cosmicalstorm wrote:Here is a lengthy piece dealing with the very dangerous situation that is growing on the Eurasian contient right now. Is this plain alarmism? I'm sorry but I don't think so, for one thing, I found this reposted in some corners of the internet that rarely has this kind of debate on other days. I'm definetly worried.
You've repeated essentially the same thesis ("Russian villainy will trigger World War III RIGHT THE FUCK NOW")... at least twice now, possibly three or four times.
When you
keep doing it in the absence of any actual change that would motivate increased alarm, it becomes alarmism.
It's like, if the Russians actually went and marched a big army into the Ukraine and declared Kiev to be Russian territory,
that would justify suddenly being more worried. If the Russians started sending threatening telegrams to Poland on a regular basis, that would justify suddenly being more worried.
But you seem to be getting more and more worried in the complete absence of outside stimuli. That sounds less like you recognizing a worsening world situation, and more like you falling steadily into the orbit of a big pile of nonsense.
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I will also note that you are violating a basic principle honored by most people who post articles on this site: In quite a few cases, you're not posting links to the sources.
This is important, because it makes a
huge difference which "corner of the Internet" you're getting this stuff from. A news article in the
London Times is different than an editorial in the
Times, which is in turn different from an editorial in the
Daily Mail (does it even have editorials on foreign policy?). And
anything in a newspaper is different from a blog post written by a sketchy lunatic who's spent the last twenty years ranting about government mind control satellites on a poorly maintained website where all the text is red on black background.
By not providing sources, you make it much harder to judge the relevance and accuracy of what is being quoted. And you also make it harder to place what is being quoted in context. For example, it makes a difference if this being written by someone who's been screaming that Russia is about to invade Lithuania continuously for the past twenty years... because in that case they have a proven track record of being
wrong on that issue.
"Russia seems doomed to continue its decline — an outcome that should be no cause for celebration in the West," Nye wrote in a recent column. "States in decline — think of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1914 — tend to become less risk-averse and thus much more dangerous."
https://www.vox.com/2015/6/29/8845913/russia-war
Except that the Austro-Hungarian Empire's "less risk averse" character would have been irrelevant if it hadn't been for other, brashly expansionistic, powers willing to trigger a large war with them over small issues,
even when the Austro-Hungarians had been provoked.
A little bit of basic common sense and good faith negotiation goes a long way in preventing a "Guns of August" scenario