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Данилов <user@test.ru>: Mar 08 09:44PM +0300 08.03.2022 20:54, Pan Szymanowski пишет: > они по нему > (c) СМИ > Рекордные - не рекордные, но как в Каролине в 2008. Байден сказал, что во всем виноват Путин. |
⁹⁹⁹√ulcаn <999V@russian.z1>: Mar 08 01:47PM -0500 On 3/8/2022 1:44 PM, Данилов wrote: >> (c) СМИ >> Рекордные - не рекордные, но как в Каролине в 2008. > Байден сказал, что во всем виноват Путин. а за рубль уже дают по морде |
jes2001@yandex.ru (Pan Szymanowski): Mar 08 06:47PM >> (c) СМИ >> Рекордные - не рекордные, но как в Каролине в 2008. > На продуктовой корзине отражается? Если надолго, то да. Вся ж экономика к бензину привязана. -- (C) *** JES 2022 *** Урри Шимановски, известный американский писатель, естествоиспытатель и некродизайнер. http://shymanovsky.mooo.com |
jes2001@yandex.ru (Pan Szymanowski): Mar 08 06:50PM >> (c) СМИ >> Рекордные - не рекордные, но как в Каролине в 2008. > Байден сказал, что во всем виноват Путин. Даже и не сомневаюсь, что он так и сказал. Я это убожество не слушаю. Брежнев заметно харизматичнее был. -- (C) *** JES 2022 *** Урри Шимановски, известный американский писатель, естествоиспытатель и некродизайнер. http://shymanovsky.mooo.com |
⁹⁹⁹√ulcаn <999V@russian.z1>: Mar 08 01:43PM -0500 Why China Can't Bail Out Putin's Economy By Paul Krugman (sorry) https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/07/opinion/china-russia-sanctions-economy.html In deciding to invade Ukraine, Vladimir Putin clearly misjudged everything. He had an exaggerated view of his own nation's military might; my description last week of Russia as a Potemkin superpower, with far less strength than meets the eye, looks even truer now. He vastly underrated Ukrainian morale and military prowess, and failed to anticipate the resolve of democratic governments — especially, although not only, the Biden administration, which, in case you haven't noticed, has done a remarkable job on everything from arming Ukraine to rallying the West around financial sanctions. I can't add anything to the discussion of the war itself, although I will note that much of the commentary I've been reading says that Russian forces are regrouping and will resume large-scale advances in a day or two — and has been saying that, day after day, for more than a week. What I think I can add, however, is some analysis of the effects of sanctions, and in particular an answer to one question I keep being asked: Can China, by offering itself as an alternative trading partner, bail out Putin's economy? No, it can't. [] |
⁹⁹⁹√ulcаn <999V@russian.z1>: Mar 08 01:36PM -0500 On 3/8/2022 1:35 PM, ⁹⁹⁹√ulcаn wrote: > far-right Arizona State Senator Wendy Rogers declared on Twitter. "This > is just as wrong as invading Ukraine." > https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/03/russia-ukraine-war-cancel-putin-culture-war/626978/ The idea of the decadent, snowflake, cancel-culture-obsessed West—contrasted with the traditional values of Mother Russia and its strongman leader—has become a staple of Kremlin propaganda. Putin has warned about "infertile and genderless" Europe, a continent whose tolerance of same-sex couples and men wearing mascara is presented as evidence of terminal decline. The theme has been picked up by the American right, with the former Trump adviser Steve Bannon praising Putin as "anti-woke" mere hours before the invasion of Ukraine. This idea that wokeness equals weakness is wishful thinking. In a real war, your views on pronoun usage matter far less than whether you can maintain your supply lines or achieve air superiority. хахахаха |
⁹⁹⁹√ulcаn <999V@russian.z1>: Mar 08 01:39PM -0500 On 3/8/2022 1:36 PM, ⁹⁹⁹√ulcаn wrote: > your views on pronoun usage matter far less than whether you can > maintain your supply lines or achieve air superiority. > хахахаха But the idea of Putin's "cancellation" shouldn't be consigned to the slop bucket of public discourse, along with the other arguments caused by bored, anxious onlookers milling about online. After all, the reason I have voiced concerns over hair-trigger shamings and sackings is precisely because those actions are so powerful. Cancellation works. Cancellation hurts. And therefore, cancellation should be saved for the very worst among us—those who commit violent crimes, incite others to violence, or build careers on preaching hatred against minority groups. The atrocities of which Putin's troops are accused in Ukraine exceed that threshold. There is a difference, it turns out, between the hyperbolic invocation of "violence" on Twitter and literal violence itself.[] The ancient Greeks understood the power of creating outcasts. Athenians had a range of punishments available to them that would make even a southern Republican governor queasy, including death by exposure or being thrown into a chasm. But ostracism, or 10 years of exile, was considered so serious that it required a public vote, in which offenders' names were written on ostraka—shards of leftover pottery. The toll of banishment is evident to modern researchers too. A 2003 study found that the effects of being ostracized even show up on MRIs. "Being the target of ostracism activates brain regions associated with pain, threatens fundamental needs, worsens mood and causes behavior changes," note the authors of one psychology textbook. Ostracism is a feeling from which no amount of money or privilege can insulate you.[] When a Russian spymaster complains about his country's cancellation, our response should not be to laugh at an idiot confusing a culture war and a real one. Instead, we should recognize that economic and social isolation is a powerful weapon, and resolve to use it with the same restraint as any other weapon. |
Const <renter28@gmail.com>: Mar 08 06:34PM cabeza de turco - козел отпущения. Этимология загадочна мне. --- Const |
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