Sam Lowry said:
sombear said:
Sam Lowry said:
sombear said:
Mothra said:
sombear said:
Realitybites said:
sombear said:
Ukraine made the call. Ukraine still is making the call.
Speaking of Ukraine and calls, how about that call from Brandon to Ukraine demanding that Viktor Shokin get fired and the probe into Burisma end. Yeah, Ukraine's government is independent alright.
It's quite ironic . . . y'all scream about Ukrainian corruption but object when a corrupt prosecutor is canned.
And what this has to do with Ukraine-Russia peace negotiations I have no idea, except to say conspiracists love to piece together unrelated issues. I'm waiting for someone to tie in the JFK assassination and Iraq.
The propensity of conservatives to so easily buy conspiracy theories is a concerning trend.
It's both sides of course but I agree. I blame twitter …. The most troubling aspect to me (and no, this is not a passive aggressive shot at the pro-Russia folks b/c we can set that issue aside, and it's still true) is so many on my side (conservative) virtually always give the benefit of the doubt to the anti-American side and always give the benefit of the doubt to the narrative that supports their own opinions. There is too little objective analysis.
It's hard to give America the benefit of the doubt when you know the history of our covert wars. Like many Americans you are in deep denial on that subject.
Not in denial at all. All I've ever argued is that we're no worse than other world powers. I think we've been better. Far from perfect, but better, and usually fighting for freedom/democracy and/or against communism and Islamic regimes.
We're fighting against countries that we think are too big economically. We're more than happy to support Islamists if it helps that agenda, and the anti-communist rationale fell by the wayside a long time ago. Wiser presidents like Reagan did indeed oppose communism, but they did so without making Russia an enemy per se.
In the vast majority of cases where we've chosen a side, we've chosen the side of freedom, democracy, anti-Islamist rule, or anti-communist/socialist. Sometimes, of course, those have conflicted, and we have, for example, supported dictator-types over what we deemed a worse alternative. Iran, Cuba, and some South American regimes are examples.
We have strong relationships with virtually all of the stronger economies and always have, so no idea where you're coming from there.
And, again, we don't do much if anything that others, including Russia, don't do. And more often than not Russia works against freedom and democracy and for socialism or tyrants.