Russian Invastion of Ukraine: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
=Sun Apr 10, 2022=
[[IT Troops]].
=Fri Apr 8, 2022=
=Fri Apr 8, 2022=
''Present-day Russia is a Bonapartist regime, very similar to the French regime of 1848–1870 famously described by Marx, but also to the inter war Germany. It relies on plebiscites by benefiting from a sudden introduction of universal suffrage and aggressively boosts resentment and revanchism in society after a major defeat (in Russia’s case, after the Cold War). Ruled by a leader with almost unlimited power, such regimes tend to degenerate into electoral monarchies that repress all internal divisions and are hostile to their neighbors. They are economically stable, which helps them depoliticise the masses, trading absolute civic disengagement for relative well-being and supporting escapism into private life. All this leads them to become militarily aggressive, externalising internal conflicts, overestimating threats from the outside and ending up bolstering strong military alliances against them. They are driven by suicidal tendencies and are heading inevitably towards defeat – but that comes at a high price for everyone, especially now, in the nuclear age.'' - from [https://www.akweb.de/politik/putin-war-in-ukraine-a-fascist-regime-looms-in-russia/]
''Present-day Russia is a Bonapartist regime, very similar to the French regime of 1848–1870 famously described by Marx, but also to the inter war Germany. It relies on plebiscites by benefiting from a sudden introduction of universal suffrage and aggressively boosts resentment and revanchism in society after a major defeat (in Russia’s case, after the Cold War). Ruled by a leader with almost unlimited power, such regimes tend to degenerate into electoral monarchies that repress all internal divisions and are hostile to their neighbors. They are economically stable, which helps them depoliticise the masses, trading absolute civic disengagement for relative well-being and supporting escapism into private life. All this leads them to become militarily aggressive, externalising internal conflicts, overestimating threats from the outside and ending up bolstering strong military alliances against them. They are driven by suicidal tendencies and are heading inevitably towards defeat – but that comes at a high price for everyone, especially now, in the nuclear age.'' - from [https://www.akweb.de/politik/putin-war-in-ukraine-a-fascist-regime-looms-in-russia/]

Revision as of 20:04, 10 April 2022

Sun Apr 10, 2022

IT Troops.

Fri Apr 8, 2022

Present-day Russia is a Bonapartist regime, very similar to the French regime of 1848–1870 famously described by Marx, but also to the inter war Germany. It relies on plebiscites by benefiting from a sudden introduction of universal suffrage and aggressively boosts resentment and revanchism in society after a major defeat (in Russia’s case, after the Cold War). Ruled by a leader with almost unlimited power, such regimes tend to degenerate into electoral monarchies that repress all internal divisions and are hostile to their neighbors. They are economically stable, which helps them depoliticise the masses, trading absolute civic disengagement for relative well-being and supporting escapism into private life. All this leads them to become militarily aggressive, externalising internal conflicts, overestimating threats from the outside and ending up bolstering strong military alliances against them. They are driven by suicidal tendencies and are heading inevitably towards defeat – but that comes at a high price for everyone, especially now, in the nuclear age. - from [1]

And - At the same time, Putin has built a trickle-down system similar to the one Ronald Reagan created in his time. While the elites became insanely rich and bought endless luxurious yachts and palaces, the general population was able to raise its standard of living through mortgages and consumer credit.

Sat Apr 2, 2022

$70k per hour cost to fly an F22 Raptor. [2].

US needs a ball check - otherwise we allow for offensive nuclear threat - [3]

Sanctions as a weapon - [4]

Sun Mar 27, 2022

The Making of Putin - [5]

Thu Mar 24, 2022

Good explanation of Putin's thinking - makes sense that he thought that Jan 6, 2021 made fun of democracy and thus he thought he could get away with murder. [6]

Mar 23, 2022

Comparison of Putin and Hitler over their 10 year rise - [7] from texty.org. Really good insights.

Also - Eurasianism - [8]

And Eukraine Jewish Encounter - [9]

Mar 17, 2022

Interesting News Sources

Mar 14, 2022

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/03/ukraine-united-states-nato/627052/ suggests a proper response - treating Russia like the gangsta it is

Mar 11, 2022

  • Analysts appear to state that escalation is likely to lead to a nuclear weapon being used, based on war game scenarios back from 2014. No visible offramp exists for Putin, as he controls Russia's information flows. [10]

Analysis Mar 8, 2022

  • First, understand nuclear strategy - [11]
  • One possibility is that the Rubicon has been crossed - [12]
  • Then, read about an analysis interpreted on Mar 5, 2022 regarding a possible fall of Russia according to a leaked document from Russian intelligence known as FSB - - is this document verified or fake? - [13]. Case made is not impossible. It may be likely - logic there appears to be sound. Unless this is pure psyops.

Communications

Mar 8, 2022

To Catarina -

Read my retweet from Igor Sushko based on a leaked report, translated, mentioned in The Times (UK) article recently

https://twitter.com/marcin_ose

A 2000 word doc from FSB that discusses that Russia is in deep shit and that the west should enter the war before too many more innocent lives are lost.

I also posted this on the wiki with some more supporting info on nuclear strategy at

https://wiki.opensourceecology.org/wiki/Ukraine_War#Analysis_Mar_8.2C_2022

Truth Wins

  • Here's a possitive outlook - [14]

Military Analysis

  • Air Force Magazine - [15]

Losses

  • Russia - [16]. By Interfax Ukraine - [17]
  • Ukraine - why is this not visible?

Military Aid Needs

  • Mar 1 - in Defense News - [18]

Intro

Recents on Twitter - https://twitter.com/search?q=ukraine%20news&src=typed_query&f=live

Check out this contrarian viewpoint - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1vdiEABLFoo from the feed. at about 4 AM Sunday CST USA. From Coach Red Pill on Telegram. How fascinating.

It is interesting to see the arguments promoted by each side. From the assumptions that the good or evil side takes, their respective conclusions appear sound. Their conclusions depend on the assumptions that they are making. And assumptions depend on admissible information - which information the viewpoint includes and which it omits in its considerations. And what values it holds. Thus, one could gain reconciliation or admit to differences based on admissible information and therefore the assumptions made.