Omega18 wrote:Lets talk about previous election results in the friggin Ukraine then.
Why?
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I thought that elections are done over a plethora of issues, not just one issue, like an opinion poll.
Omega18 wrote:A single not linked to poll which clearly doesn't represent how the people of the Ukraine actually vote doesn't change this. In fact, the results are so unbelievable it certainly makes me wonder who took the poll and what there motives were for doing so. (Beside outright making up the results or doing something like only polling people in the east, you can also certainly get desired results if you phrase the polling questions carefully enough as a rule.)
Hey, you idiot, this poll was run by polling groups from respective CIS countries. The phrasing of questions was given.
Opinion polls deal with single issues, whereas elections do not.
The "antiRussian" parties also promised to pay out a part of burned SberBank savings, for examples, which turned out to be a good strategy for the elections. Lots of issues. And you were saying we should just think only PR and Communist Party voters have a good opinion of Russia? Moron.
Coyote wrote:It seemed to me that freaking out about that (especially the Alaska one, which was so soon after the Nork missile test) kinda undermined the seriousness of other concerns.
A missile system threatens your strategic arsenals effectiveness. You voice concerns. End of story.
Coyote wrote:Chechnya.
Wait, what is that? Let me explain very carefully:
Chechnya is not a foreign country. Chechnya is a slave-holding, ethnic cleansing and sharia law rebellion sprung inside of Russia. You can ask about the merits of crushing them, instead of just kicking it out of Russia and leaving it to it's devices, but that's a side question, so don't derail the thread while discussing how evil Russkies commited some sort of agression here.
Coyote wrote:And cynical political maneuverings in places ranging from Dagestan, Nagorno-Karabakh, and other little microstates in the region.
"Cynical"? You mean when our peacekeeper forces actually wasted their lives to stop the southern nations from engulfing into a complete genocide? Is that what you're insinuating, Coyote? In that case you're so badly unaccustomed with history of Dagestan and Nagorno-Karabach that this isn't even funny. Besides, how the fuck is Dagestan a state?
Coyote wrote:After the USSR broke up, only Beyelorus felt bad about it afterwards and wanted to come back.
It's Belorus. And Belorus didn't want Russia to come back, it just carried on with the USSR.
Coyote wrote:They didn't like serving as the historical buffer zone for the Rodina-- sorry, that's the way it was.
I never said that they did, or should. What should this point signify? We let our buffer zone states go away of our own free will.
Omega18 wrote:I'd personally disagree and say the legitimacy of your holdings are far more questionable when achieved specifically by conquest.
Hey fucker, if you "question" something, go look into your own fucking back yard first:
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I guess a lot of that is illegitimate. Let's cut that America down.
Illuminatus Primus wrote:You are a second-rate power, and your nation has always typically had an inferiority/backwards complex with the West. Maybe since Byzantium and Ivan. Definitely since Peter. He just said your nation ought to accept its second-rate status. Nothing about "hammering it into you." Sorry, but that's Russian xenophobia right there.
So? If we are a second-rate power, and have some "inferiority complex" (isn't that better to have than a superiority one anyway?), why do we need to "understand" that? Doesn't it follow that we already do?
And how is our nation not accepting second-rate status? Maybe it goes around the world, blows up shit for gigs? Or it sits in the corner and voices discontent with some foreign policy decisions which it can't do anything about? Which course of action Russia follows and how does it reflect us being too stupid to understand that we're a small power?
Illuminatus Primus wrote:How about South Ossetia interference?
Wait, are you saying we should remove the peacekeepers and let Georgia take over those regions?
Do you know about the history of civil war in the Caucausus, and how Abkhazians and South Ossetians do not like Georgia?
Illuminatus Primus wrote:Noises about intervention in Kosovo?
What's that shit, I wonder.
"Noises". Intervention. That's not going to happen, and I'm quite sure our president or FM did not say anything about a military intervention. Feel free to correct me though.
thejester wrote:None of the information you just posted in anyway supports the statement 'most of Ukraine holds our president in higher regard than their own' and it is drawing a very long bow to say that the majority of Ukrainians favour a unification with Russia when the actual question was a unification of four CIS states in the context of Ukranian membership of the EU.
Okay, I'll post the part about the president too. From the same poll:
Looking at the rating of foreign presidents in CIS coutnries, it's clear that Stas wrote:Putin is so far the most popular CIS leader. In Ukraine, Putin was approved by 72% of population, while their own president Yushenko was approved only by 30%. Also a striking trend can be seen - the support of Russian president in Ukraine never fell below 67% since 2004, while the support of the current Ukraine's president Yushenko fell from 57% at the start of 2005 to 30% currently (7th July 2006).
And yes, the actual question was about a 4-state union of historic USSR republics. So what? You're nitpicking, right?
Illuminatus Primus wrote:The fact is that the Russian Federation in of itself is much more an empire than the United States. There are many culturally and ethno-linguistically distinct nations within the Russian Federation.
Why the hell are we talking about the United States anyway? And there's a map of US conquests and territorial aquisitions right up there - not the least of those territories were taken by the sword, so why is there "less legitimacy"?
Omega18 wrote:Chechnya has somewhere around 93.5% of the population being Chechen, with only about 3.7% of the population being specifically Russian. This makes a huge difference in the eyes of many around the world, especially when its clear most of the population wants to be independent.
Hey, asshole.
Do you even know that most Russians were ethnically cleansed in Chechnya? And do you know that Armenians and other etnhnic minorities were like 100% cleansed from Chechnya? Do you even know what the bloody fuck Chechnya is?
Vympel wrote:Dagestan never attempted seperatism from the Russian Federation
It never did. However, Chechnen radical islamists attacked the republic in 1999. Also, Russians were ethnically cleansed in Dagestan prior to and during the Chechen conflict; there's still huge fear of the Caucasus in the whole of Russia.
Coyote wrote:Ukrainians I met (and I met a lot of them in Israel) most certainly did not like being mixed up with Russians...
So?
What is that supposed to tell? I was actually travelling around the CIS; there's not even a hint at the degree of animosity you're pointing out by the majority of populations.
So in short: "Russia always will be agressive" is full of shit, and post-1991 Russia was not agressive even compared to that moral paragon, the United States of Fuck Yeah. 