Just a reminder that they voted twice, once for independence in 2014 and once for annexation to Russia in 2022. We can debate the legitimacy of those votes, but they did happen.sombear said:Just a reminder that the Donbas never voted, never even informally raised joining Russia as an issue, and was NOT majority "Ethnic Russian" in 2014.Redbrickbear said:ron.reagan said:I expect Russia to give away some land if native language has anything to do with thisRedbrickbear said:FLBear5630 said:The Russians in Crimea were shipped or migrated to work the Naval base. The Russian gentrified these areas. Look at the population pre-Communism.Redbrickbear said:whiterock said:LOL. "never."Redbrickbear said:Assassin said:Polish Foreign Minister Sikorski slams Russia’s Ambassador to the UN at the GA:
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) February 24, 2025
“Ukraine isn’t as the Russian ambassador said, a ‘project.’ It has a longer history than Russia. It has been a member of the UN longer than Russia. It has a language, identity & its own aspirations” pic.twitter.com/Rfs4iVcy68
"It has been a member of the UN longer than Russia. It (Ukraine) has a language, identity & its own aspirations"
The Polish Ambassador is absolutely right
But he forgets that a least a 1/3rd of Ukraine was never culturally, ethnically, and historically part of the Ukrainian Nation.
And that Kyiv is still fighting a war to try and pull people back into a Union with Ukraine who don't want to be part of that Nation
You need to go back and read your history again........
I just finished [The Cossacks: The History and Legacy of the Legendary Slavic Warriors]
Got a book I should read that proves that Tatar Muslim inhabited Crimea...later ethnic Russian inhabited Crimea is somehow a long term part of the Ukrainian Nation?
Especially since its was not until 1954 that Soviet dictator Khrushchev transferred Crimea to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic
Plus....[According to the 2014 census, 84% of Crimean inhabitants named Russian as their native language; 7.9% Crimean Tatar; 3.7% Tatar; and 3.3% Ukrainian
Or how about the Donbas? Sparsely populated until the Russian Empire got some Scots and Welsh businessmen/experts to come in and develop the coal industry....itself worked mostly by ethnic Russians
[The rise of the coal industry led to a population boom in the region, largely driven by Russian settlers]
For the record....Crimea was never Ukrainian....go back and look at the Census from the days long before the USSR
Even 130 years ago Ukrainians were not even close to being a majority there
[The 1897 Russian Empire Census, Crimean Tatars continued to form a slight plurality (35%) of Crimea's still largely rural population, but there were large numbers of Russians (33%) and Ukrainians (11%), as well as smaller numbers of Germans, Jews (including Krymchaks and Crimean Karaites), Bulgarians and Belarusians]
Borders all over the world would be redraw if everyone could chose who they wanted to be in a political union with.
Of course DC would not like to see that at home
Kyiv does not want that right now.
And Moscow does not want that.
I am starting to see a pattern where centralized States fear letting people actually vote and leave and form new political unions....