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    1. Nick J, I hope you are not suggesting it should not be posted. I think Ben Morgan’s columns are quite valuable in some ways. Because they seem to have a reasonably free comment section and so the frequent inaccuracies get a refuting or two. It’s up to the brain of the reader – there’s the challenge.

      1. There’s just no point in reading the actual article, though. It’s like reading any other ASPI nonsense or anti-Chinese racists like Anne-Marie Brady.

  1. You can’t blame “the US” for not sending aid to Ukraine. The major, in fact pretty much the only reason it’s not sent is that the speaker refuses to bring it to the house. Because the speaker is a right wing religious nutcase in thrall to the Maga crowd. But even he now seems to be softening his stance, so I do have hope that aid is on its way. I also think Biden has used what presidential powers he has to send what aid he can. Little though it might be. One problem is that industrial capacity – the capacity produce wall materials at least has been declining for years now. Some countries can barely cope with their own needs in peacetime let alone supply someone at war.

    1. Another problem the US has is a significantly degraded Eastern seaport. That Ukrainian captained Dali sure made a mess of the “star and bangles” bridge that Biden has crossed many times by train (in his dotage).

    2. Certainly the issues with the USA supplying more military aid has caused the rest of Europe (NATO) to stop relying on them, and that in itself is not a bad thing.

      This is an opinion piece so as always take with a grain of salt, but I do think the narrative that the Republicans (and Trump) are friends of Putin is not true.

      https://thehill.com/opinion/international/4568183-bidens-to-blame-for-the-ukraine-aid-mess-not-trump-and-the-gop/

      And in the mean time freedom of speech remains alive and well in Russia

      https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/3/29/russia-mulls-labelling-queen-of-soviet-pop-pugacheva-a-foreign-agent

    3. On the contrary, we can blame the US for their treachery toward the people of Ukraine.
      It’s all a matter of priorities.
      The independence of Ukraine is nowhere as important to the US as having a racist settler state in the heart of the oil rich Middle East, with the military ability to enforce US domination of the region.
      The US hardly lifted a finger in 2014 when the Russian Federation seized control of Crimea.
      When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the US closed their embassy in Kiev and fled the country, and on the way out offered the President of Ukraine a seat in one of their departing planes.
      It was only when the Ukrainian people mounted an unexpected and spirited defence of their country, that the US realised that by helping the Ukrainian people to resist the Russian takeover of their country was an opportunity to give their Russian imperialist rival a black eye.
      This US turn around saw the US reopen their embassy in Kiev and give military aid to the Ukrainian government.
      Just as easily the US will turn off this support if they think that their proxy state in the Middle East is in trouble.

      1. Hahahah, OK Pat. Funny how you skip over how Victoria Nuland and other bestial American monsters overthrew the Ukrainian government in 2014, necessitating Russia to come to the rescue of the people of Crimea.

        1. My brutal racist imperialist occupier is better than your racist imperialist occupier Eh Mohammed?

          …..perceived internationally as the conflict between Russia and Chechnya. This conflict, which escalated into a war, focussed the spotlight on the North Caucasus as the most critical region in the Russian Federation and brought with it reminders of the anti-colonial resistance put up by the Muslim mountain peoples in the 19th century against Russia’s advance into the region, resistance that in some regions had been maintained right through to the Soviet period. During the pre-national era this resistance had been based above all on Islam….

          https://journals.openedition.org/assr/18403?lang=en

          Nearly three decades ago, when post-Soviet Russia launched its first bloody war on Chechnya, Moscow traded its prospects for democracy for renewed, revanchist imperialism. When in 1993 then-President Boris Yeltsin decided to move against his opposition in the Russian parliament, he used the military to crush it. With the help of the military generals who backed him in his assault on the parliament, Yeltsin dismantled Russian parliamentary democracy and rewrote the constitution to secure presidential authoritarianism. He paid back the generals by destroying Chechnya. Yeltsin’s undemocratic move set the precedent for Russia to use violence at home and abroad to strengthen personalized rule.

          Russia lost the first Chechen War of 1994-1996 due to the Russian army’s weakness and the resilience of Chechen leader Dzhokhar Dudayev’s command. Although Russian and international human rights organizations and European Union states condemned Russia’s crimes against humanity, Yeltsin successfully sold the war to the United States as an internal conflict against “banditry.” And in one of its greatest strategic missteps, the United States failed to condemn Yeltsin…..

          …..A few years later, Vladimir Putin, too, used a war in Chechnya to legitimize and strengthen his personal power. In August 1999 Putin used the pretext of Islamic terrorism to launch the Second Russian-Chechen War. He officially labeled it a “counter-terrorist operation,” which he thought would be short, to raise his own popularity, rising from an unknown political appointee as prime minister to the president of Russia.
          Like Yeltsin, Putin’s path to domination within Russia arose thanks to military force. Proving victorious in Chechnya, with huge losses over 10 years, Putin appointed a proxy governor—Akhmad Kadyrov, the father of Ramzan Kadyrov—in Chechnya in 2000 in exchange for loyalty, setting the precedent for Putin’s political formula of regional domination.
          Both Yeltsin and Putin nurtured populist imperial sentiment, a belief that Russia is the victim of external powers that needs to protect itself by conquest.

          https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/03/11/russia-chechnya-democracy-ukraine-putin-kadyrov/

          Mohammed, Want to know what the Russian imperialist invasion of Grozny looked like. It looked just like the Zionist’s invasion of Gaza looks today.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Grozny_(1999%E2%80%932000)#

          …..the siege and assault of the Chechen capital Grozny by Russian forces, lasting from late 1999 to early 2000. This siege and assault of the Chechen capital resulted in the widespread devastation of Grozny. In 2003, the United Nations designated Grozny as the most destroyed city on Earth due to the extensive damage it suffered. The battle had a devastating impact on the civilian population. It is estimated that between 5,000[5] and 8,000[6] civilians were killed during the siege, making it the bloodiest episode of the Second Chechen War.

          . From the Halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli, and everything in between, the nature and the crimes of American imperialism are well documented.

          Every imperialism is racist and genocidal, it is the very nature of imperialism.

          Biden calls Putin an imperialist. Putin calls Biden an imperialist. Both deny that the US and Russia are both imperialists

          All imperialists are racist, how else can they justify to themselves ruling over other peoples?

          All imperialists are genocidal, how else can can an imperialist nation put down an insurgent people, who refuse to submit to foreign rule?.
          As one US general once said in Vietnam ‘We had to destroy the village to save it”

          ‘Destroying the village to save it’ is a euphemism for genocide.
          Destroying the village to save it, is what Israel is doing in Gaza. It is what Russia did in Grozny.

          The Grozny model

          After 20 days of heavy artillery shelling of the city center — sometimes at a rate of 4,000 rounds an hour — the Russian military eventually took Grozny on Jan. 20, 2005.
          The heavy bombardment of Grozny “worked” in one sense. The Russians took the city. But Mogulof and other observers believe it may have made the Chechens more resolved to fight back. “It’s mechanized terrorism,” ….

          ……The air assault killed tens of thousands of civilians and left Grozny in ruins. The United Nations called it “the most destroyed city on earth.” …..

          Aleppo —“a kind of hell”

          ….In 2015, Russian forces began an intervention in Syria on Assad’s behalf, using air power to tip the balance in his favor. In Aleppo, the rebel-held territories were completely encircled in mid-2016, leaving 250,000 people under siege and subject to heavy Russian airstrikes. The Russian and Syrian militaries were both accused of war crimes, including deliberately targeting medical facilities, using indiscriminate weapons such as cluster munitions and attempting to starve the city’s population……

          https://www.grid.news/story/global/2022/03/29/terror-destruction-and-chaos-russian-tactics-in-ukraine-have-a-history/

          1. Some kind of bullshit equivalence argument, eh Pat?
            Is it too much to hope for that one day you might wake up?
            Putin’s disdain for bolshevism must really piss you off.

          2. Not as much as his love for capitalist expansionism and Russian imperialism.

          3. Pat, you are so naive. “Aleppo a nightmare”?
            There is no evidence of this. None. Except Western experts saying how “bloodthirsty” Putin was to kill the citizens of the country he was helping. you know, the sort of talk that is entirely absent from these experts about Gaza.

            You do not comprehend that this is not the cold war era you grew up in. This is not the Imperialist US v Ismperialist USSR, to whatever degree that was actually true. Since the end of the Cold war we have been in the hegemonic era, where the Anglo-Zionist “rules and orders” forces, led by the US, have been actively warring all over the world unopposed for 20 years. Russia’s moves in Syria and Ukraine are the counterattack that sovereign nations have been crying out for. So they don’t get balkanised, Iraqed, Libyad, Syriad, Ukrained. With the ME simps being a special case where they are finally brave enough to stop funding terror forces for the US bidding.

  2. GS, a year ago I photographed street people asleep outside the stock exchange in Wall St, and again in Times Square. I saw tent cities in Baltimore and Philadelphia.
    On that basis alone the US has absolutely no right to send a single dollar offshore.

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