AggieKO said:
Curious if Putin understands English but can't speak it? His answers are much quicker than Tuckers.
If the Tucker interview and the response to it from people like Richard Hanania show anything, it's that there's an enormous gulf in historical sense between the West and Russia. Tucker knew Putin would take the discussion further back than most in the West would expect it to go,…
— RAW EGG NATIONALIST (@Babygravy9) February 9, 2024
Yes but Putin's takes this to entire differently level. Its his religion- the way he recounted Russian history and Poland's intervention in that 'holy' history. He blames 13th C Poland for the Ukrainian mess of today. That requires a passion most folk just dont have; dangerous levels of it. The sooner this dude exits this world the better off it will be.Nanomachines son said:
Watching this Putin interview I came away with the fact that I hate modern American politics. Putin knows his nation's history and we should expect that from our leaders. We used to have this and we used to have leaders who knew history dating back to Jamestown and back into England and Europe.
Regardless of Putin's motivations or lies, you cannot say he has not studied history and geopolitics extensively. We need to expect this and demand it from our own leaders.
Great post as always. It is ingrained in their being. Even the harden Stalinist communist had to refer to WW2 as "The Great Patriotic War." Russia has always had a dark bloody history. Repeated invasions will do that to a people-- The Mongols, French, Germans, etc have killed millions through the centuries.MouthBQ98 said:
Yes. Keep in mind Putin is the head Oligarch too, effectively. He is a billionaire mostly discreetly, but his focus is power and putting power to use instead of amassing wealth. He drew much of his power by being the politically acceptable and populist face of that group amongst the Russian population, and restoring order from the post breakup chaos, even if it was through authoritarianism. An alliance with his peers in their respective areas of economic power helped him reach and stay at the top, until he had fixed his position. Keeping them satisfied as a group does matter and the war definitely strains that economically, but I think it also helps empower Putin as long as it does not hot terribly badly in the view of the Russian public.
Putin can use wars to reestablish Russian sovereignty or prestige pretty much almost endlessly to keep his population focused on that matter and off of any dissatisfaction they might feel. It is something Russia is culturally used to.
yep, its amazing how many people keep falling for putins grift. He's a short manlet with an inferiority complex who parades around as a badassRapier108 said:
No surprise that Putin can't get over stuff that happened to Russia 1000+ years ago.
As Dr. Dunning taught in his Russian history class, Russians have the biggest case of victim mentality of any society on Earth. They simply cannot let go of any wrong, perceived or not, that Russia has suffered. In their minds, they are always the victim of some injustice that needs to be righted, but at the same time, no amount of righting is ever enough.
Hedge, as usual you completely missed the point.Mike Hancho said:yep, its amazing how many people keep falling for putins grift. He's a short manlet with an inferiority complex who parades around as a badassRapier108 said:
No surprise that Putin can't get over stuff that happened to Russia 1000+ years ago.
As Dr. Dunning taught in his Russian history class, Russians have the biggest case of victim mentality of any society on Earth. They simply cannot let go of any wrong, perceived or not, that Russia has suffered. In their minds, they are always the victim of some injustice that needs to be righted, but at the same time, no amount of righting is ever enough.
It's also interesting in how eerily similar it is to the mindset of many Americans who are chasing after perceived injustices that no amount of righting will ever fix - only they want to do it as a means of taking the U.S. down a peg....while Putin and those like him in Russia are using their inferiority complex and victim mentality to strengthen their country as best they can.Rapier108 said:
No surprise that Putin can't get over stuff that happened to Russia 1000+ years ago.
As Dr. Dunning taught in his Russian history class, Russians have the biggest case of victim mentality of any society on Earth. They simply cannot let go of any wrong, perceived or not, that Russia has suffered. In their minds, they are always the victim of some injustice that needs to be righted, but at the same time, no amount of righting is ever enough.
Mike Hancho said:yep, its amazing how many people keep falling for putins grift. He's a short manlet with an inferiority complex who parades around as a badassRapier108 said:
No surprise that Putin can't get over stuff that happened to Russia 1000+ years ago.
As Dr. Dunning taught in his Russian history class, Russians have the biggest case of victim mentality of any society on Earth. They simply cannot let go of any wrong, perceived or not, that Russia has suffered. In their minds, they are always the victim of some injustice that needs to be righted, but at the same time, no amount of righting is ever enough.
Nanomachines son said:If the Tucker interview and the response to it from people like Richard Hanania show anything, it's that there's an enormous gulf in historical sense between the West and Russia. Tucker knew Putin would take the discussion further back than most in the West would expect it to go,…
— RAW EGG NATIONALIST (@Babygravy9) February 9, 2024
Absolutely, this was my biggest takeaway.
Rapier108 said:
No surprise that Putin can't get over stuff that happened to Russia 1000+ years ago.
As Dr. Dunning taught in his Russian history class, Russians have the biggest case of victim mentality of any society on Earth. They simply cannot let go of any wrong, perceived or not, that Russia has suffered. In their minds, they are always the victim of some injustice that needs to be righted, but at the same time, no amount of righting is ever enough.
Because they chose to be. And I don't want to be friends with a country that thinks it is ok to invade their neighbor, raping, torturing, and murdering the population along the way because "shared history" makes them think they belong together.Tibbers said:
Yay for war and death! Why is Russia our enemy again?
ttu_85 said:Yes but Putin's takes this to entire differently level. Its his religion- the way he recounted Russian history and Poland's invention in that 'holy' history. He blames 13th C Poland for the Ukrainian mess of today. That requires a passion most folk just dont have; dangerous levels of it. The sooner this dude exits this world the better off it will be.Nanomachines son said:
Watching this Putin interview I came away with the fact that I hate modern American politics. Putin knows his nation's history and we should expect that from our leaders. We used to have this and we used to have leaders who knew history dating back to Jamestown and back into England and Europe.
Regardless of Putin's motivations or lies, you cannot say he has not studied history and geopolitics extensively. We need to expect this and demand it from our own leaders.
The problem with Putin's reliance on that history is that he thinks it trumps the self determination of the Ukrainian people who decided that they did not want to be a part of Russia anymore. Russia made a deal with Ukraine to give up their nukes in return for a promise from Russia not to invade, and Russia broke that promise. None of Putin's long line of historical claims trumps the right of a free people to self determine who governs them.Nanomachines son said:ttu_85 said:Yes but Putin's takes this to entire differently level. Its his religion- the way he recounted Russian history and Poland's invention in that 'holy' history. He blames 13th C Poland for the Ukrainian mess of today. That requires a passion most folk just dont have; dangerous levels of it. The sooner this dude exits this world the better off it will be.Nanomachines son said:
Watching this Putin interview I came away with the fact that I hate modern American politics. Putin knows his nation's history and we should expect that from our leaders. We used to have this and we used to have leaders who knew history dating back to Jamestown and back into England and Europe.
Regardless of Putin's motivations or lies, you cannot say he has not studied history and geopolitics extensively. We need to expect this and demand it from our own leaders.
We should demand this level of passion from our leaders. Why is this a bad thing? He's not blaming Poland at all, he used all of the historical context to show why those lands belonged to Russia, not that it was all Poland's fault. Our leaders should have an autistic level of of knowledge about US history going back to Jamestown. They should know the reasons and causes for every major conflict and land acquisition. They should know our grievances or claims to specific areas of land. They should know why people made the decisions they did within the historical context of the time period.
This is not dangerous at all. This is what good leaders do. This place constantly harps on how those who forget history are doomed to repeat it yet when confronted by a foreign adversary who has this level of knowledge, it is now condemned. I don't get it, either knowledge of history is a good thing or it is bad. Which is it?
Mike Hancho said:Daddy said:suburban cowboy said:
At least Russia has a leader that loves and serves his country
Absolutely
Actually elected a real competent leader that sharp as a knife that loves his country that's not putting his country up for sale whether you agree with his agenda or not as a United States citizen
I actually listen to it and said man I wish he was our president versus poopy pants who's bought and paid for by people that hate our country that are trying to implode it.
Elected? Lmao.
It's amazing how many of the far right thinks Putin is a good "alpha male" badass. You're being played by a KGB agent who want to restore the ussr
Yes.Woods Ag said:
So if the people of Texas vote to be able to self govern outside of the US' control, the US MUST comply and allow them to leave?
Woods Ag said:
So if the people of Texas vote to be able to self govern outside of the US' control, the US MUST comply and allow them to leave?
His claims about the US and Ukraine supposedly breaking the agreement are a smoke screen he used as his basis for the invasion. He broke the agreement in 2014 and his real reason for the invasion was that the Ukrainians threw out his puppet in favor of a leader of their choosing.Woods Ag said:
He does. There was an agreement and that agreement was broken by Ukraine and NATO which allowed him to break his side of the agreement.
You can be opposed to him invading Ukraine and also understand that he had a reason to do so. They're not mutually exclusive.
Absolutely. But that doesn't mean it is wrong. Our declaration of independence spells it out. When a free people decide that they have had enough from their government and decide they want to change, it is their inherent right to do so and choose a government for themselves.Woods Ag said:
You know it won't be that easy though, right?
This is largely because progressivism has become the religion of the modern West, of which the arrogant dogma of presentism is one of its pillars.Nanomachines son said:If the Tucker interview and the response to it from people like Richard Hanania show anything, it's that there's an enormous gulf in historical sense between the West and Russia. Tucker knew Putin would take the discussion further back than most in the West would expect it to go,…
— RAW EGG NATIONALIST (@Babygravy9) February 9, 2024
Absolutely, this was my biggest takeaway.
GAC06 said:
I guess he forgot the bit of history that Ukraine voted for independence and Russia agreed to guarantee their territorial integrity, and not hundreds of years ago. In his lifetime.
If this is true, then why didn't Putin invade these countries back in the 2000's when the US had 250,000+ troops tied down in Iraq and Afghanistan? We wouldn't have been able to stop them.AtticusMatlock said:
That's the whole point of the US sending arms to Ukraine. Ukraine is in the way of Russia's real targets.
Russia's declining population and indefensible geography have made the more paranoid nationalists like Putin believe that the only way they can survive is to secure chokepoints against future land invasion. This means securing the mountainous region in Moldova and parts of Hungary, taking back Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia and taking over parts of Poland.
They were busy fighting in Chechnya.281TexAg said:If this is true, then why didn't Putin invade these countries back in the 2000's when the US had 250,000+ troops tied down in Iraq and Afghanistan? We wouldn't have been able to stop them.AtticusMatlock said:
That's the whole point of the US sending arms to Ukraine. Ukraine is in the way of Russia's real targets.
Russia's declining population and indefensible geography have made the more paranoid nationalists like Putin believe that the only way they can survive is to secure chokepoints against future land invasion. This means securing the mountainous region in Moldova and parts of Hungary, taking back Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia and taking over parts of Poland.
This is fair game, I dare them to try. Is there a single piece of land in this world that hasn't been claimed/taken/re-claimed over time?Agthatbuilds said:Nanomachines son said:If the Tucker interview and the response to it from people like Richard Hanania show anything, it's that there's an enormous gulf in historical sense between the West and Russia. Tucker knew Putin would take the discussion further back than most in the West would expect it to go,…
— RAW EGG NATIONALIST (@Babygravy9) February 9, 2024
Absolutely, this was my biggest takeaway.
Ultimately, putins/russias opinion on historical Russian territories is irrelevant.
It's the same logic hilter used.
It's the same logic leftist use today regarding native Americans
It would justify mexico invading the southwest to claim back ancestral lands.
It doesn't matter what happened 1000 years ago, or even 100.
Ukraine is a sovereign state. He has no justification for this invasion.
There were contingencies though. Deals and agreements and understandings that were not adhered to.GAC06 said:Woods Ag said:
So if the people of Texas vote to be able to self govern outside of the US' control, the US MUST comply and allow them to leave?
Ukraine has been independent 30 years and Russia recognized it.