Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation/occupation of the peninsula unsustainable.RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Putin said it was "de-Nazification" of the government which is led by a Jewish man. Putin tried to take Kyiv and was repelled. I think Putin's original goals were something other than water supplies to the Crimea.Redbrickbear said:RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) comes from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
Your first sentence is confusing. It implies they did it just to make the annexation unsustainable. if Russia wasn't annexing, they wouldn't do it, correct?LIB,MR BEARS said:RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
A few desalination plants has got to be a lot cheaper than going to war. On the bright side, he did find out how bad his military is.Redbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation/occupation of the peninsula unsustainable.RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located).
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) comes from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading Kherson was turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
I am not advocating a personal view on the annexation/occupation of Crimea.RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Agree with that.LIB,MR BEARS said:A few desalination plants has got to be a lot cheaper than going to war. On the bright side, he did find out how bad his military is.Redbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation/occupation of the peninsula unsustainable.RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located).
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) comes from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading Kherson was turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
True.He Hate Me said:Putin said it was "de-Nazification" of the government which is led by a Jewish man. Putin tried to take Kyiv and was repelled. I think Putin's original goals were something other than water supplies to the Crimea.Redbrickbear said:RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) comes from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
I guess I am not up to speed. Did Ukraine cut the water in 2014 or 2022?Redbrickbear said:I am not advocating a personal view on the annexation/occupation of Crimea.RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Only pointing out that Ukraine cut the water from the Canal that feeds Crimea and then for that reason Russia invaded to turn it back on.
Once the water to Crimea was cut the Russians had two options....pull out or invade Ukraine to get control of the Canal.
We see what they ended up doing. But the status quo was not going to last.
Found this:RMF5630 said:I guess I am not up to speed. Did Ukraine cut the water in 2014 or 2022?Redbrickbear said:I am not advocating a personal view on the annexation/occupation of Crimea.RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Only pointing out that Ukraine cut the water from the Canal that feeds Crimea and then for that reason Russia invaded to turn it back on.
Once the water to Crimea was cut the Russians had two options....pull out or invade Ukraine to get control of the Canal.
We see what they ended up doing. But the status quo was not going to last.
If 2014, I can see the point
If in 2021 or 2022, Russia took it and annexed it 8 years ago, what did they expect!
Ok, thanks.Redbrickbear said:Found this:RMF5630 said:I guess I am not up to speed. Did Ukraine cut the water in 2014 or 2022?Redbrickbear said:I am not advocating a personal view on the annexation/occupation of Crimea.RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Only pointing out that Ukraine cut the water from the Canal that feeds Crimea and then for that reason Russia invaded to turn it back on.
Once the water to Crimea was cut the Russians had two options....pull out or invade Ukraine to get control of the Canal.
We see what they ended up doing. But the status quo was not going to last.
If 2014, I can see the point
If in 2021 or 2022, Russia took it and annexed it 8 years ago, what did they expect!
[Ukraine shut down the canal in 2014 soon after the Russian annexation of Crimea. The flow of water was restored in March 2022 during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. A 2015 study found that the canal had been providing 85% of Crimea's water prior to the canal's 2014 shutdown.]
[Shortly after Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, Ukraine built a concrete dam cutting off 85 percent of the peninsula's water supply. So one of Moscow's first strategic moves after invading the country was to blow it up.]
https://thehill.com/policy/equilibrium-sustainability/597910-how-a-ukrainian-dam-played-a-key-role-in-tensions-with/
Putin doesn't determine our policies.RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
How dare they shut the water off of a peninsula that was illegally annexed by Russia?Redbrickbear said:Found this:RMF5630 said:I guess I am not up to speed. Did Ukraine cut the water in 2014 or 2022?Redbrickbear said:I am not advocating a personal view on the annexation/occupation of Crimea.RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Only pointing out that Ukraine cut the water from the Canal that feeds Crimea and then for that reason Russia invaded to turn it back on.
Once the water to Crimea was cut the Russians had two options....pull out or invade Ukraine to get control of the Canal.
We see what they ended up doing. But the status quo was not going to last.
If 2014, I can see the point
If in 2021 or 2022, Russia took it and annexed it 8 years ago, what did they expect!
[Ukraine shut down the canal in 2014 soon after the Russian annexation of Crimea. The flow of water was restored in March 2022 during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. A 2015 study found that the canal had been providing 85% of Crimea's water prior to the canal's 2014 shutdown.]
[Shortly after Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, Ukraine built a concrete dam cutting off 85 percent of the peninsula's water supply. So one of Moscow's first strategic moves after invading the country was to blow it up.]
https://thehill.com/policy/equilibrium-sustainability/597910-how-a-ukrainian-dam-played-a-key-role-in-tensions-with/
That bridge brought in supplies and military equipment but not enough water to Crimea.RMF5630 said:Ok, thanks.Redbrickbear said:Found this:RMF5630 said:I guess I am not up to speed. Did Ukraine cut the water in 2014 or 2022?Redbrickbear said:I am not advocating a personal view on the annexation/occupation of Crimea.RMF5630 said:Annexation - to incorporate (a country or other territory) within the domain of a stateRedbrickbear said:Ukraine cutting off the water to Crimea made the Russian annexation of the peninsula unsustainableRMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
That is a big part of why Russian invaded Kherson oblast (where the Canal that feeds Crimea is located)
Not defending the actions of Russia...simply pointing out that is a big reason they invaded.
Close to 90% of the water for Crimea (for drinking and farming) come from the canal that brings water from the large Dnieper river to the peninsula.
First thing the Russians did after invading was turn the turn the water back on and unblock the Canal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Crimean_Canal
Annexing means it is yours. You take control and responsibility. Many annexations DO NOT happen because the cost of bringing the infrastructure and providing services outweigh the value.
So, your view is that not only does Ukraine have to cede the land, city and infrastructure with no compensation, but also provide utilities and never join NATO or the EU. Then all is right????
Crimea is Russian, it is their responsibility to provide water, WITHOUT INVADING ANOTHER NATION. Seems a pretty low bar.
Only pointing out that Ukraine cut the water from the Canal that feeds Crimea and then for that reason Russia invaded to turn it back on.
Once the water to Crimea was cut the Russians had two options....pull out or invade Ukraine to get control of the Canal.
We see what they ended up doing. But the status quo was not going to last.
If 2014, I can see the point
If in 2021 or 2022, Russia took it and annexed it 8 years ago, what did they expect!
[Ukraine shut down the canal in 2014 soon after the Russian annexation of Crimea. The flow of water was restored in March 2022 during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. A 2015 study found that the canal had been providing 85% of Crimea's water prior to the canal's 2014 shutdown.]
[Shortly after Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, Ukraine built a concrete dam cutting off 85 percent of the peninsula's water supply. So one of Moscow's first strategic moves after invading the country was to blow it up.]
https://thehill.com/policy/equilibrium-sustainability/597910-how-a-ukrainian-dam-played-a-key-role-in-tensions-with/
And you guys are asking NATO why now???
Ukraine shut the canal when Russia invaded in 2014. EIGHT YEARS later it became an issue that made invading Ukraine unavoidable? Didn't Russia build a bridge? A rather major one? So big it had its own logo?? So, the canal was SO important that they invaded Ukriane. They couldn't build a water line to support their annexation? They had time (Obviously, they built the bridge below!)! Sam????
https://www.reduper.com/industry/traffic/bridge/sea-bridge/crimean-bridge/
Yeah, well he sure created a short cut to the NATO application process didn't he?Sam Lowry said:Putin doesn't determine our policies.RMF5630 said:Gotta ask Putin. He invaded. If he didn't invade, he would have Crimea and the status quo would have remained. Now, he is going to get the exact opposite, Ukraine will get NATO membership.Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
JC:"They're stealing Ukrainian children. 500 just yesterday were shipped to Russia. & this is why we should be supporting them. We cannot allow this kind of evil to go unchecked...Don't you agree with me on that?"
— Briahna Joy Gray (@briebriejoy) October 31, 2022
BG: "I'm sorry, I don't. And here's why."https://t.co/2IhClPsGpX pic.twitter.com/0l3pOaggCe
The Pentagon officially confirmed today that US troops are on the ground in Ukraine, allegedly performing "inspections" of US weapon caches. This information was released via anonymous media briefing. No word on whether the troops are wearing "boots" as they walk "on the ground" pic.twitter.com/ok9aAT1gDk
— Michael Tracey (@mtracey) November 1, 2022
Pentagon acquisition chief Bill LaPlante says Ukraine has helped him understand what really matters. "What really matters is production."
— Lee Hudson (@LeeHudson_) November 4, 2022
"We as a country did our best to not do production," LaPlante said.
Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
who says they've accepted it other than you and Canada?Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
Because of the 200k troops rolling across the border... Russia caused the urgency, not NATO or Ukraine. Ukraine is a sovereign nation if they want to move west, that is there right. They don't need Putin's permission. This seems pretty straight forward, you really not seeing it? To put in simpler terms, if NATO didn't act IMMEADIATELY Ukraine would not exist. Russia would have rolled over in a month. That is pretty urgent.Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
With Joe Biden at the helm, I would not be surprised to see Canada invade and take over the United States. He will do nothing. They had better hurry, though. The invasion of the U.S. from Mexico and Central America is well underway!whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
It isn't, for us. But it is for Ukraine.
In Russia, we have an autocratic country prepared to invade a neighboring democracy solely so it can sleep better at night and grow its economy. If we accept that logic as valid, where does it stop?
There is an old adage in real estate about not wanting to own the whole world, just what touches you…….
⚡️Bloomberg: US asks banks to keep doing business with some Russian firms.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) November 8, 2022
The U.S. Treasury and State Departments have quietly urged large banks to keep doing business with some strategic Russian firms, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter.
According to Bloomberg, the effort signals the Biden administration is looking to strike a balance between hindering Russia's invasion of Ukraine and avoiding adverse impacts of sanctions designed to punish Russia for the war.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) November 8, 2022
You're still dancing around the question. We know what it means for Ukraine.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
It isn't, for us. But it is for Ukraine.
In Russia, we have an autocratic country prepared to invade a neighboring democracy solely so it can sleep better at night and grow its economy. If we accept that logic as valid, where does it stop?
There is an old adage in real estate about not wanting to own the whole world, just what touches you…….
Sam Lowry said:You're still dancing around the question. We know what it means for Ukraine.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
It isn't, for us. But it is for Ukraine.
In Russia, we have an autocratic country prepared to invade a neighboring democracy solely so it can sleep better at night and grow its economy. If we accept that logic as valid, where does it stop?
There is an old adage in real estate about not wanting to own the whole world, just what touches you…….
Exactly. Our boys and girls are not doing the fighting and dying for Ukraine. Ukrainian boys and girls are doing the fighting and dying for Ukraine. We support them and their cause because if we don't, our boys and girls will be at greater risk than they are today in treaty obligations to defend every square inch of NATO.RMF5630 said:Sam Lowry said:You're still dancing around the question. We know what it means for Ukraine.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Which again begs the same question. If we've accepted Russian hegemony in Ukraine for as long as the United States has existed, why is it suddenly a matter of life and death?whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Also known as greed.whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Why now?RMF5630 said:Which is?Sam Lowry said:
And it's been that way for years…which brings us back to the question no one wants to answer.
For the oldest reason of all - to grow your economy by seizing someone else's - before you become too weak (or your opponent too strong) to succeed.
Or survival, depending on one's perspective.
It isn't, for us. But it is for Ukraine.
In Russia, we have an autocratic country prepared to invade a neighboring democracy solely so it can sleep better at night and grow its economy. If we accept that logic as valid, where does it stop?
There is an old adage in real estate about not wanting to own the whole world, just what touches you…….
Sam we have answered it 5 times. We have supported and championed Democracies in Europe since 1949, NATO cannot let Russia just invade who they choose because they don't like the form of Govt Ukraine has chosen
NATO is not supplying combat troops only equipment and training. Same as Russia does around world. Why are you so forxsupporting the Russia invasion of Ukraine? You seem upset NATO is helping Ukraine stay independent. Why do you support totalitarian?