assured that I’m not writing in anger.
Linus Torvalds is famous for his C programming skills, not his communication capabilities. It would be less of a waste of both our times if you spent your words on information rather than petty insults.
You probably don’t get the reference: Pushkin, The Wagon of Life.
Sorry, I don't read European poetry. can I interest you in some Funk?