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Have you ever been to Houston? There is a lot of industry permanently based there including refineries, manufacturing, and the Port of Houston to name a few. Guess we should pack it all up and move it to,,, where? Coast is out. Rivers flood. Ground shakes. Wind blows.
fka ftc said:
I think its clear that when it comes to fighting Russians, nothing else matters.
By you own calculations you said $100 billion in "existing weapons to kill Russians" and $20 billion in financial aid.Teslag said:fka ftc said:
I think its clear that when it comes to fighting Russians, nothing else matters.
Ridiculous assertion. We have plenty of existing weapons to kill Russians, especially when that's literally what they were manufactured to do.
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There are 123 million households in the United States. So 900 x 123,000,000 = $110 Billion. That's the total amount of aid we have given, which is mostly the book value of existing weapons and training/support for those weapons. Only about 20 or so billion of that is direct financial assistance in the form of grants and loans.
So basically it's just another lazy gotcha headline that lacks any real effort at objective clarity. Carry on.
Market? CCare to clarify?Teslag said:Quote:
Have you ever been to Houston? There is a lot of industry permanently based there including refineries, manufacturing, and the Port of Houston to name a few. Guess we should pack it all up and move it to,,, where? Coast is out. Rivers flood. Ground shakes. Wind blows.
Let the market decide. There is not constitutional power given to the Feds to reimburse people for disaster losses.
Its absolutely relevant as it is a prime example of where that money could otherwise be used. Its real, its right here for most of us in Texas, and many posters know someone or were affected by hurricanes, including Ike and Harvey in the last 15 years.Teslag said:
I'm not going to derail the thread with details as to why I believe we shouldn't be subsidizing coastal living. But it's my belief. If you want to have that debate then start another thread.
The entire thing was a red herring on your part. We have the money kill Russians so kill them we shall.
Just to be clear, you have no thoughts on accountability for those dollars or auditing / control over those dollars? Your response leaves it unclear.Teslag said:
50% would be excessive. But there will always be payoffs, bribes, corruption in warfare. That's been true for thousands of years and it's true now. It's naive to believe otherwise. So it comes with the game and I have accept a certain level of it.
In 2013 VP Joe Biden flew to China on Air Force 2. He took his son Hunter with him. Hunter returned to America on AF2 with an incredibly lucrative deal with the Chinese.
— MAZE (@mazemoore) August 10, 2023
In what may have been the last instance of true journalism by the MSM in our country, the press hammered… pic.twitter.com/Rtmp65VyBO
fka ftc said:Just to be clear, you have no thoughts on accountability for those dollars or auditing / control over those dollars? Your response leaves it unclear.Teslag said:
50% would be excessive. But there will always be payoffs, bribes, corruption in warfare. That's been true for thousands of years and it's true now. It's naive to believe otherwise. So it comes with the game and I have accept a certain level of it.
Can you point me to any reporting about what those guys are doing? I mean, I can send you reporting and metrics on how funds for the program I linked are spent.Teslag said:fka ftc said:Just to be clear, you have no thoughts on accountability for those dollars or auditing / control over those dollars? Your response leaves it unclear.Teslag said:
50% would be excessive. But there will always be payoffs, bribes, corruption in warfare. That's been true for thousands of years and it's true now. It's naive to believe otherwise. So it comes with the game and I have accept a certain level of it.
Of course. And if you look back on this thread it wasn't my side that threw a wall eyed fit when we had "advisors" doing just that. It was ranting and raving about "boots on ground" and "escalation".
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American military personnel are now in Ukraine to help keep track of the billions of dollars' worth of weapons and equipment the United States has sent since the start of the Russian invasion, a senior U.S. defense official and senior U.S. military official said.
Former Prime Minister of Pakistan🇵🇰 Imran Khan details the US plot to overthrow him as Prime Minister on Going Underground.
— Going Underground (@GUnderground_TV) August 10, 2023
The US plot is now further confirmed with the leaked cypher which shows the US threatened Pakistan with isolation and said all would be forgiven if he was… pic.twitter.com/1bTqncxryQ
🇺🇦 F-16 pilot training only next summer; Kiev complains: This is called procrastination
— Sprinter (@Sprinter99800) August 11, 2023
▪️The first group of six Ukrainian pilots is not expected to complete training for handling F-16 fighter jets in the US before next summer, the "Washington Post" reported today, citing… pic.twitter.com/k7AvvcQr3g
If you want to know how much the ruling regime hates you, remember that they refused to spend $7 billion to build a border wall and then refused to cut you a check for $2,000 after it locked you in your house, banned your kids from school, and got you fired from work over a virus… https://t.co/sa7TEG6klJ
— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) August 10, 2023
Blackrock gets half a trillion dollar deal to "rebuild" Ukraine.
— illuminatibot (@iluminatibot) August 11, 2023
What a spontaneous & shocking coincidence.https://t.co/4WA1QVo2FB
Washington Post, perhaps the most loyal major news outlet to Biden in America, has massively changed its portrayal of the Ukraine war. pic.twitter.com/OKYiURsmls
— Max Abrahms (@MaxAbrahms) August 11, 2023
Biden is now asking for an additional *$24 billion* for Ukraine without once articulating why it advances U.S. national interests. It's malpractice not to ask whether the geopolitical disaster known as Hunter Biden has something to do with it: smells to me like we’re using U.S.… https://t.co/ekt5AyQNEp
— Vivek Ramaswamy (@VivekGRamaswamy) August 10, 2023
Another banner said “Kick Nazis Out of Football”
— What the media hides. (@narrative_hole) August 11, 2023
The Greek team won the Conference League qualification match against Dynamo Kiyv pic.twitter.com/zHixhqi6TW
Russia is experiencing a "dollar famine", Russian media report. No wonder propagandist Solovyev was so worried (see my previous post).
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) August 10, 2023
Russian economy is facing a growing currency deficit as export revenues decline, foreign trade degrades to barter schemes "in rubles" and… pic.twitter.com/cCrBb9VRn9
Not a Bot said:
If you can get past the first very opinionated paragraph of this tweet, it goes into pretty deep analysis of what's going on with the ruble and how it is affecting the Russian economy.Russia is experiencing a "dollar famine", Russian media report. No wonder propagandist Solovyev was so worried (see my previous post).
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) August 10, 2023
Russian economy is facing a growing currency deficit as export revenues decline, foreign trade degrades to barter schemes "in rubles" and… pic.twitter.com/cCrBb9VRn9
PlaneCrashGuy said:
I'll be interested to see if this Russian offensive captures more land or if Uke can successfully hold them off. I don't think Uke is "gaining ground everyday" anymore. I'm hard pressed to think Russia can mount an offensive from their heels.
⚡️#BREAKING Ukraine's Zelenskiy says all regional chiefs of Ukraine's military recruitment offices have been fired — Reuters
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) August 11, 2023
Ukrainian President Zelensky dismissed all heads of regional military recruitment offices. In total, there are already 112 criminal proceedings against officials from such facilities.
— Status-6 (@Archer83Able) August 11, 2023
Zelensky declared that the recruitment system will now be managed by veterans who saw combat,… pic.twitter.com/3Ioq1lMXpE
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My suspicion is they won't try to move north/farther much toward the west. I think they want to just maintain their lines in the south
GAC06 said:
Ukraine has been under attack for 18 months, and has a significant air defense capability compared to before. I suspect the civilian political reaction will be a lot worse in Russia if a few power plants get blown up than in Ukraine. Plus oil infrastructure of course.
Teslag said:Quote:
My suspicion is they won't try to move north/farther much toward the west. I think they want to just maintain their lines in the south
They could probably accomplish this with a realistic peace deal now but they won't.
Delusional propaganda, at best.Quote:
Administration officials said the proposal aims to address Ukraine's needs for the first quarter of the new fiscal year that begins in October, adding that existing funding will suffice until then.
"We won't be bashful about going back to Congress beyond the first quarter of next year if we feel like we need to do that," a senior administration official told reporters. "It's really ... the best estimate we can come up with for what we think we're going to need to support Ukraine, at least for those first three months of the year."
There is currently about $6.2 billion left in a Pentagon account to send existing equipment from U.S. stockpiles to Ukraine, and another $2.2 billion to put weapons and equipment on contract for later deliveries. That money will likely last until early fall, given current U.S. spending rates, meaning a new package will need to be in place soon to allow Ukraine to plan for operations through the winter, which is expected to continue to see heavy fighting as Ukrainian forces continue their push toward Russian-occupied Crimea.
It really is. People also tend to believe the propaganda that we are just sending unused equipment sitting around as if that has a zero cost to it. In theory, but really in reality, we could have sold that equipment to any number of allies near and far.nortex97 said:
Yes and that is just for the first fiscal quarter (October thru December), plus they've said they won't be shy about coming to ask for more during that period.
I know there is a miss lindsey group that gets more excited about war than any poster that's visited this site, but wow, that should be a non-starter for sane GOP congress critters.Delusional propaganda, at best.Quote:
Administration officials said the proposal aims to address Ukraine's needs for the first quarter of the new fiscal year that begins in October, adding that existing funding will suffice until then.
"We won't be bashful about going back to Congress beyond the first quarter of next year if we feel like we need to do that," a senior administration official told reporters. "It's really ... the best estimate we can come up with for what we think we're going to need to support Ukraine, at least for those first three months of the year."
There is currently about $6.2 billion left in a Pentagon account to send existing equipment from U.S. stockpiles to Ukraine, and another $2.2 billion to put weapons and equipment on contract for later deliveries. That money will likely last until early fall, given current U.S. spending rates, meaning a new package will need to be in place soon to allow Ukraine to plan for operations through the winter, which is expected to continue to see heavy fighting as Ukrainian forces continue their push toward Russian-occupied Crimea.
Teslag said:
Ukraine will want, and should be allowed, to join NATO with any peace deal. It's the only way to assure any peace is permanent. Russia knows this too. Russia would be fine agreeing to a peace now, and them come back for another bite at the apple years later. Ukraine in NATO completely takes that off the table.