Nobody interested in the Russia-Ukraine conflict?
There were no EU laws the UK had to follow - only mutual agreements to implement common standards, many of which were championed by the UK.
This was the great lie of Brexit - the UK's sovereignty and independence was never at risk from the EU.
You put it better than I could: common standards agreed by a lot of countries which keep everyone safe from dictatorships making unilateral laws to benefit themselves. Now we aren't in the EU, we don't have those safeguards, the British government can do exactly as they want...
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That alien woman. On Earth to observe and wonder about homo sapiens.
I think you're correct. I looked it up, and noblemen started trying to control the king in 1100 with Henry I with the Charter of Liberties, followed by the Magna Carta in 1215. I think the noblemen got fed up with the king being a law unto himself so they made him obey the law.
I'm really going way off topic
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That alien woman. On Earth to observe and wonder about homo sapiens.
Curbed to an extent by the House of Lords, which holds the government of the day to account.
I tend to think of HoL as "the adults in the room".
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Giraffe: a ruminant with a view.
You put it better than I could: common standards agreed by a lot of countries which keep everyone safe from dictatorships making unilateral laws to benefit themselves. Now we aren't in the EU, we don't have those safeguards, the British government can do exactly as they want...
The UK government still have to obey international law. Extremely long hours and sick pay are boundaries that no developed nation would dare to cross. If the government went too far judges and juries can veto any laws they feel overstep the line.
Ab-so-fucking-lutely. You could always (and most likely will) get an even more concentrated nationalist, 'Third Rome' informed Russian state that's less stable, even more ideologically extreme and now dedicated to avenging the slight it feels the west inflicted upon it (regardless of the fact that it was self-inflicted).
This regime would feel further even incentive to behave in the same paranoid manner the Russian state has traditionally behaved in. This regime would likely lean further into the idea that they're a Christian state under persecution by the godless liberal west (as the wackos to the right of Putin already claim, like the father of the lady who was carbombed). This regime would almost certainly behave with a heavier hand towards any regions that might seek to separate.
Think of the difference between the current Iranian or Saudi regime, and ISIS, only with an arsenal of ICBMs.
Think of the difference between the most conservative and pragmatic members of the NSDAP vs. the ones who were obsessed with mysticism, UFOs and pseudo-pagan rituals, only with an arsenal of ICBMs.
There's a good chance that whatever replaces Putin's regime will be a less rational actor.
They're all s**t sandwiches until you realize some of the s**t sandwiches also carry rabies.
Evil and stable is less dangerous than evil and batshit insane.
It's not that easy, there's enormous human and other costs associated with that, if that's seriously something you view as a solution. Maybe from where your sitting those costs won't be felt, but that doesn't mean those costs won't be felt by a lot of innocent people, many of them outside of Russia.
The collapse of the Russian state, along with the disruptions to food, fertilizer and energy exports it would cause would be catastrophic to the world's economy. It would likely trigger a refugee crisis in Europe (from Russians fleeing) and it would likely trigger ethnic conflicts in Siberia and other regions that Russia stole and filled with colonists.
It might not be your problem, but that doesn't mean it wouldn't be a massive problem.
In a lot of ways Russia as a society behaves like a person who's experienced repeated overwhelming trauma (given that they have). If that analogy also works literally, it's understandable why certain coping mechanisms (both on an individual and on a collective level) end up so deformed. It doesn't mean the rest of the world has to tolerate antisocial actions their state undertakes, but it does mean it's likely that curbstomping Russia and repeatedly causing them to feel humiliated is unlikely to benefit anyone, not us, not Russia, not Russians and not ethnic minorities within Russia.
If that's the case we shouldn't do it, at least if we have any moral authority.
Putin's problem is still a problem of Russian modernization to some extent. CPC's problem is still a problem of China's modernization to some extent. The strong path dependence will make this region frozen in amber in the regime changes that have not produced any substantial impact.
Modernization is a road with unknown entrance and unknown result. If we want to arouse more people to explore it, a modern entity must prove its superiority before a sufficient proportion of the population - and modernity is not performing well at present.
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With the help of translation software.
Cover your eyes, if you like. It will serve no purpose.
You might expect to be able to crush them in your hand, into wolf-bone fragments.
goldfish21
Veteran
Joined: 17 Feb 2013
Age: 42
Gender: Male
Posts: 22,612
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Modernization is a road with unknown entrance and unknown result. If we want to arouse more people to explore it, a modern entity must prove its superiority before a sufficient proportion of the population - and modernity is not performing well at present.
Wut?
The entire world is in the current year 2022 (or whatever calendar you use, we're in the present moment) so how can it be that russia or china aren't in modern times or are somehow working towards the present moment as if their calendars haven't caught up to the rest of the world ? We're all in present times, not the distant past.. soooo ??
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No for supporting trump. Because doing so is deplorable.
Curbed to an extent by the House of Lords, which holds the government of the day to account.
I tend to think of HoL as "the adults in the room".
It's nice to think of the HoL as the adults in the room but for how long will that last? It's almost full of Boris's mates and Russians.
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That alien woman. On Earth to observe and wonder about homo sapiens.
I tend to think of HoL as "the adults in the room".
Indeed... which is why...
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... rt-reveals
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Behold! we are not bound for ever to the circles of the world, and beyond them is more than memory, Farewell!
Except that the government is planning/has already started controlling which judges are put in place and what their powers are. Give them some time and they'll find ways around international laws...
As Donald Trump did in the USA, which is why the Supreme Court was able to dismantle Roe v Wade. The judges he put in place have extreme views so that decision was the result.
Boris Johnson ‘planning reforms which would let ministers overrule judicial decisions’ https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/p ... ml?r=19741
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That alien woman. On Earth to observe and wonder about homo sapiens.
I tend to think of HoL as "the adults in the room".
Indeed... which is why...
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... rt-reveals
Wow that sounds fantastic! A modernised upper chamber which can't be filled with Tory donors and/or Russians!
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That alien woman. On Earth to observe and wonder about homo sapiens.
Modernization is a road with unknown entrance and unknown result. If we want to arouse more people to explore it, a modern entity must prove its superiority before a sufficient proportion of the population - and modernity is not performing well at present.
Wut?
The entire world is in the current year 2022 (or whatever calendar you use, we're in the present moment) so how can it be that russia or china aren't in modern times or are somehow working towards the present moment as if their calendars haven't caught up to the rest of the world ? We're all in present times, not the distant past.. soooo ??
Many Chinese involved in political discussions believe that we are still trapped in the System of Qin Dynasty(from 221 to 206 BC). It never left, but became stronger and stronger.
Requiring to wear burka made of polyester fiber will not make the Sharia more advanced.
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With the help of translation software.
Cover your eyes, if you like. It will serve no purpose.
You might expect to be able to crush them in your hand, into wolf-bone fragments.
ASPartOfMe
Veteran
Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 36,377
Location: Long Island, New York
US will take ‘catastrophic’ action if Vladimir Putin uses nuclear weapons
Jake Sullivan, the US national security adviser, said on Sunday night that the US had “communicated directly, privately to the Russians at very high levels” how it would respond if Vladimir Putin carried out the nuclear strike threat he made during an address last week.
“If Russia crosses this line, there will be catastrophic consequences for Russia. The United States will respond decisively,” Mr Sullivan told NBC’s Meet the Press programme.
Mr Sullivan did not describe the nature of the planned response but said the US had privately “spelled out in greater detail exactly what that would mean” to Moscow.
It came as Putin’s foreign minister said on Sunday that annexed areas of Ukraine would be protected like Russian territory. Referendums in those areas are continuing, with Ukrainians under pressure from armed Moscow forces to cast their ballots.
Some of Putin’s allies, including the speaker of the State Duma, publicly broke ranks on Sunday to criticise the way in which conscripts are being recruited, amid reports of elderly and ill men being drafted after the Russian president announced a partial mobilisation order.
While the threat is seen by some as an attempt to assert control after a series of embarrassing defeats in Ukraine, Nato’s nuclear powers have started ramping up vigilance and deterrence.
In a separate interview on Sunday, Mr Sullivan said Putin’s nuclear threats were a “matter that we have to take deadly seriously”.
Military analysts believe Putin could use Russia’s military doctrine, which allows it to use nuclear weapons to defend its territory, to reframe the conflict in Ukraine as defensive.
Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s veteran foreign minister, said on Sunday that the Kremlin could use nuclear weapons to defend occupied Ukrainian territories, if annexed following referendums.
Russian forces have only been able to coerce one in five residents of occupied Melitopol to vote in a sham annexation referendum despite the threat of violence, its exiled mayor has said.
Since voting began on Friday, Russian officials have been going door-to-door in occupied regions flanked by gunmen to give out ballot papers and identify voters.
Ukrainians living under occupation have been warned their families would be massacred if they refuse to take part.
Despite the threats, Ivan Fedorov, Ukraine’s elected mayor of Melitopol, said: “Our citizens haven’t taken part in this fake referendum … after three days Russia has only been able to find just 20 per cent of people to vote. Nobody wants to vote, nobody wants to say yes to the Russian referendum.”
Of those forced to cast a vote, he said “90 per cent” had voted against Russia’s occupation becoming permanent
In the build-up to the vote, pro-Moscow officials blocked evacuation routes to Ukrainian-held territory, only allowing women and children to flee to occupied Crimea, Mr Fedorov said.
Mr Fedorov said men of fighting age had been blocked from leaving altogether, raising the prospect of them being forcibly drafted into Russian-backed armed forces.
Meanwhile, Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, confirmed on Sunday that Kyiv had received high-powered air-defence systems for the first time from the US. The National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS) was promised by Washington last month.
Mr Zelensky told CBS the shipment had been received but added: “Believe me, it’s not even nearly enough to cover the civilian infrastructure, schools, hospitals, universities, homes of Ukrainians.”
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
Jake Sullivan, the US national security adviser, said on Sunday night that the US had “communicated directly, privately to the Russians at very high levels” how it would respond if Vladimir Putin carried out the nuclear strike threat he made during an address last week.
“If Russia crosses this line, there will be catastrophic consequences for Russia. The United States will respond decisively,” Mr Sullivan told NBC’s Meet the Press programme.
Mr Sullivan did not describe the nature of the planned response but said the US had privately “spelled out in greater detail exactly what that would mean” to Moscow.
It came as Putin’s foreign minister said on Sunday that annexed areas of Ukraine would be protected like Russian territory. Referendums in those areas are continuing, with Ukrainians under pressure from armed Moscow forces to cast their ballots.
Some of Putin’s allies, including the speaker of the State Duma, publicly broke ranks on Sunday to criticise the way in which conscripts are being recruited, amid reports of elderly and ill men being drafted after the Russian president announced a partial mobilisation order.
While the threat is seen by some as an attempt to assert control after a series of embarrassing defeats in Ukraine, Nato’s nuclear powers have started ramping up vigilance and deterrence.
In a separate interview on Sunday, Mr Sullivan said Putin’s nuclear threats were a “matter that we have to take deadly seriously”.
Military analysts believe Putin could use Russia’s military doctrine, which allows it to use nuclear weapons to defend its territory, to reframe the conflict in Ukraine as defensive.
Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s veteran foreign minister, said on Sunday that the Kremlin could use nuclear weapons to defend occupied Ukrainian territories, if annexed following referendums.
Russian forces have only been able to coerce one in five residents of occupied Melitopol to vote in a sham annexation referendum despite the threat of violence, its exiled mayor has said.
Since voting began on Friday, Russian officials have been going door-to-door in occupied regions flanked by gunmen to give out ballot papers and identify voters.
Ukrainians living under occupation have been warned their families would be massacred if they refuse to take part.
Despite the threats, Ivan Fedorov, Ukraine’s elected mayor of Melitopol, said: “Our citizens haven’t taken part in this fake referendum … after three days Russia has only been able to find just 20 per cent of people to vote. Nobody wants to vote, nobody wants to say yes to the Russian referendum.”
Of those forced to cast a vote, he said “90 per cent” had voted against Russia’s occupation becoming permanent
In the build-up to the vote, pro-Moscow officials blocked evacuation routes to Ukrainian-held territory, only allowing women and children to flee to occupied Crimea, Mr Fedorov said.
Mr Fedorov said men of fighting age had been blocked from leaving altogether, raising the prospect of them being forcibly drafted into Russian-backed armed forces.
Meanwhile, Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, confirmed on Sunday that Kyiv had received high-powered air-defence systems for the first time from the US. The National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS) was promised by Washington last month.
Mr Zelensky told CBS the shipment had been received but added: “Believe me, it’s not even nearly enough to cover the civilian infrastructure, schools, hospitals, universities, homes of Ukrainians.”
Militarily the US won’t do much apart from putting their own arsenal on higher alert.
They’ll be huge political moves though with pressure on neutral countries like China
The issue with mutually assured destruction or MAD is a strike against the other guarantees your own destruction.
I’ve said before the US will not end itself over Ukraine or Europe anymore than the USSR would have done over Cuba.
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"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends upon the unreasonable man."
- George Bernie Shaw
goldfish21
Veteran
Joined: 17 Feb 2013
Age: 42
Gender: Male
Posts: 22,612
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Young man shoots an officer at a recruitment centre, others torched in arsons across Russia.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/russian- ... gzjsKdmUVE
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No for supporting trump. Because doing so is deplorable.
Yeah, the "partial mobilization" may well be the death of pootin and his regime; especially with how ineptly, swiftly, forcefully, and chaotically it is being rolled out. The fact that they are not following their public claims about only drafting reservists is really causing panic. They have even been drafting the elderly, disabled, ill, and others who do not qualify for service.
What is really concerning though, is that they are moving for forcibly mass conscript Ukrainians in the temporary occupied territories(TOT). They aren't even waiting till their sham "referendums" are done. russian officials have also been going door to door in the TOTs with armed soldiers demanding people cooperate with the "referendum" and threatening to massacre their families if they don't. These officials are then "rewarding" those who are coerced into participating by giving them a russian passport. russia has also sealled off any escape by civilians in the TOTs to Ukrainian territory and is only allowing women and children to flee into russia and Crimea. The men, at least of fighting age, are not allowed to leave those areas at all. They also may be moving to forcibly conscript Ukrainian POWs.
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