Here is July 11th's update! TLDR? Here's the summary.

Here is the update for July 12th and 13th! TLDR? Here's the summary.

News update for July 14th: I passed my exam! So I'm going out to celebrate today. Also, it looks like Japan is giving up on pretending it's a democracy, America is on its knees begging to invade Iran, and Moon of Alabama has an update on the current macro state of the war.

Here is the update for July 15th! TLDR? Here's the summary.

Here is the update for July 16th! TLDR? Here's the summary.

No updates on Sundays.

Links and Stuff

Want to contribute?

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Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict

Add to the above list if you can, thank you.


Resources For Understanding The War Beyond The Bulletins


Defense Politics Asia's youtube channel and their map, who is an independent youtuber with a mostly neutral viewpoint.

Moon of Alabama, which tends to have good analysis (though also a couple bad takes here and there)

Understanding War and the Saker: neo-conservative sources but their reporting of the war (so far) seems to line up with reality better than most liberal sources.

Alexander Mercouris, who does daily videos on the conflict and, unlike most western analysts, has some degree of understanding on how war works. He is a reactionary, however.

On the ground: Patrick Lancaster, an independent journalist reporting in the Ukrainian warzones.

Unedited videos of Russian/Ukrainian press conferences and speeches.


Telegram Channels

Again, CW for anti-LGBT and racist, sexist, etc speech, as well as combat footage.

Pro-Russian

https://t.me/aleksandr_skif ~ DPR's former Defense Minister and Colonel in the DPR's forces. Russian language.

https://t.me/Slavyangrad ~ Gleb Bazov, banned from Twitter, referenced pretty heavily in what remains of pro-Russian Twitter.

https://t.me/asbmil ~ ASB Military News, banned from Twitter.

https://t.me/s/levigodman ~ Does daily update posts.

https://t.me/patricklancasternewstoday Patrick Lancaster - crowd-funded U.S journalist, mostly pro-Russian, works on the ground near warzones to report news and talk to locals.

https://t.me/riafan_everywhere ~ Think it's a government news org or Federal News Agency? Russian language.

https://t.me/gonzowarr ~ Front news coverage. Russian langauge.

https://t.me/rybar ~ Russian language.

https://t.me/epoddubny ~ Russian language.

https://t.me/boris_rozhin ~ Russian language.

https://t.me/mod_russia_en ~ Russian Ministry of Defense.

https://t.me/UkraineHumanRightsAbuses ~ Pro-Russian, documents abuses that Ukraine commits.

Pro-Ukraine

With the entire western media sphere being overwhelming pro-Ukraine already, you shouldn't really need more, but:

https://discord.gg/projectowl ~ Pro-Ukrainian OSINT Discord.

https://t.me/ice_inii ~ Alleged Ukrainian account with a rather cynical take on the entire thing.


Last week's discussion post.


  • DivineChaos100 [none/use name]
    hexbear
    58
    2 years ago

    Russia may extend ‘gay propaganda’ ban to include adults

    Russian lawmakers have proposed extending a ban on “gay propaganda”, broadening a law that human rights activists say has put LGBTQ people at risk and led to increased discrimination and violence.

    The ban on the promotion of “non-traditional” sexual relationships to minors could be broadened to include adults, a senior legislator said.

    Russia’s existing “gay propaganda” law, passed in 2013, has been used to stop gay pride marches and detain LGBTQ rights activists.

    Under the proposed changes, any event or act regarded as an attempt to promote homosexuality could incur a fine, Reuters reported.

    The head of the State Duma’s information committee, Alexander Khinshtein, said on Telegram:

    We propose to generally extend the ban on such propaganda regardless of the age of the audience (offline, in the media, on the internet, social networks and online cinemas).
    

    The existing law envisages fines of up to 1m roubles (£13,400) or up to 15 days in jail for propagating “non-traditional sexual relations among minors”.

    Source is Guardian

    • SoyViking [he/him]
      hexbear
      38
      2 years ago

      This is so fucked. I can't help wondering if the west, by using LGBT rights as an example of how much more civilised they were than the Asiatic hordes, has done the LGBT community of Russia and other independent countries a huge disservice. They have succeeded in making people think of LGBT rights a western thing, thereby putting LGBT people in the crosshairs of public opinion when justified anti-western sentiments grow. If you have a lot of old homophobia sloshing around in your cultural baggage and LGBT is something the event does, hating LGBT becomes really really easy.

      I sincerely hope that Russia gets a homegrown LGBT liberation movement that is explicitly anti-western and anti-imperialist.

      • RonJeremyCorbyn [none/use name]
        hexbear
        26
        2 years ago

        Meme of Eric Andre shooting a person symbolizing gays, and then in the next panel asking, why would the west do this?

      • comi [he/him]
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        16
        2 years ago

        Nah, I don’t think so. It’s just appeal to social conservatism, I don’t think west had a lot to do with it. Russians are fairly unimpressed with public affection in general, so something like pride parade was doomed from the start. Before whole shitshow I think 50 percent of people were “let them do whatever they want without parades and adoption”. And adoption was manipulated by propaganda deliberately. Now conservatives are crawling from the rocks with good old “religion, government, people” shit though.

        • DumpsterDive [none/use name]
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          20
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          Nah, I don’t think so. It’s just appeal to social conservatism, I don’t think west had a lot to do with it.

          This is just demonstrably false, and you can see it in the rhetoric of Russian reactionaries as well as in the history of the US taking student movements that are hostile to the government and subverting them for the purpose of destabilization and full-on color revolution. That doesn't give Russia or those reactionaries an excuse, but there's a very clear association between gay rights movements and the west. Same thing happens in China, though China is thankfully not quite as reactionary about it.

      • DivineChaos100 [none/use name]
        hexbear
        16
        2 years ago

        It's nearly impossible to build a homegrown LGBT movement if the homegrown sentiments falsely equates it with the west. We have left adjacent politicians in hungary also saying that "maybe trans people shouldn't be driven into mass suicide" is useless western idpol and then pointing at fucking Latin America saying "see , there gay marriage wasn't the main priority, that's why they are successful" when it quite literally was for Lula for example.

        The West does use LGBT NGOs to stir shit, that's a given but let's not act reacting to this with extreme homophobic oppression is the west's fault.

          • DivineChaos100 [none/use name]
            hexbear
            1
            2 years ago

            Yeah i have the same experiences. The thing is, for example in hungary it's completely unnecessary, especially in the left, to go against LGBT issues or "useless idpol" as those who do, do, since while like from the outside it could seem that hungarian society has the same conservative brainworms but literally every poll that was made in the last decade (even by conservative pollsters) showed that most people support stuff like gay marriage or if not marriage, at least registered partnership. We even had a referendum about the same kind of "gay propaganda" law as in Russia that LGBT organisations, whether they got money from NED or not campaigned for invalid votes and won, the referendum ended up with more invalid votes than yes or no.

            So for me it is even completely unreasonable especially for leftists to go against stuff like this, especially if there was an actual homegrown lgbt movement that could be used to consolidate power in the face of imperialism, just as it happened in Latin America.

            I'm not well versed in Russian society but i highly doubt that Putin would be overthrown if he said "you know what, maybe gay people shouldn't be ostracized".

      • zeal0telite [he/him,they/them]
        hexbear
        1
        2 years ago

        It's why I don't care that Pride is banned or whatever in Russia.

        "Oh no, there's nowhere for Western liberals to show up and talk about how shit a country they don't live in is. "

        LGBT stuff will take a different form in Russia. It already has, and it will because it has to because of the western influence what we understand as "LGBT" is.

        Transgender people are allowed to change their legal gender without requiring sex reassignment surgery in Russia, and being homosexuality isn't a criminal offense. They're a conservative country, but it's not the instant death sentence I see it portrayed as.

        You see the LGBT flag as a symbol of acceptance, others will see it draped over the US embassy, a symbol created in a foreign country that destroyed their country for the crime of wanting to live better.

        I cannot change the Russian culture,but we can change how we react to it.

  • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    Real debt trap: Sri Lanka owes vast majority to West, not China Multipolarista

    Sri Lanka owes 81% of its external debt to US and European financial institutions and Western allies Japan and India. China owns just 10%. But Washington blames imaginary “Chinese debt traps” for the nation’s crisis, as it considers a 17th IMF structural adjustment program.

    more info

    Facing a deep economic crisis and bankruptcy, Sri Lanka was rocked by large protests this July, which led to the resignation of the government.

    Numerous Western political leaders and media outlets blamed this uprising on a supposed Chinese “debt trap,” echoing a deceptive narrative that has been thoroughly debunked by mainstream academics.

    In reality, the vast majority of the South Asian nation’s foreign debt is owed to the West.

    Sri Lanka has a history of struggling with Western debt burdens, having gone through 16 “economic stabilization programs” with the Washington-dominated International Monetary Fund (IMF).

    These structural adjustment programs clearly have not worked, given Sri Lanka’s economy has been managed by the IMF for many of the decades since it achieved independence from British colonialism in 1948.

    As of 2021, a staggering 81% of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt was owned by US and European financial institutions, as well as Western allies Japan and India.

    This pales in comparison to the mere 10% owed to Beijing.

    • jackmarxist [any]
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      32
      2 years ago

      Yes but white people deserve the debt trap money unlike the Chinese

    • bbnh69420 [she/her, they/them]
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      2 years ago

      Fun fact, a creditor group including Blackrock and Ashmore hold over 30% of the country's debt.

      https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/exclusive-blackrock-ashmore-part-sri-lankas-creditor-group-ahead-debt-talks-2022-04-06/

    • Frogmanfromlake [none/use name]
      hexbear
      20
      2 years ago

      The West is really trying to sell a narrative that China is responsible for Sri Lanka's problems in an attempt to move the country closer to the West and IMF. Someone living there told me that the American ambassador invited the protestors to the US embassy and that liberals have co opted a chunk of the protests with an end goal of moving away from China and closer to the West.

  • SoyViking [he/him]
    hexbear
    44
    2 years ago

    Some stories about how Ukrainian refugees are treated in Denmark told by the volunteer we dropped off some bags of children's clothes to.

    • The municipal authorities who are tasked with helping refugees are not up for the task. If refugees are housed privately they don't consider it their job to help with anything else.
    • The municipal authorities doesn't tell refugees of the possibilities to get help from either public services or private charities.
    • Because of this many refugees lack basic clothing and household items. One family had lived in the same issue of clothes for a month.
    • Just getting registered as a residents can take months and without a personal registration number it is almost impossible to interact with authorities, the healthcare system, opening a bank account or even getting a bus card.
    • Childcare can be a huge problem and municipalities do a really shitty job providing it. A single mother was offered a kindergarten for her youngest child a 40 minutes bus ride from their home. The municipality told her that she could just let her six year old walk to school alone. A six year old walking to school alone in a foreign country where they don't speak the language.
    • All in all the authorities do what they are best at: Being dicks to vulnerable people who they think won't be able to make a fuss about it.

    Support refugees, Ukrainian or otherwise, in whatever way you can.

  • Awoo [she/her]
    hexbear
    40
    2 years ago

    Italy's Prime Minister is resigning as his coalition collapsed. Cause? Disagreements over sending weapons to Ukraine.

    Things are fraying all over Europe right now. Not long until big infighting kicks off.

  • euro_chapo [comrade/them]
    hexbear
    36
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    News from Germany: Der Spiegel just reported that Gazprom stated that NordStream 1 maintenance might take much longer than planned, because details about the replacement turbine still are not settled (I don't even want to understand the technicalities here).

    Madman Putin is really doing it - gas to Europe might actually be grind to a complete halt for like weeks. :putin-wink:

    Funniest outcome would be if they just said,

    "Heeey, uhm so Germany, this replacement might take like 6 months or so, why don't you switch on NordStream 2 instead if you want gas? It's almost ready to go! Sorry! See you around, suckers!" :troll:

    • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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      2 years ago

      Previously I thought the claims that Russia would intentionally cut off gas permanently (at least, for the forseeable future) to Europe were stupid and that once they got the replacement part then they would do the maintenance and turn it back on and all of them would have to go "Ah, well, THIS time Russia wasn't lying, but..." but honestly your hypothesis is way funnier and makes sense.

      AFAIK there's no technical issues with the NS2 pipeline, it's literally just not being used because the United States told Germany not to use it. It's as concrete a choice as you can get between "Do you want gas so your economy doesn't collapse, or do you want to be irreversibly attached to a sclerotic, dying colossus?". If you'd have asked me before February what choice Germany would make then I'd obviously choose the former, but now...

      • 20000bannedposters [love/loves]
        hexbear
        23
        2 years ago

        It's not even collapse. It's do you want your economy to evaporate. Corps there are saying that many of the industries that do collapse will be permanent. They will be seeking other places to build the products and those jobs and tax revenue will for ever be lost to Germany. Or the products may just not exist afterwards.

        This whole thing, and history in general, just shows how much patience Russians have. I feel like they have waited a good amount of time so the news falls off, public opinion starts to sour on western leadership, and now they are finally starting to ratchet it up with denying gas. They let the west sanctions do tons of damage to the west, and now they seem to be ready to heap on their side of controlled damage.

      • TheOtherwise [none/use name]
        hexbear
        21
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        I still have a naive hope Germany will break from the dying Empire. But i also have a sinking feeling my hopes will soon be squashed...

        • Mardoniush [she/her]
          hexbear
          10
          2 years ago

          Betting on the SPD to turn right and do the wrong thing has rarely gone astray

    • SoyViking [he/him]
      hexbear
      27
      2 years ago

      It turns out that biting the hand that supplies the energy your economy runs on is not a very good idea.

  • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    The Abe assassination reminds us that individuals make history WaPo

    Truly today's crown jewel of dipshittery. If you looked at the headline and immediately thought "Oh god, this is gonna fucking suck", then you're correct, but unfortunately, it sucks even more than you're thinking it will.

    The assassination of former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe on July 8 shocked his country and the world. Beyond its obvious repugnance in moral terms, Abe’s murder challenges us to consider what implications his sudden loss might have for the political future, in Japan and globally.

    As such, it tests competing views of history and what does, or does not, determine the course of public events.

    According to a widely held perspective, the removal of even a major figure such as Abe, who was the longest-serving head of government in postwar Japan and still influential despite resigning due to ill health in late 2020, lacks ultimate consequence. What determined the past, and will determine the future, are broad, impersonal, social forces — religion, ideology, demography, economic development.

    Yet a contrary intuition — that individual leadership matters — persists. Assassinations perversely tend to confirm it. By plucking leaders violently from atop society, these killings divide history between one period when life was unimaginable without these prominent personages and another, full of what-ifs, defined by their absence.

    Surely the power to make such an impact is part of what tempts assassins. And we must admit the painful extent to which they do, in fact, shape our world, albeit through subtraction: We are experiencing history minus Abraham Lincoln, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, Huey Long, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., John F. and Robert F. Kennedy, Yitzhak Rabin and Anwar Sadat.

    I feel fairly confident that WW1 would have happened even if Franz Ferdinand wasn't killed. At a different time, perhaps, but BROAD HISTORICAL FORCES were aligned that way. To quote Matt Christman, it was overdetermined. Also, mentioning Martin Luther King as a victim of assassination given WHO ASSASSINATED HIM is threatening to give me an aneurysm. I'm not even gonna fucking think about the JFK or RFK mention because my brain might explode.

    For that matter, we live in a world shaped by assassinations that failed, perhaps the most fateful of which was the attempt on Adolf Hitler’s life by coup-minded officers and diplomats 78 years ago this July 20.

    Like, obviously I wish Hitler WAS assassinated, but I don't think it would have made a really significant difference to WW2 or the Holocaust. I agree that there's something to be said about "great men", who were put in place through broad historical trends, leaving their own little unique personal stamp on history, but it would have been a tremendous tragedy of about the same order of magnitude if Hitler's second or third in command took power after he was asssassinated.

    Postwar Japan, a restored but aging economic power facing the rise of its ancient rival — China — might have tried to jump-start its productive capability and reassert itself in global affairs, including militarily, no matter who served as prime minister between 2012 and 2020.

    Even within the constraints of a culture that prizes consensus and collective action, however, Abe pursued those objectives in his own particular way, casting Japanese reassertion as both a legitimate national interest and a contribution to the democratic world’s security. He won over Japanese voters and U.S. presidents as different as Barack Obama and Donald Trump.

    Those extremely different people. Donald Trump is a self-obsessed golf-playing moron who only cares about himself and will throw people to the wolves the second it becomes beneficial to him, unlike Obama - the man who was also all those things and is, what, on his 13th fucking autobiography by now?

    Japan’s surviving political leadership now seems motivated to build a monument to Abe in the form of amendments, long sought by him, that will change the country’s pacifist postwar constitution clearly to authorize military self-defense.

    "Individuals make history, not broad historical trends, which explains why, after Abe was assassinated... checks notes... Japan continued on its broad historical trend towards increasing fascism [with the absence of a strong working class left-wing movement to oppose it]." What the fuck are you talking about???

    Though the contexts are totally different, the process could resemble President Lyndon B. Johnson’s pursuit of the 1964 Civil Rights Act as a tribute to his slain predecessor, John F. Kennedy. Another precedent: Congress passed civil service reform in 1883, in response to the assassination two years earlier of President James Garfield by Charles Guiteau, a frustrated federal job seeker.

    These examples only illustrate that assassination can have paradoxical side-effects — they do not redeem it. Political murder is inherently destabilizing to any political system and especially antithetical to democracy. Nothing could be more contrary to popular rule than the violent decapitation of a government, party or social movement by one self-appointed executioner.

    I'm going insane looking at that last sentence. Oh my fucking god. All I can do is stare blankly at it and try and maintain a hold on my consciousness.

    This is why the United States is wise to invest in Secret Service protection and other measures to keep public officials safe. The impact of a major assassination on the already feverishly divided U.S. body politic today would be too awful to consider. Alas, it is also all too imaginable, as shown by the recent arrest of an armed man who, according to law enforcement, had second thoughts about killing Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh and surrendered to police outside the justice’s house.

    This man is not going to valhalla.

    If we are honest about it, the need to field a small army of official bodyguards constitutes a deeply troubling, though tacit, admission of insufficient domestic tranquility in the United States.

    Happier and, in an important sense, more democratic, is the country where weapons possession is appropriately limited, the public’s attitudes are temperate — and politicians, judges and candidates feel free to walk the streets with minimal or no security.

    The United States came closer to that ideal before Nov. 22, 1963, than it has since. Sweden lost a great deal of innocence in 1986, when a gunman killed former prime minister Olof Palme as he left a movie theater with his family, having previously given his security detail the night off.

    As of July 8, Japan, too, was the kind of place where public officials often felt safe mingling with the voters they proposed to represent.

    Now it faces the grim task of striking a new, sustainable balance, bearing in mind always that, in a democracy, no individual has the right to change history through violence — and all individuals must feel safe to try to change it peacefully.

    This guy was put on this earth to drive me insane, and he's succeeding.

  • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    Summary

    News

    The EU is working on improving compliance among European countries with the sanctions on Russia, lamenting that they don't have the same sanctions enforcement mechanisms as the US (Strange that the US has such well-developed sanction mechanisms, eh? Anyway, the Putler invented global blackmail). At the same time, the EU is worried that it's losing, or has lost, the battle of narratives with the wider world on the Ukraine war, with many countries, including in the G20, don't want to rock the boat too much with Russia. A French minister says that Putin will cut off the Russian gas supply to Europe because he's an evil totaliauthoritarian, which makes previous discussions about Europe cutting off their own gas supplies to own Russia pretty hilarious in hindsight. Russia will receive its pipeline gas turbine after July 14th. Zelensky has fired his ambassadors to Germany, India, Czechia, Norway, and Hungary, with no specific reason given. The UK is trying to ramp up its nuclear power capacity, which I feel like they should have started a decade or more ago. Gazprom is reducing its gas supplies to Italy due to 10 days of routine maintenance. Lithuania is desperately trying to put itself out of its misery by increasing the restrictions on goods that can be sent to Kaliningrad.

    China will apparently soon announce that it's allowing local governments to sell $220 billion-worth of special local bonds to help strengthen the economy. Macau is being put on lockdown for the first time in over two years until July 18th. Wang Yi says that Asian nations should avoid be used as chess pieces in a major power rivalry. Kiribati is quitting the Pacific island bloc over internal disputes, with Australia trying desperately to stop them from leaving. Sri Lanka's President and Prime Minister are leaving their posts (and Bloomberg advises the country to set up an "all-party cabinet that includes technocrats with deep economic experience", hilariously). Geothermal power in Laos is generating $600 million annually for them.

    Pakistan's mango harvest is being ruined by drought. The US is still trying to destabilize Uzbekistan.

    The Ivory Coast is trying to clean up after flooding, caused a little by climate change but a lot by a lack of proper drainage infrastructure and a lot of concrete and bitumen through which water cannot drain.

    The western US continues to experience water scarcity, with increasingly desperate measures being tried. Most Americans find the major issue with electric vehicles is the logistics of how and where to charge them.

    An important street in Bolivia is being named after Qassem Soleimani, an Iranian general and hero to who the US assassinated in early 2020, and a sisterhood agreement between Tehran and a city in Bolivia is being established.

    Conflict and Climate

    Russia continues to destroy Western-supplied ammo. Ukraine says that new US guided rockets have "passed the test", but the attrition rate on the front lines means that Ukraine needs a lot more.

    Billions of people rely on 50,000 wild species for survival and their livelihoods, stressing the importance of biodiversity. NASA will release the first high-resolution color images from the James Webb telescope tomorrow.

    Dipshittery, Good Takes, and Hope

    A ghoul tries to argue that trying to rein in climate change is bad, actually, for working class people, by citing the protests in the Netherlands and the crisis in Sri Lanka, the latter which has a "virtue-signalling" ESG rating of 98.1 out of 100. Zelensky cites Ukrainian forces moving onto Snake Island after Russia retreated as a symbol that Ukraine "will not be broken", ignoring that it already has been, and will be for decades. It's actually your fault - yes, you - that this recession is happening, because recessions are powered by belief, and if you believed that there wasn't going to be a recession, it wouldn't have happened. The Supreme Court is damaging the international image of America, which is otherwise a shining beacon of democracy which is responsible for only good things. Bloomberg argues that Biden can in fact unite Israel and Saudi Arabia to face down Iran, whose containment and subjugation would, apparently... bring down terrorism in the region? ...uhh... have they checked who's supplying the terrorists over there and who Iran is fighting? ...no?... okay... moving on... the Western media reports that China has developed mind-reading AI that can measure your loyalty to the party, which is almost certainly not true but if it is: I bet I would score the highest, like S+ tier. Boris Johnson is, as literally everybody knows, bad because he's a raving populist who is so deeply concerned about the people in his country, especially the homeless, that he brought the country down, and we need more aristocr-- I mean, meritocrats and technocrats to rule the UK, like Liz Truss.

    Responsible Statecraft has some decent analysis about how the Iran hawks are delusional. Popular Resistance interviews Elnora Gavin, a resident of Benton Harbor who is organizing with her local area to fight problems there. MEPs in the EU expect the European Council to revise the EU Treaties to include the right to an abortion as a fundamental human right.

  • SoyViking [he/him]
    hexbear
    34
    2 years ago

    The Euros blinked:

    🇪🇺🇷🇺 The EU and Russia agreed on the transit of goods to the Kaliningrad region, Brussels provided a document that "fully satisfied" Moscow, Izvestia reports, citing high-ranking sources in the Russian Federation

    • jackmarxist [any]
      hexbear
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      2 years ago

      Inb4 Lithuania still fucks it up for reddit upvotes

      • CTHlurker [he/him]
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        2 years ago

        Isn't Lithuania having 18% inflation year-on-year at the moment? Seems suicidal for them to be doing litterally anything other than begging. But I guess after 30 years of heavy braindrain, there isn't much remaining.

        • jackmarxist [any]
          hexbear
          20
          2 years ago

          As long as they getting upvotes they can beat the inflation.

            • jackmarxist [any]
              hexbear
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              2 years ago

              So just make more stupid suicidal posts and print more upvotes! It's the only logical way

  • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    Michael Hudson: The End of Western Civilization – Why It Lacks Resilience, and What Will Take Its Place Naked Capitalism

    Wake up babe, new Michael Hudson speech just dropped.

    This is a transcript for a speech he performed yesterday for China's Global University. It's way too long to reasonably quote it all here, and all of it's good so it's difficult to take parts out of it, but here's a couple paragraphs:

    The Orwellian Doublethink of calling oligarchies “democracies” is followed by defining a free market as one that is free for financial rent-seeking. U.S.-backed diplomacy has indebted countries, forcing them to sell control of their public infrastructure and turn their economy’s “commanding heights” into opportunities to extract monopoly rent.

    ...

    If we ask just who today is enacting and enforcing policies that seek to check oligarchy in order to protect the livelihood of citizens, the answer is that this is done by socialist states. Only a strong state has the power to check a financial and rent-seeking oligarchy. The Chinese embassy in America demonsrated this in its reply to President Biden’s description of China as an autocracy: "Clinging to a Cold War mentality and the hegemon’s logic, the US pursues bloc politics, concocts the “democracy versus authoritarianism” narrative … and ramps up bilateral military alliances, in a clear attempt at countering China."

    Guided by a people-centered philosophy, since the day when it was founded … the Party has been working tirelessly for the interest of the people, and has dedicated itself to realizing people’s aspirations for a better life. China has been advancing whole-process people’s democracy, promoting legal safeguard for human rights, and upholding social equity and justice. The Chinese people now enjoy fuller and more extensive and comprehensive democratic rights.

    ...

    But it was too late to save the U.S. and European economies. The long post-1945 debt buildup has run its course. The U.S. economy has been deindustrialized, its infrastructure is collapsing and its population is so deeply indebted that little disposable income is left to support living standards. Much as occurred with Rome’s Empire, the American response is to try to maintain the prosperity of its own financial elite by exploiting foreign countries. That is aim of today’s New Cold War diplomacy. It involves extracting economic tribute by pushing foreign economies further into dollarized debt, to be paid by imposing depression and austerity on themselves.

    ...

    The only possible way for history really to end would be for the American military to destroy every nation seeking an alternative to neoliberal privatization and financialization. U.S. diplomacy insists that history must not take any path that would not culminate in its own financial empire ruling through client oligarchies. American diplomats hope that their military threats and support of proxy armies will force other countries to submit to neoliberal demands – to avoid being bombed, or suffering “color revolutions,” political assassinations and army takeovers, Pinochet-style. But the only real way to bring history to an end is by atomic war to end human life on this planet.

    • ReformOrDDRevolution [comrade/them]
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      2 years ago

      This was a good read, I've really enjoyed reading/listening to Hudson lately. I'll have to pick up the new edition of Super Imperialism.

  • mrbigcheese [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    idk how DSA posts manage to attract so many raging angry liberals but damn lol i fucking hate americans, these mfs getting mad at the slightest push back against billions in military spending

    https://twitter.com/DSA_Intl_Comm/status/1547217937039253505

    • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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      edit-2
      2 years ago

      Exhibit #942042032 as to why the West as a hegemony must be destroyed and every single one of these people re-educated. The land will sink into an ocean of boiling, acidic blood and just before the end, just before the power grid shuts down, the last tepid leftist will say "Maybe we shouldn't have spent $292 trillion dollars on supplying the European Ultrafascist Confederation with weaponry with its conflict with China and Africa?" and the last dronie will smugly say "No." and post a gif of the F-98, a plane which costs $50 billion dollars and cannot actually fly. Then the lights will shut off, the internet will shut down, and all that will be left is to cook rat meat on an open fire as you freeze to death.

      • Mardoniush [she/her]
        hexbear
        7
        2 years ago

        Neo-Wikipedia article from 2580: "2038-2040: the end of effective Carrier task forces, starvation in California, sack of Washington DC."

    • GVAGUY3 [he/him]
      hexbear
      21
      2 years ago

      They completely think that this would result in Russia taking over Ukraine.

      • mrbigcheese [he/him]
        hexbear
        17
        2 years ago

        actually the US is obviously trying to have Russia take over Ukraine by only committing 1% of its yearly budget to funding this war, if we dont up our spending to $1T to Ukraine we're basically rootin for Putin!

    • TheGamingLuddite [none/use name]
      hexbear
      17
      2 years ago

      The cultural gap between the leftlib ukraine flags on twitter and the bloodthirsty, battle-hardened eastern european neo-nazis they worship is so bizarre. The only thing Azov hates more than Russians is liberal cosmpolitans.

  • amber2 [she/her,they/them]
    hexbear
    32
    2 years ago

    Energy crisis now reminds me of covid in Summer 2020

    "If things are so bad now, how the fuck are we going to survive the winter?"

  • sellmetherope [comrade/them]
    hexbear
    32
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Pakistan rapidly shaping up to be the next domino after Sri Lanka

    https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Soaring-Energy-Prices-Spell-Disaster-For-Pakistan.html

    Also Pakistan has a love-hate with the US, mostly hate. The USA has love-hate-mostly-hate for Pakistan. Pakistan is now geopolitically isolated.

    Next flashpoint isn’t Taiwan it’s Pakistan.