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US attitudes to Trump – the great American divide – politicalbetting.com

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  • We did birth rates a couple of days ago, didn't we?

    Latest stats out...

    There were 605,479 live births in England and Wales in 2022, down 3.1% from 624,828 in 2021 and the lowest number since 2002.

    The number remains in line with the recent trend of decreasing live births seen before the #COVID19 pandemic.

    https://twitter.com/ONS/status/1692091687667896482
  • Russia does have nukes and yes we should do whatever it takes. What's not true is what I responded to which was the claim "Putin has very little left to lose"

    Putin has Moscow and the rest of Russia left to lose. If the choice is lose Crimea, or lose Crimea and Moscow, then Putin will lose Crimea. He is not going to seek to lose Moscow.

    Whatever it takes, does that include nuking Russia then?
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855

    I'm saying that humans have always striven toward greater freedom, wellbeing, and prosperity, always will do, and any suggestion to the contrary is a deranged fantasy. That includes personal transportation.
    No they haven't. Thirty years ago I could board a plane with a knife in my pocket and - gasp - over 100ml of shampoo in my bag, and light a cigarette straight after take off. up to 1965 you could drive as fast as your car allowed, outside cities. up to 2003 you could have a drink, and sail a boat. The government has now legislated that if I want to buy a new ICE car after 2030 and somebody wants to sell me one, we are not allowed to. Your imagination seems not to be up to the task of conceiving that sentence with ICE omitted. Your freedoms have been massively eroded, and I absolutely guarantee that the things Luckyguy2083 is allowed to do will be a lot less than what you are.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,926
    edited August 2023
    There seems to be a pretty healthy debate on Ukraine today that doesn't involve vituperative (nice word) shutting down of arguments.

    Actually quite surprising we don't have at least 2 or 3 parallel debates going on. Not even on LTNs or housebuilding.

    As Dura points out most of the so called popular front for the liberation of Ukraine (aka people who don't trust any assurances Russia might give in a future peace deal) are not into vituperation. I assume I'm considered part of that camp, and I don't come on here with the purpose of insulting or having enjoyable snarky banter. It's a matter of taste - some people enjoy it, some don't. I come here because there's an interesting range of opinions and experience.
  • We did birth rates a couple of days ago, didn't we?

    Latest stats out...

    There were 605,479 live births in England and Wales in 2022, down 3.1% from 624,828 in 2021 and the lowest number since 2002.

    The number remains in line with the recent trend of decreasing live births seen before the #COVID19 pandemic.

    https://twitter.com/ONS/status/1692091687667896482

    Who could have thought that telling young, fertile people not to go out where they could hook up with other young, fertile people would reduce birth rates?
  • Personally I feel that Ukraine-Russia will end with some kind of negotiated settlement.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,793
    TOPPING said:

    You first.
    My view? Russia will take an awful lot of shifting from Ukraine. It'll be a long and bloody process and much as I want to see them defeated and driven out it probably won't happen. Certainly not anytime soon.

    Your view is more 'out there', is it? Guess it must be. Therefore I'd be interested to hear it (truly) and you shouldn't be shy. No way will I get 'vituperative' about it and call you a 'Putin apologist' or anything similarly stupid.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,926

    Personally I feel that Ukraine-Russia will end with some kind of negotiated settlement.

    Of course it will. The question is under what conditions. And that is where people differ. The danger is rewarding bad behaviour and encouraging more of it.
  • Whatever it takes, does that include nuking Russia then?
    No, whatever it takes conventionally. This is a conventional war.

    The rules of engagement in these conflicts since WWII have been very clear. No troops, no direct engagement, no nukes - but ammunition, weapons, support, training, logistics are OK.

    That is what we are doing. Its what the USSR did when the west was fighting in Korea and Vietnam, its what the West did when the USSR was fighting in Afghanistan etc
  • TimS said:

    Of course it will. The question is under what conditions. And that is where people differ. The danger is rewarding bad behaviour and encouraging more of it.
    What do you think will happen?
  • No, whatever it takes conventionally. This is a conventional war.

    The rules of engagement in these conflicts since WWII have been very clear. No troops, no direct engagement, no nukes - but ammunition, weapons, support, training, logistics are OK.

    That is what we are doing. Its what the USSR did when the west was fighting in Korea and Vietnam, its what the West did when the USSR was fighting in Afghanistan etc
    We cannot support them forever, surely.
  • kinabalu said:

    My view? Russia will take an awful lot of shifting from Ukraine. It'll be a long and bloody process and much as I want to see them defeated and driven out it probably won't happen. Certainly not anytime soon.

    Your view is more 'out there', is it? Guess it must be. Therefore I'd be interested to hear it (truly) and you shouldn't be shy. No way will I get 'vituperative' about it and call you a 'Putin apologist' or anything similarly stupid.
    Yes I'd like to hear it too.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    No, whatever it takes conventionally. This is a conventional war.

    The rules of engagement in these conflicts since WWII have been very clear. No troops, no direct engagement, no nukes - but ammunition, weapons, support, training, logistics are OK.

    That is what we are doing. Its what the USSR did when the west was fighting in Korea and Vietnam, its what the West did when the USSR was fighting in Afghanistan etc
    Ukraine may, however, invade Russia. Indeed, it will probably need to, both to bypass the minefields and in order to have something worth trading at the negotiating table that it's not too bothered about losing.
  • Who could have thought that telling young, fertile people not to go out where they could hook up with other young, fertile people would reduce birth rates?
    It doesn't appear to have anything to do with lockdown. As the report states, "The number remains in line with the recent trend of decreasing live births seen before the #COVID19 pandemic."
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668

    Who could have thought that telling young, fertile people not to go out where they could hook up with other young, fertile people would reduce birth rates?
    Who could have thought that you’d fail to read the words “in line with the trend of decreasing live births seems before the #COVID19 pandemic”?
  • What do you think will happen?
    I think if Russia is kicked out of Ukrainian territory then the negotiated settlement will be that Russia agrees to recognise Ukraine's borders. Russia won't lose any of its own territory either (which does not of course include Crimea).

    I think if they're not, then a negotiated settlement is much less likely and we might end up with what is far worse, a frozen conflict like Korea.

    So doing whatever it takes to support Ukraine makes an acceptable negotiated settlement more likely, not less likely.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,816

    Personally I feel that Ukraine-Russia will end with some kind of negotiated settlement.

    The German invasions of France in 1914 and 1940 both ended with negotiated settlements, so that covers a vast range of possibilities.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668

    Personally I feel that Ukraine-Russia will end with some kind of negotiated settlement.

    That is how nearly all wars end, yes.
  • Preventing them from owning their own homes until they're 50 might have even more to do with it.
    Absolutely!
  • I think if Russia is kicked out of Ukrainian territory then the negotiated settlement will be that Russia agrees to recognise Ukraine's borders. Russia won't lose any of its own territory either (which does not of course include Crimea).

    I think if they're not, then a negotiated settlement is much less likely and we might end up with what is far worse, a frozen conflict like Korea.

    So doing whatever it takes to support Ukraine makes an acceptable negotiated settlement more likely, not less likely.
    Cannot see that happening without Putin being removed in which case you roll the dice
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668

    No, whatever it takes conventionally. This is a conventional war.

    The rules of engagement in these conflicts since WWII have been very clear. No troops, no direct engagement, no nukes - but ammunition, weapons, support, training, logistics are OK.

    That is what we are doing. Its what the USSR did when the west was fighting in Korea and Vietnam, its what the West did when the USSR was fighting in Afghanistan etc
    A minor correction… There were Soviet military personnel actively engaged in the Korean War, notably pilots.

  • We cannot support them forever, surely.
    Well, Korea has required support for close to 70 years now as that conflict never ended. Is that what you want?

    I hope we don't need to support Ukraine for 70 years, but if its what we take, I have no objection to supporting them that long.
  • Preventing them from owning their own homes until they're 50 might have even more to do with it.
    There will be a bit of a signal from the Spring 2021 lockdown, but yes. Making it harder for young people to settle down over a decade explains a lot more of the graph.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    The German invasions of France in 1914 and 1940 both ended with negotiated settlements, so that covers a vast range of possibilities.
    Neither of those points is right, really. The 'settlements' were imposed in 1919 and 1940, with the defeated party unable to resist terms and no negotiations meaningful of the name took place. Obviously, if you extend the 1940 invasion through to 1945, there was explicitly no deal done: 'unconditional surrender' was demanded, and given.
  • Preventing them from owning their own homes until they're 50 might have even more to do with it.
    The Tories think I’m brainwashed and woke. Instead of hearing my concerns they call me dumb.
  • Cannot see that happening without Putin being removed in which case you roll the dice
    Then we roll the dice.

    The dice will be rolled whenever Putin leaves, its what happens whenever a dictator falls. Not a reason not to do the right thing.

    Do you accept that Ukraine has been able to liberate some of its territory already?

    If so, do you accept that Ukraine has the potential to liberate more, or all, of its occupied territory? Just as its already liberated some?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    Neither of those points is right, really. The 'settlements' were imposed in 1919 and 1940, with the defeated party unable to resist terms and no negotiations meaningful of the name took place. Obviously, if you extend the 1940 invasion through to 1945, there was explicitly no deal done: 'unconditional surrender' was demanded, and given.
    I'm liking that because I like it and also you would have been stuck on 666 of them otherwise.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    edited August 2023
    kinabalu said:

    My view? Russia will take an awful lot of shifting from Ukraine. It'll be a long and bloody process and much as I want to see them defeated and driven out it probably won't happen. Certainly not anytime soon.

    Your view is more 'out there', is it? Guess it must be. Therefore I'd be interested to hear it (truly) and you shouldn't be shy. No way will I get 'vituperative' about it and call you a 'Putin apologist' or anything similarly stupid.
    My view is as obvious, facile, and banal as yours.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,259
    TimS said:

    are not into vituperation...

    I don't like fancy soups, no matter how you cook it.

    :lol:

  • viewcode said:

    Anyway, while I'm here, why do Tesco Superstores not stock Smoked Ham and Cheese Toasties, but Tesco Express/Metros do?

    https://www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/308476950

    The Tesco superstore near here claims to stock ham & cheddar toasties but not ham & cheese. Something something AI.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    We cannot support them forever, surely.
    We can almost certainly support them for longer than the Russians can support themselves, and so long as the Ukranians are willing to keep up the fight that’s the right thing to do.
  • Sandpit said:

    We can almost certainly support them for longer than the Russians can support themselves, and so long as the Ukranians are willing to keep up the fight that’s the right thing to do.
    What is the limit on supporting them?
  • Who could have thought that telling young, fertile people not to go out where they could hook up with other young, fertile people would reduce birth rates?
    Other way round. Covid lockdown forced young couples to entertain themselves at home, causing an upward tick in births. Letting them out again resumed the downward trend.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,309
    edited August 2023
    TimS said:

    There seems to be a pretty healthy debate on Ukraine today that doesn't involve vituperative (nice word) shutting down of arguments.

    Actually quite surprising we don't have at least 2 or 3 parallel debates going on. Not even on LTNs or housebuilding.

    As Dura points out most of the so called popular front for the liberation of Ukraine (aka people who don't trust any assurances Russia might give in a future peace deal) are not into vituperation.

    I didn't say that they were not into it, just that they are fucking crap at it.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,259

    A minor correction… There were Soviet military personnel actively engaged in the Korean War, notably pilots.

    The korean war was weird. The USSR did not vote against it in the Security Council and the was was a US-led UN coalition against the North Koreans. MacArthur drove them nearly back to the NK/China border, until the Chinese said "fuck it" and invaded Korea, forcing the UN forces back down to the present border.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    There will be a bit of a signal from the Spring 2021 lockdown, but yes. Making it harder for young people to settle down over a decade explains a lot more of the graph.
    Build more houses. Millions more houses, support new ways to build houses, make the planning process much simpler, support more remote work and tax incentives to move businesses to areas of cheaper housing.

    The cost of housing is the single biggest issue holding the UK back.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    Neither of those points is right, really. The 'settlements' were imposed in 1919 and 1940, with the defeated party unable to resist terms and no negotiations meaningful of the name took place. Obviously, if you extend the 1940 invasion through to 1945, there was explicitly no deal done: 'unconditional surrender' was demanded, and given.
    The German observer Brockdorff-Rantzau at the Versailles conference was so furious at the terms he refused to sign them. He left the room, and the German government collapsed. The new government under Bauer had to order him back into the room under instructions from Ebert who pointed out 'we've got no choice.'

    Which has always struck me as ironic because twelve months earlier Trotsky and Lenin had played out an almost identical drama over Brest-Litovsk...which was imposed by the Germans.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    Well, Korea has required support for close to 70 years now as that conflict never ended. Is that what you want?

    I hope we don't need to support Ukraine for 70 years, but if its what we take, I have no objection to supporting them that long.
    Good of you to make commitments from beyond the grave there. Are you going to have yourself wired up Weekend at Bernie’s style to help out in 2093?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    The Tesco superstore near here claims to stock ham & cheddar toasties but not ham & cheese. Something something AI.
    My gorge rises at the thought of Cheddar not being cheese.
  • What is the limit on supporting them?
    My opinion - No nukes, no visibly active forces of our own troops.

    What limit should we have in your opinion? And why?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited August 2023

    What is the limit on supporting them?
    When the Ukranians decide they’ve had enough of war, then we should stop supporting them in war and support them in peace.

    It’s not in Europe’s interest to have an angry imperial bear on their doorstep, so if the Ukranians want to fight the orcs we should all help them out.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214
    ydoethur said:

    The German observer Brockdorff-Rantzau at the Versailles conference was so furious at the terms he refused to sign them. He left the room, and the German government collapsed. The new government under Bauer had to order him back into the room under instructions from Ebert who pointed out 'we've got no choice.'

    Which has always struck me as ironic because twelve months earlier Trotsky and Lenin had played out an almost identical drama over Brest-Litovsk...which was imposed by the Germans.
    Quite.

    This mantra that 'all wars end in negotiations' is a lot more complex than it sounds (unsurprisingly). In fact, the number of wars that end with meaningful negotiations, where the two (or more) sides are able to genuinely bargain over substantive issues isn't all that high. More often, particularly in the 20th century, we see one side imposing terms, or a frozen stalemate, or some combination of the two where one side 'wins' but there's no formal agreement to end the conflict, it just winds down de facto because one side has achieved its objectives and the other can't resist, or feels it's not worth the effort.
  • Sandpit said:

    When the Ukranians decide they’ve had enough of war, then we should stop supporting them in war and support them in peace.

    It’s not in Europe’s interest to have an angry imperial bear on their doorstep, so if the Ukranians want to fight the orcs we should all help them out.
    I meant how much support should we give them? Troops? Weapons? What?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    ydoethur said:

    My gorge rises at the thought of Cheddar not being cheese.
    I'm always grateful for your puns.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    My opinion - No nukes, no visibly active forces of our own troops.

    What limit should we have in your opinion? And why?
    I'm afraid both of those options have to be on the table.

    Putin needs to be told that Ukraine sits under NATO's nuclear umbrella and that if he nukes it, Russia will cease to exist.

    And shipping registered to NATO countries need to be accompanied by naval vessels to and from Ukraine for their own protection, with orders to return fire if fired upon.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I meant how much support should we give them? Troops? Weapons? What?
    Weapons, training, logistics, intelligence, surveillance, all good.

    The unwritten rule for this sort of conflict, is no NATO uniforms on the ground.

    Where would you draw the line?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516
    DougSeal said:

    I'm always grateful for your puns.
    However you slice it, they are are awesome.

    *curses lack of emoji for blowing my own trumpet*
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    I'm afraid both of those options have to be on the table.

    Putin needs to be told that Ukraine sits under NATO's nuclear umbrella and that if he nukes it, Russia will cease to exist.

    And shipping registered to NATO countries need to be accompanied by naval vessels to and from Ukraine for their own protection, with orders to return fire if fired upon.
    You go, David.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,793
    TOPPING said:

    My view is as obvious, facile, and banal as yours.
    Ah ok. I thought it might be a bit spicier - what with all this 'getting shut down' business whenever you proffer it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    edited August 2023
    kinabalu said:

    Ah ok. I thought it might be a bit spicier - what with all this 'getting shut down' business whenever you proffer it.
    You say that I have previously proffered my view on Ukraine but you also said you were interested in hearing what my view was.
  • Sandpit said:

    Build more houses. Millions more houses, support new ways to build houses, make the planning process much simpler, support more remote work and tax incentives to move businesses to areas of cheaper housing.

    The cost of housing is the single biggest issue holding the UK back.
    Pretty much.

    And right now, the Conservatives are trapped by their electorate from doing any of that.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,283
    Carnyx said:

    I miss Cyclefree ...
    Cyclefree essentially left because she was bullied off the site. Yes, I'm looking at you @Dura_Ace.

    So rather than cheering and liking put-downs perhaps we should be a little bit nicer to each other, conscious there's a real person at the other end of the keyboard?

    I include myself in this, by the way.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    Pretty much.

    And right now, the Conservatives are trapped by their electorate from doing any of that.
    This is my friend Karma.

    And she's a bitch



  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561

    Cyclefree essentially left because she was bullied off the site. Yes, I'm looking at you @Dura_Ace.

    So rather than cheering and liking put-downs perhaps we should be a little bit nicer to each other, conscious there's a real person at the other end of the keyboard?

    I include myself in this, by the way.
    I miss Ms Cyclefree too. I hope she comes back,
    If anyone knows her ……….
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    Dura_Ace said:

    I didn't say that they were not into it, just that they are fucking crap at it.
    We all secretly wish we were you Dura, honest.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    Cyclefree essentially left because she was bullied off the site. Yes, I'm looking at you @Dura_Ace.

    So rather than cheering and liking put-downs perhaps we should be a little bit nicer to each other, conscious there's a real person at the other end of the keyboard?

    I include myself in this, by the way.
    Mammoth self-awareness success rescued from the teeth of mammoth self-awareness fail.
  • ydoethur said:

    However you slice it, they are are awesome.

    *curses lack of emoji for blowing my own trumpet*
    Must be gratifying to receive that Seal of approval.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,793
    TOPPING said:

    You say that I have previously proffered my view on Ukraine but you also said you were interested in hearing what my view was.
    Yes indeed. You must have proffered it (mustn't you?) otherwise you wouldn't be saying it offends and upsets (certain) people. And I sure was interested in hearing it. Still am tbh. You might think it's not interesting but why not let me be the judge of that?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,516

    Must be gratifying to receive that Seal of approval.
    It's grate.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    kinabalu said:

    Yes indeed. You must have proffered it (mustn't you?) otherwise you wouldn't be saying it offends and upsets (certain) people. And I sure was interested in hearing it. Still am tbh. You might think it's not interesting but why not let me be the judge of that?
    I think you have exhausted what mileage you hoped to gain from this exchange.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,816
    Latin America is becoming the most politically interesting part of the world. Argentina could have a maverick libertarian in charge soon.

    https://youtu.be/ETlLWPzIH84
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    .
    DougSeal said:

    Good of you to make commitments from beyond the grave there. Are you going to have yourself wired up Weekend at Bernie’s style to help out in 2093?
    Panmunjeom at Barty's.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,793
    TOPPING said:

    I think you have exhausted what mileage you hoped to gain from this exchange.
    Ok, Captain. I guess I can labour on in life without the benefit of your 'controversial' view on Ukraine. Not sure why you're self-censoring with me though? I promised I wouldn't be 'vituperative' and I totally meant that.
  • DougSeal said:

    Good of you to make commitments from beyond the grave there. Are you going to have yourself wired up Weekend at Bernie’s style to help out in 2093?
    If life expectancy can keep going up (big if) I'm not giving up the possibility of still being alive then.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188
    Carnyx said:

    UNless the Toy Soldiers are Games Warehouse ones, in which case they form a completely different category.
    Can anyone outside a US Military unlimited budget Black Program afford a set of those?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    It's grate.
    Fonduementally so.
  • Can anyone outside a US Military unlimited budget Black Program afford a set of those?
    @TheScreamingEagles might be able to afford afford a modest set if he gave up getting any new shoes and clothes for a year.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    Whatever it takes, does that include nuking Russia then?
    No, it will takes nuking ourselves.

    If madly waving nuclear weapons around wins all conflicts, then the maddest wins. Right?

    So my plan to detonate nuclear weapons at regular intervals to keep a cavern full of molten salt liquid, which is then used to drive steam turbines*, is the way to go?

    "You want to nuke us? We nuke ourselves, once every five minutes, just to keeps the lights on and post on PB!"

    *Actually looked at back in the 1950s
  • ydoethur said:

    What's the first thing Johnson says to Carrie after sex?

    'Darling, I'll be home in 20 minutes.'
    Johnson, you say?

    Wasn't he important once?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    Pretty much.

    And right now, the Conservatives are trapped by their electorate from doing any of that.
    As we saw the other day, the "Save the countryside/Green" contingent on the left will howl down any attempt to increase house building.

    The problem is that a large confluence of interests are against increased house building. Not a majority, but enough it make it a political killer at local level.

    So I expect no change with another government.

    It somewhat reminds me, somewhat, of the tests of supersonic aircraft over land in the 1960s in the US. The result of the tests was that a substantial minority (30% IIRC) would never adapt to the sound and would vote for whoever would stop it. Which killed supersonic overflight in the US stone dead.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    Must be gratifying to receive that Seal of approval.
    You're on the ball.

    (Or is it balanced on your nose?)
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,793

    If life expectancy can keep going up (big if) I'm not giving up the possibility of still being alive then.
    You'll have 13,575,142 posts by then. Oh god.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    We cannot support them forever, surely.
    The current cost of support is a small portion of Western defence budgets. Over time we are seeing the cost of gas and oil fall back. It's worth remembering that some Western nations are on (or approaching) the downslope of oil and gas usage - as the economies go green, usage will fall, despite economic growth continuing.

    At the current monetary cost, we could continue forever.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    Johnson, you say?

    Wasn't he important once?
    It is fascinating how rapidly he's dropped out of politics.

    Writing anodyne, no-one-can-hate columns for the papers about saving the newts, no less.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    @TheScreamingEagles might be able to afford afford a modest set if he gave up getting any new shoes and clothes for a year.
    He might have to move from a decent banker to Coutts, even so.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,979

    It is fascinating how rapidly he's dropped out of politics.

    Writing anodyne, no-one-can-hate columns for the papers about saving the newts, no less.
    I wonder how long the Daily Mail will keep him on. Surely the idea was that he totally sticks it to Rishi on a weekly basis. Newts must be a terrible let-down.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    Russia will be hard to shift from Ukraine. But Ukraine doesn't need to shift them from all of Ukraine. They need to get a breakthrough somewhere on the defensive line and then exploit it. If they can then make the dash to the Sea of Azov (80km) then Crimea will be cut off from Russia except potentially via the Kerch Bridge (hence the relentless targeting of it). The Russian position will then be untenable.

    The progress Ukraine has made with no air superiority is frankly remarkable. If the West/NATO had committed to providing F-16s and other weapon systems earlier then they would likely be in a better position. We should be giving everything we can possibly spare.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2023

    I wonder how long the Daily Mail will keep him on. Surely the idea was that he totally sticks it to Rishi on a weekly basis. Newts must be a terrible let-down.
    Comes with the Mayor of London territory, of course.

    [Edit: is that too dated/recherche, I wonder?]
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,207
    edited August 2023

    The current cost of support is a small portion of Western defence budgets. Over time we are seeing the cost of gas and oil fall back. It's worth remembering that some Western nations are on (or approaching) the downslope of oil and gas usage - as the economies go green, usage will fall, despite economic growth continuing.

    At the current monetary cost, we could continue forever.
    Indeed from the value for money perspective, getting the Ukranians to destroy the Russian military is great value. They are defanging the bear, the only real military threat to the continent.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    I wonder how long the Daily Mail will keep him on. Surely the idea was that he totally sticks it to Rishi on a weekly basis. Newts must be a terrible let-down.
    What did he write about at the Daily Telegraph? It wasn't much political vituperation, was it?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492

    Quite.

    This mantra that 'all wars end in negotiations' is a lot more complex than it sounds (unsurprisingly). In fact, the number of wars that end with meaningful negotiations, where the two (or more) sides are able to genuinely bargain over substantive issues isn't all that high. More often, particularly in the 20th century, we see one side imposing terms, or a frozen stalemate, or some combination of the two where one side 'wins' but there's no formal agreement to end the conflict, it just winds down de facto because one side has achieved its objectives and the other can't resist, or feels it's not worth the effort.
    Conflicts usually have outcomes, rather than solutions.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    This thread has had an outcome.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,492
    Foxy said:

    Indeed from the value for money perspective, getting the Ukranians to destroy the Russian military is great value. They are defanging the bear, the only real military threat to the continental.
    In terms of Western military spending, it's an incredibly good deal.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,145
    edited August 2023
    New thread.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674
    TimS said:

    There seems to be a pretty healthy debate on Ukraine today that doesn't involve vituperative (nice word) shutting down of arguments.

    Actually quite surprising we don't have at least 2 or 3 parallel debates going on. Not even on LTNs or housebuilding.

    As Dura points out most of the so called popular front for the liberation of Ukraine (aka people who don't trust any assurances Russia might give in a future peace deal) are not into vituperation. I assume I'm considered part of that camp, and I don't come on here with the purpose of insulting or having enjoyable snarky banter. It's a matter of taste - some people enjoy it, some don't. I come here because there's an interesting range of opinions and experience.

    I think that some here do respond to any non-hawkish comment on Ukraine by speculating on the motives of the writer, which does have a chilling effect, especially for those of us who choose to be identifiable. So I don't comment very often. But I'll take your invitation as encouragement, and FWIW my view is:

    (1) Russia's invasion is mostly pretty straightforward imperialism - "we want your territory and we'll take it by force of arms". As such, it's appalling.
    (2) Russia did have reason to complain about the way NATO was expanding up to its border (in much the same way as the US got worried about Cuba), and could reasonably have objected vehemently but peacefully to Ukraine joining in. That option was closed off by the invasion (which is why the invasion was stupid as well as appalling), and Ukraine should be welcomed into NATO once the war is either over or frozen, so that any future Russian attacks become an attack on the whole alliance and the invasion is seen to have failed in its primary aim.
    (3) Our dislike of the invasion shouldn't lead us to think that Ukrainian nationalism is wonderful and needs to be embraced in toto. The willingness of nationalists to continue to celebrate Hitler collaborators like Bandera is repulsive, the prewar treatment of the Russophile minority was dubious and the insistence on regaining every inch of disputed territory regardless of the views of current residents* is not a war aim we should prioritise.
    (4) Some Ukrainian sources admit that much of the area that is not yet recaptured has significant pro-Russian sympathies, and we could do with some more non-aligned media reporting from the east as we're getting an unremitting stream of one-sided coverage. There was one al-Jazeera piece some months back, which IIRC basically said that the Russians had some active support but the majority simply wanted the war to stop without being counter-liberated - which seems plausible, even given the constraints on people speaking their minds.
    (5) We should therefore aim to encourage a cease-fire ultimately followed by referendums in each region on where they want to belong - the Slesvig-Holstein solution. We should continue to give Ukraine support to make further Russian advances impossible, but shouldn't escalate with new weapon systems or seek to encourage the maximal war aim in (3) by suggesting we'll give more and more until total victory (since that would boost the "no compromise" approach),

    It's a minority view, and I have zero influence on the issue, so it doesn't actually matter what I think, but maybe it helps in the interest of a full-spectrum debate.

    * As in all referendums, the issue of "what is a current resident" will be a problem if we ever get that far - if pro-Ukraine residents have fled to the west of the country, do they get a vote in what happens in the east? But we're a very long way from even discussing that.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188
    Foxy said:

    Indeed from the value for money perspective, getting the Ukranians to destroy the Russian military is great value. They are defanging the bear, the only real military threat to the continent.
    That's been noted by a few - we are sending 1980s military equipment to destroy the 1960s, 70s and 80s Soviet equipment they were designed to destroy.

    There's another rumour about the Jordanian Challengers again...
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668

    Quite.

    This mantra that 'all wars end in negotiations' is a lot more complex than it sounds (unsurprisingly). In fact, the number of wars that end with meaningful negotiations, where the two (or more) sides are able to genuinely bargain over substantive issues isn't all that high. More often, particularly in the 20th century, we see one side imposing terms, or a frozen stalemate, or some combination of the two where one side 'wins' but there's no formal agreement to end the conflict, it just winds down de facto because one side has achieved its objectives and the other can't resist, or feels it's not worth the effort.
    Yes.

    I mean, it depends what you mean by negotiations. These frozen conflicts usually entail some degree of negotiation, even if it's just at the level of agreeing a ceasefire that then goes on and on.

    But even when there are more meaningful negotiations, it is said that more than 50% of peace agreements fail within 5 years. It is difficult to produce meaningful long-term peace. We only need to look at Ireland/Northern Ireland (1848-1998) to see how protracted conflicts can be.

    But obviously that's not a reason not to try!
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,259

    Cyclefree essentially left because she was bullied off the site. Yes, I'm looking at you @Dura_Ace.

    So rather than cheering and liking put-downs perhaps we should be a little bit nicer to each other, conscious there's a real person at the other end of the keyboard?

    I include myself in this, by the way.
    coughcougyouliterallychallengedsomebodytoafightcoughcough
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668

    Latin America is becoming the most politically interesting part of the world. Argentina could have a maverick libertarian in charge soon.

    https://youtu.be/ETlLWPzIH84

    "Maverick libertarian"? Did you mean to write "far right conspiracy theorist"?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    As we saw the other day, the "Save the countryside/Green" contingent on the left will howl down any attempt to increase house building.

    The problem is that a large confluence of interests are against increased house building. Not a majority, but enough it make it a political killer at local level.

    So I expect no change with another government.

    It somewhat reminds me, somewhat, of the tests of supersonic aircraft over land in the 1960s in the US. The result of the tests was that a substantial minority (30% IIRC) would never adapt to the sound and would vote for whoever would stop it. Which killed supersonic overflight in the US stone dead.
    Exactly, LD, Green and Residents Association and Independent councils are much more NIMBY than Tory councils
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,207

    I think that some here do respond to any non-hawkish comment on Ukraine by speculating on the motives of the writer, which does have a chilling effect, especially for those of us who choose to be identifiable. So I don't comment very often. But I'll take your invitation as encouragement, and FWIW my view is:

    (1) Russia's invasion is mostly pretty straightforward imperialism - "we want your territory and we'll take it by force of arms". As such, it's appalling.
    (2) Russia did have reason to complain about the way NATO was expanding up to its border (in much the same way as the US got worried about Cuba), and could reasonably have objected vehemently but peacefully to Ukraine joining in. That option was closed off by the invasion (which is why the invasion was stupid as well as appalling), and Ukraine should be welcomed into NATO once the war is either over or frozen, so that any future Russian attacks become an attack on the whole alliance and the invasion is seen to have failed in its primary aim.
    (3) Our dislike of the invasion shouldn't lead us to think that Ukrainian nationalism is wonderful and needs to be embraced in toto. The willingness of nationalists to continue to celebrate Hitler collaborators like Bandera is repulsive, the prewar treatment of the Russophile minority was dubious and the insistence on regaining every inch of disputed territory regardless of the views of current residents* is not a war aim we should prioritise.
    (4) Some Ukrainian sources admit that much of the area that is not yet recaptured has significant pro-Russian sympathies, and we could do with some more non-aligned media reporting from the east as we're getting an unremitting stream of one-sided coverage. There was one al-Jazeera piece some months back, which IIRC basically said that the Russians had some active support but the majority simply wanted the war to stop without being counter-liberated - which seems plausible, even given the constraints on people speaking their minds.
    (5) We should therefore aim to encourage a cease-fire ultimately followed by referendums in each region on where they want to belong - the Slesvig-Holstein solution. We should continue to give Ukraine support to make further Russian advances impossible, but shouldn't escalate with new weapon systems or seek to encourage the maximal war aim in (3) by suggesting we'll give more and more until total victory (since that would boost the "no compromise" approach),

    It's a minority view, and I have zero influence on the issue, so it doesn't actually matter what I think, but maybe it helps in the interest of a full-spectrum debate.

    * As in all referendums, the issue of "what is a current resident" will be a problem if we ever get that far - if pro-Ukraine residents have fled to the west of the country, do they get a vote in what happens in the east? But we're a very long way from even discussing that.
    This map was the referendum on independence. Ever oblast voted for Ukranian independence, and only in Crimea was it even close. The rest were overwhelming.


  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,283
    viewcode said:

    coughcougyouliterallychallengedsomebodytoafightcoughcough
    Yes, and I have admitted I've struggled with my mental health here at times.

    So this is not welcome. Please never mention it again.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    "Maverick libertarian"? Did you mean to write "far right conspiracy theorist"?
    He is not bellicose on the Falklands though, saying it is up to islanders to decide and favouring diplomacy

    "Falklands: Milei favors diplomacy and the Hong Kong model, respecting people's wishes — MercoPress" https://en.mercopress.com/2023/08/14/falklands-milei-favors-diplomacy-and-the-hong-kong-model-respecting-people-s-wishes
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346

    I think that some here do respond to any non-hawkish comment on Ukraine by speculating on the motives of the writer, which does have a chilling effect, especially for those of us who choose to be identifiable. So I don't comment very often. But I'll take your invitation as encouragement, and FWIW my view is:

    (1) Russia's invasion is mostly pretty straightforward imperialism - "we want your territory and we'll take it by force of arms". As such, it's appalling.
    (2) Russia did have reason to complain about the way NATO was expanding up to its border (in much the same way as the US got worried about Cuba), and could reasonably have objected vehemently but peacefully to Ukraine joining in. That option was closed off by the invasion (which is why the invasion was stupid as well as appalling), and Ukraine should be welcomed into NATO once the war is either over or frozen, so that any future Russian attacks become an attack on the whole alliance and the invasion is seen to have failed in its primary aim.
    (3) Our dislike of the invasion shouldn't lead us to think that Ukrainian nationalism is wonderful and needs to be embraced in toto. The willingness of nationalists to continue to celebrate Hitler collaborators like Bandera is repulsive, the prewar treatment of the Russophile minority was dubious and the insistence on regaining every inch of disputed territory regardless of the views of current residents* is not a war aim we should prioritise.
    (4) Some Ukrainian sources admit that much of the area that is not yet recaptured has significant pro-Russian sympathies, and we could do with some more non-aligned media reporting from the east as we're getting an unremitting stream of one-sided coverage. There was one al-Jazeera piece some months back, which IIRC basically said that the Russians had some active support but the majority simply wanted the war to stop without being counter-liberated - which seems plausible, even given the constraints on people speaking their minds.
    (5) We should therefore aim to encourage a cease-fire ultimately followed by referendums in each region on where they want to belong - the Slesvig-Holstein solution. We should continue to give Ukraine support to make further Russian advances impossible, but shouldn't escalate with new weapon systems or seek to encourage the maximal war aim in (3) by suggesting we'll give more and more until total victory (since that would boost the "no compromise" approach),

    It's a minority view, and I have zero influence on the issue, so it doesn't actually matter what I think, but maybe it helps in the interest of a full-spectrum debate.

    * As in all referendums, the issue of "what is a current resident" will be a problem if we ever get that far - if pro-Ukraine residents have fled to the west of the country, do they get a vote in what happens in the east? But we're a very long way from even discussing that.
    The problem with recognisng referendums after an invasion by another power is that it just encourages ethnic cleansing and settlement. Invade, chuck out lots of the old residents and give their property to 'your people. As Russia has done in Crimea Post 2014. Recognising referendums in such a situation condones ethnic cleansing.
This discussion has been closed.