moon
Satire for Sanity
Fuck off. I'm moron intolerant.What's that got to do w/ the U.S. ?
Fuck off. I'm moron intolerant.What's that got to do w/ the U.S. ?
Only as long as it is supported by US Evangelists- and that won't be for much longer. There is a Latino majority coming to the USA,.Alright, so then what remains to be seen is how long Israel will hold Palestinian land.
This fable could be applied to Russia too. It wasn't enough that they successfully defended themselves against Nazi Germany, but they felt the need to take over all the states not occupied by the West.As I said before, if this was just about the Palestinians, I agree that they might just go the way of the native americans. Only Israel's now expanded things beyond Palestinian lands. I'm sure you've heard of the saying of biting off more than you can chew. Another idea that comes to mind:
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The Dog and The Shadow - Fables of Aesop
If you covet all, you may lose all. A dog carrying food crossed a bridge and sees its reflection. Wanting the reflection's food the dog drops his. Ooops.fablesofaesop.com
In the end they lost the Baltics and the Balkans.
And now they've caused once neutral Finland and Sweden to join NATO.
How did they 'lead' the coup?You should quit denying the truth. The US-led coup of 2014 started the war by empowering the Ukrainian neo-Nazis.
By Miss Piggy and McCain showing up?
Yes. Their politcs are no longer controlled by the Kremlin.You sure they really lost all of the Balkans?
That does not mean they are controlled by the Kremlin. Nothing wrong with being partial to Moscow as long as it's their free will.Now, I know that Serbia is currently embroiled in protests, but I think it's telling that the Serbian President apologized to his people for supporting Ukraine rather than for supporting Russia.
No doubt the U.S. supported the Maidan Revolution (which was irresponsible), but they couldn't have caused it. Some Ukranian people caused it.What's publicly visible is generally just the tip of the iceberg. If you'd like a deep dive into the American role in the 2014 Euromaidan coup, I highly recommend the following article:
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Timeline: Euromaidan, the original “Ukraine Crisis”
As Russia actually do launch an invasion or “special operation” in Ukraine, we thought now was a good time to recap on how we got here. The historical, political and ethnic divisions in…off-guardian.org
Some words from American Professor and Statesman Jeffrey Sachs' are also good. Quoting from an article that's taken from a speech Sachs made to European Parliament:
**
As you know, Viktor Yanukovych was elected as president of Ukraine in 2010 on the platform of Ukraine’s neutrality. Russia had no territorial interests or designs in Ukraine at all. I know. I was there off-and-on during these years. What Russia was negotiating during 2010 was a 25-year lease to 2042 for Sevastopol naval base. That’s it. There were no Russian demands for Crimea, or for the Donbas. Nothing like that at all. The idea that Putin is reconstructing the Russian empire is childish propaganda. Excuse me.
If anyone knows the day-to-day and year-to-year history, this is childish stuff. Yet childish stuff seems to work better than adult stuff. So, there were no territorial demands at all before the 2014 coup [in Ukraine]. Yet the United States decided that Yanukovych must be overthrown because he favored neutrality and opposed NATO enlargement. It’s called a regime change operation.
There have been around one hundred regime-change operations by the U.S. since 1947, many in your countries [speaking to the MEPs] and many all over the world.
(Political scientist Lindsey O’Rourke documented 64 U.S. covert regime-change operations between 1947 and 1989, and concluded that “Regime change operations, especially those conducted covertly, have often led to prolonged instability, civil wars, and humanitarian crises in the affected regions.” See O’Rourke’s 2018 book, Covert Regime Change: America’s Secret Cold War. After 1989, there is ample evidence of the C.I.A. involved in Syria, Libya, Ukraine, Venezuela, and many other countries.)
That’s what the C.I.A. does for a living. Please know it. It’s a very unusual kind of foreign policy. In the American government, if you don’t like the other side, you don’t negotiate with them, you try to overthrow them, preferably, covertly. If it doesn’t work covertly, you do it overtly. You always say it’s not our fault. They’re the aggressor. They’re the other side.
They’re “Hitler.” That comes up every two or three years. Whether it’s Saddam Hussein, whether it’s [deposed Syrian President Bashar] al-Assad, whether it’s Putin, that’s very convenient. That’s the only foreign policy explanation the American people are ever given. Well, we’re facing Munich 1938. We can’t talk to the other side. They’re evil and implacable foes. That’s the only model of foreign policy we ever hear from our government and mass media. The mass media repeats it entirely because it’s completely suborned by the U.S. government.
The Maidan Revolution & Aftermath
Now in 2014, the U.S. worked actively to overthrow Yanukovych. Everybody knows the phone call intercepted by my Columbia University colleague, Victoria Nuland, and the U.S. ambassador, Geoffrey Pyatt. You don’t get better evidence. The Russians intercepted her call, and they put it on the Internet.
It’s fascinating. By doing that, they all got promoted in the Biden administration. That’s the job. When the Maidan occurred, I was called soon after. “Professor Sachs, the new Ukrainian prime minister would like to see you to talk about the economic crisis.” So, I flew to Kyiv, and I was walked around the Maidan. And I was told how the U.S. paid the money for all the people around the Maidan, the “spontaneous” Revolution of Dignity.
Ladies and gentlemen, please, how did all those Ukrainian media outlets suddenly appear at the time of the Maidan? Where did all this organization come from? Where did all these buses come from? Where did all those people come from? Are you kidding? This is an organized effort. And it’s not a secret, except perhaps to citizens of Europe and the United States. Everyone else understands it quite clearly.
**
Full article:
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Jeffrey Sachs: The Geopolitics of Peace
The author explains manipulative U.S. post-war foreign policy to European MPs, explodes myths about Ukraine and urges an independent European foreign policy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjcMoDFU1xg&ab_channel=MichaelvonderSchulenburg This is an edited transcript of Professor Jeffrey Sachs’consortiumnews.com
Ah, I see we misunderstood what we were saying to each other. I'll explain in the next bit...Yes. Their politcs are no longer controlled by the Kremlin.You sure they really lost all of the Balkans?
That does not mean they are controlled by the Kremlin. Nothing wrong with being partial to Moscow as long as it's their free will.Now, I know that Serbia is currently embroiled in protests, but I think it's telling that the Serbian President apologized to his people for supporting Ukraine rather than for supporting Russia.
They just showed a clip from the debate w/ Harris where Trump didn't just say he'd end the war on Day 1 - he said he'd end it if elected, and even before he became President.
He's such a fucking liar.
No doubt the U.S. supported the Maidan Revolution (which was irresponsible), but they couldn't have caused it. Some Ukranian people caused it.What's publicly visible is generally just the tip of the iceberg. If you'd like a deep dive into the American role in the 2014 Euromaidan coup, I highly recommend the following article:
![]()
Timeline: Euromaidan, the original “Ukraine Crisis”
As Russia actually do launch an invasion or “special operation” in Ukraine, we thought now was a good time to recap on how we got here. The historical, political and ethnic divisions in…off-guardian.org
Some words from American Professor and Statesman Jeffrey Sachs' are also good. Quoting from an article that's taken from a speech Sachs made to European Parliament:
**
As you know, Viktor Yanukovych was elected as president of Ukraine in 2010 on the platform of Ukraine’s neutrality. Russia had no territorial interests or designs in Ukraine at all. I know. I was there off-and-on during these years. What Russia was negotiating during 2010 was a 25-year lease to 2042 for Sevastopol naval base. That’s it. There were no Russian demands for Crimea, or for the Donbas. Nothing like that at all. The idea that Putin is reconstructing the Russian empire is childish propaganda. Excuse me.
If anyone knows the day-to-day and year-to-year history, this is childish stuff. Yet childish stuff seems to work better than adult stuff. So, there were no territorial demands at all before the 2014 coup [in Ukraine]. Yet the United States decided that Yanukovych must be overthrown because he favored neutrality and opposed NATO enlargement. It’s called a regime change operation.
There have been around one hundred regime-change operations by the U.S. since 1947, many in your countries [speaking to the MEPs] and many all over the world.
(Political scientist Lindsey O’Rourke documented 64 U.S. covert regime-change operations between 1947 and 1989, and concluded that “Regime change operations, especially those conducted covertly, have often led to prolonged instability, civil wars, and humanitarian crises in the affected regions.” See O’Rourke’s 2018 book, Covert Regime Change: America’s Secret Cold War. After 1989, there is ample evidence of the C.I.A. involved in Syria, Libya, Ukraine, Venezuela, and many other countries.)
That’s what the C.I.A. does for a living. Please know it. It’s a very unusual kind of foreign policy. In the American government, if you don’t like the other side, you don’t negotiate with them, you try to overthrow them, preferably, covertly. If it doesn’t work covertly, you do it overtly. You always say it’s not our fault. They’re the aggressor. They’re the other side.
They’re “Hitler.” That comes up every two or three years. Whether it’s Saddam Hussein, whether it’s [deposed Syrian President Bashar] al-Assad, whether it’s Putin, that’s very convenient. That’s the only foreign policy explanation the American people are ever given. Well, we’re facing Munich 1938. We can’t talk to the other side. They’re evil and implacable foes. That’s the only model of foreign policy we ever hear from our government and mass media. The mass media repeats it entirely because it’s completely suborned by the U.S. government.
The Maidan Revolution & Aftermath
Now in 2014, the U.S. worked actively to overthrow Yanukovych. Everybody knows the phone call intercepted by my Columbia University colleague, Victoria Nuland, and the U.S. ambassador, Geoffrey Pyatt. You don’t get better evidence. The Russians intercepted her call, and they put it on the Internet.
It’s fascinating. By doing that, they all got promoted in the Biden administration. That’s the job. When the Maidan occurred, I was called soon after. “Professor Sachs, the new Ukrainian prime minister would like to see you to talk about the economic crisis.” So, I flew to Kyiv, and I was walked around the Maidan. And I was told how the U.S. paid the money for all the people around the Maidan, the “spontaneous” Revolution of Dignity.
Ladies and gentlemen, please, how did all those Ukrainian media outlets suddenly appear at the time of the Maidan? Where did all this organization come from? Where did all these buses come from? Where did all those people come from? Are you kidding? This is an organized effort. And it’s not a secret, except perhaps to citizens of Europe and the United States. Everyone else understands it quite clearly.
**
Full article:
![]()
Jeffrey Sachs: The Geopolitics of Peace
The author explains manipulative U.S. post-war foreign policy to European MPs, explodes myths about Ukraine and urges an independent European foreign policy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjcMoDFU1xg&ab_channel=MichaelvonderSchulenburg This is an edited transcript of Professor Jeffrey Sachs’consortiumnews.com
SIMPLICIUS Ѱ
@simpatico771
Wow...is that real? Close-up video purportedly shows Iskander-M slamming into Kiev
If you look at the former republics of the Soviet Union I can't think of any that have an ounce of affinity for Russia.Ah, I see we misunderstood what we were saying to each other. I'll explain in the next bit...
I had never meant to imply that the Kremlin was controlling Serbia. I had meant to imply that Serbia is aligning more with Russia and less with the west as time goes by.
If it is true that only 9 died it is more evidence that the Russians are being very careful.I think it's real, I believe I've seen it elsewhere too.
My read of this attack against Ukrainian military manufacturing is that the Russians had already decided that Trump was never going to take America out of participating in and in many ways driving the killing of Russians......As always negotiating with America is useless......this will be settled on the battlefield.....were NATO will continue to lose.
If you look at the former republics of the Soviet Union I can't think of any that have an ounce of affinity for Russia.
Of all the former Warsaw Pact countries, Serbia is the only one I can think of that aligns w/ Russi and Serbia is only part of a former W. P. country. Bosnia has limited ties due to it's diverse ethnicity. The rest of the former Yugo is West oriented.
What does that tell you?
If it is true that only 9 died it is more evidence that the Russians are being very careful.
Serbia. That's it.It tells me that not all of the Balkans have aligned with the west.
Hope that Trump will prevent this from going nuclear is fading fast as he continues to fail to track with reality...pushing the idiotic Kellogg plan being the latest iteration.I agree about this being settled on the battlefield for the forseeable future. The only wrinkle I'd add is that if NATO, or even just the U.S., were to go ballistic and make this a nuclear war, I think that -everyone- could lose, but I don't see Ukraine winning either way. I also think that it'd be better not just for Ukraine but for everyone if they just lost the war with Russia without nukes getting involved.