War

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
They do have that in common with the russians, the ability to self justify any behavior, compartmentalize any information, if it results in them getting what they want.
I believe a key difference is that China never once recognized Taiwan as a nation. They always treated it as a breakaway province. What you and I might call conquest, Beijing would — sincerely— call fixing a bookkeeping error.

US is so inextricably tied to China that, for fear of antagonizing them, our posture toward Taiwan entirely skates around the sovereignty issue.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I believe a key difference is that China never once recognized Taiwan as a nation. They always treated it as a breakaway province. What you and I might call conquest, Beijing would — sincerely— call fixing a bookkeeping error.

US is so inextricably tied to China that, for fear of antagonizing them, our posture toward Taiwan entirely skates around the sovereignty issue.
According to UN law, it is up to the people living in a place to decide their own political and national fate. Even in modern America, you cannot refight the civil war, if say Florida or Texas wanted to succeed. The Brits can't do it with Scotland and Canada can't do it with Quebec, unless native rights and land rights are affected and then we could strip off vast chunks of Quebec and the UN would be fine with it.

China has no legitimate claim to Taiwan, or Tibet according to post war UN law, it should be up to the people using a properly supervised referendum. I would not favor condemning millions of people to be slaves of an authoritarian one-man rule by whim state that has no legitimate claim to power itself. I wouldn't give Vlad an inch of Ukrainian territory or control over a single human being, since we see how those already under his control are treated and have many examples of atrocities.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
According to UN law, it is up to the people living in a place to decide their own political and national fate. Even in modern America, you cannot refight the civil war, if say Florida or Texas wanted to succeed. The Brits can't do it with Scotland and Canada can't do it with Quebec, unless native rights and land rights are affected and then we could strip off vast chunks of Quebec and the UN would be fine with it.

China has no legitimate claim to Taiwan, or Tibet according to post war UN law, it should be up to the people using a properly supervised referendum. I would not favor condemning millions of people to be slaves of an authoritarian one-man rule by whim state that has no legitimate claim to power itself. I wouldn't give Vlad an inch of Ukrainian territory or control over a single human being, since we see how those already under his control are treated and have many examples of atrocities.
UN law is ceremonial, not realistically powerful.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The Rosa Parks of Putin’s Russia?
The under-reported sentencing of an unknown Russian woman illustrates how terrified the Putin regime is of any kind of dissent, how far it’s willing to go crush it and how Russians can still exhibit moral fiber and resist.

On May 10, a St. Petersburg court sentenced a 61-year-old pensioner named Irina Tsybaneva to two years’ probation. Her crime? On Oct. 6, 2022, just before Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 70th birthday, she placed a note on the grave of his parents that read: “To the maniac’s parents: Please take him. He brings so much pain and sorrow, and the whole world is praying for his death. Death to Putin. You raised a monster and a murderer.”

Strong words — and absolutely on target. The more important point, however, is that Tsybaneva acted on an emotional impulse and had no intention of making a public act of protest. Her action, in other words, was not political.

As she told the court: “I am 61 years old, I am a widow. I am not interested in politics and never have been, I am not a member of any political parties, and I have never been. I’ve never been to a rally and I never intended to.” But “after watching the news, I was overcome with fear.” She said she doesn’t “remember how I wrote it at all. I don’t remember the text at all. I realize that, succumbing to an emotional impulse, I made a rash act. I’m sorry that my actions could hurt or offend anyone, I’m sorry. It was a spontaneous action, not a planned action to get someone’s attention.”

Indeed, the note was nothing more than a cri de coeur by a senior citizen overwhelmed by the emotions produced by Putin and his war against Ukraine. Tsybaneva could have declared her disgust on Red Square. She could have distributed leaflets. Instead, she wrote a brief note, folded it and placed it in an inconspicuous spot on the grave.

“Nobody knew about the note,” she said. “I did not expect such a resonance. I was sure no one would ever see the note. The note was folded with the text on the inside, not attracting anyone’s attention at all.”

And yet the note did attract someone’s attention. An investigation was launched, and, after the police presumably spent hours tracking her down, Tsybaneva was placed under house arrest last fall. At her trial in May, she was found guilty of “desecrating burial sites for reasons of political hatred.”

The note clearly indicates that her feelings for Putin were hateful. But the hatred was not political; it was personal. Nor can one seriously believe that placing a note on a grave is a form of desecration.

And yet, despite the manifest harmlessness of Tsybaneva’s gesture, the Putin regime decided that a trial and punishment were imperative — regardless of the time and resources that might have been more fruitfully spent on fighting real crime. Only a leader who is profoundly fearful of and sensitive to any criticism, however slight, could take umbrage at a pensioner’s private opinion. A strong, self-confident regime would not act this way. A brittle and self-doubting regime would.

And it is precisely because of its weakness that such a regime responded the only way it knows how: by means of repression that, in intruding into the private lives of its subjects, resembles the totalitarianism of Stalin’s Soviet Union.

Unfortunately for Putin, the problem with his totalitarian aspirations is obvious. A system of total control works only if the regime is strong and has ample resources on hand. And that is precisely what Putin’s Russia — embroiled in a hopeless war, torn by political divisions within the elite and hamstrung by sanctions — is not.

Could Irina Tsybaneva become the Rosa Parks of Putin’s Russia? Parks’s act of defiance was supported by the growing civil rights movement and the network of African American churches that helped form a vibrant civil society within the oppressive Jim Crow South. Unfortunately, Russian civil society was among Putin’s first victims, and its leaders are either in exile or in jail.

But there is hope. Tsybaneva’s light sentence could inspire other Russians to leave notes on graves and monuments throughout the country. That may not seem like much, but revolutions often start with minor acts of protest that snowball into mass revolts.

Regardless of her immediate impact, Tsybaneva will very likely go down in history as an example of a “good Russian” who was willing to resist the evil that Putin and his regime represent. She will be lionized when that regime ends.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Former MI6 boss explains why NATO weapons will defeat Russia in Ukraine | Richard Dearlove

34,759 views Premiered 3 hours ago #timesradio
"This is a European conflict of real significance and I think it's important that Ukraine comes out of this having regained its territory."

Former MI6 boss Richard dearlove says Ukriane can and will defeat Putin with NATO support on #timesradio
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
A Leopard tank isn't a Leopard. Just saying.
No, but it seems a reasonable expectation for a photon torpedo to feature the use of photons, besides as an incidental occurrence during a matter/antimatter explosion...
I'm a star trek fanboi, and never really noticed this before, i'm more disappointed in myself than in the writers.
 

printer

Well-Known Member

Opinion survey across 500 colleges records mood of fear and anxiety among Russian students. One-third of respondents want to leave country.
The independent news outlet iStories has discovered in open-access form the results of a poll commissioned by the Russian government and surveying the opinions of students and employees across more than 500 colleges.

(Although, from the government’s point of view, these are all “Russian” schools, 30 of them are located in Russian-occupied Ukrainian regions.)
The first round of polling took place last April. The survey was published on the sociological platform Neravnodushny Chelovek (“Engaged Personhood”), a website that describes itself as a collaborative space for addressing social problems through the joint work of citizens and state organizations.
State agencies that commissioned the survey include the Ministry of Science as well as the Education Ministry and the Presidential Administration.
Students, faculty, and staff were asked, for example, about their feelings in connection with their home country. “Fear and anxiety” topped the list of responses at 36 percent; “hope” came out second at 25 percent; “disappointment and outrage” were expressed by 20 percent of respondents; and only 12–14 percent said they feel “respect, pride, and trust” when they think about Russia.

Roughly a third of respondents confessed they would like to leave the country. In some colleges, this mood was more prevalent than elsewhere: for example, at the Moscow-based Higher School of Economics (a leading research institution), 58 percent of respondents said they wanted to leave.
When asked about the words that best describe Russia’s current situation, 44 percent of respondents picked the word “crisis” from a list of options. Another third opted for “decline”; a quarter of participants chose “degradation.” Lowest on the list were “strengthening” (23 percent), “development” (18 percent), “revival” (16 percent), and “stability” (eight percent).

Sixty-nine percent of respondents said the government’s priority should be economic development and improving the quality of life in the country. Only 13 percent prioritized “state power, military might, and influencing international processes.”

Railway traffic in Crimea suspended after explosion on tracks
Traffic along the section of railway between Simferopol and Sevastopol has been suspended, according to Oleg Kryuchkov, an advisor to the head of Russia’s government in Crimea.

Telegram channels Baza, Mash and Shot reported that an explosion occurred in the Simferopol region of Crimea on the morning of May 18.

Baza writes that eight train cars transporting grain were derailed as a result of the explosion. A 50-meter (164-foot) stretch of the railway was also reportedly damaged. A large crater was found at the explosion site.

Russian state-run news outlet RIA Novosti reported that “the cause of the incident is under investigation.” Russia’s state news agency Interfax reported that a freight train that was traveling from Simferopol to Sevastopol and carrying grain was partially derailed.

According to Sergey Aksyonov, the Kremlin-appointed governor of annexed Crimea, there were no casualties. Vladimir Konstantinov, the head of the Crimean parliament, said that the “explosion occurred due to the interference of unauthorized persons.”
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
No, but it seems a reasonable expectation for a photon torpedo to feature the use of photons, besides as an incidental occurrence during a matter/antimatter explosion...
I'm a star trek fanboi, and never really noticed this before, i'm more disappointed in myself than in the writers.
Canna posited how it could be called a photon torpedo. I'm just pointing out that a Leopard tank doesn't use Leopards. I was disappointed when I found that out. and yes, I'm just kidding around.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
No, but it seems a reasonable expectation for a photon torpedo to feature the use of photons, besides as an incidental occurrence during a matter/antimatter explosion...
I'm a star trek fanboi, and never really noticed this before, i'm more disappointed in myself than in the writers.
Very high energy photons are the product of matter antimatter mutual annihilation, it produces nothing but photons when it explodes, there would probably be secondary effects too, like a big silent flash of visible light etc.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
No, but it seems a reasonable expectation for a photon torpedo to feature the use of photons, besides as an incidental occurrence during a matter/antimatter explosion...
I'm a star trek fanboi, and never really noticed this before, i'm more disappointed in myself than in the writers.
Elon's starship isn't really a starship either, but might be an interplanetary one, if you wanted to be subjected to zero G and high radiation levels for the 7-month trip to Mars.
 
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