The Right-Wing Disinformation Machine

Does your circle ever consider that we aren't sending Ukraine blank checks? 

Or even using a less myopic viewpoint, do they ever consider what the long term costs will be if Russia, playing the long game and hellbent on rebuilding its military and former "glory", waltzes through Ukraine and parks its military, battered but in the long term still a rebuildable threat, from the Black Sea to the Baltic Ocean?  

This tracks


The blank checks wording is a euphemism. 

You know that two things can be right? Just because they don't want to fund Ukraine pensions, doesn't mean they cheer for Putin.

Most don't believe that will happen, but don't cheer for it either.

 
The blank checks wording is a euphemism. 

You know that two things can be right? Just because they don't want to fund Ukraine pensions, doesn't mean they cheer for Putin.

Most don't believe that will happen, but don't cheer for it either.
In all practicality it doesn't work that way.  Not funding Ukraine is, even if unwittingly, supporting Putin's revanchist intentions.  This is the point others here don't understand.

Sorry, hoping it won't happen or believing it won't happen historically hasn't turned out so well.  The cost of those isolationist beliefs not only in lives but in dollars could be astronomical.

https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/high-price-losing-ukraine

"as Americans consider the costs of continuing to help Ukraine fight the Russians in the coming years, they deserve a careful consideration of the costs of allowing Russia to win. Those costs are much higher than most people imagine.

To deter and defend against a renewed Russian threat following a full Russian victory in Ukraine the United States will have to deploy to Eastern Europe a sizable portion of its ground forces. The United States will have to station in Europe a large number of stealth aircraft. Building and maintaining those aircraft is intrinsically expensive, but challenges in manufacturing them rapidly will likely force the United States to make a terrible choice between keeping enough in Asia to defend Taiwan and its other Asian allies and deterring or defeating a Russian attack on a NATO ally. The entire undertaking will cost a fortune, and the cost will last as long as the Russian threat continues—potentially indefinitely."

 
Last edited by a moderator:
The blank checks wording is a euphemism. 

You know that two things can be right? Just because they don't want to fund Ukraine pensions, doesn't mean they cheer for Putin.

Most don't believe that will happen, but don't cheer for it either.
The overwhelming majority of the billions sent to Ukraine is direct military and humanitarian aid, not cash. The cash that has been paid funds all kind of things to sustain daily life in the country: first responders, teachers, healthcare, housing for displaced people, etc. And yes it does help support pensions, because guess what, if those old pensioners don't get their money they will be homeless or starving, and die.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
The overwhelming majority of the billions sent to Ukraine is direct military and humanitarian aid, not cash. The cash that has been paid funds all kind of things to sustain daily life in the country: first responders, teachers, healthcare, housing for displaced people, etc. And yes it does help support pensions, because guess what, if those old pensioners don't get their money they will be homeless or starving, and die.
As we've discussed before, I understand all of that. The EU and NATO needs to step up  before I would see it continue 

 
Anyone that thinks that Russia is strong and/or will get strong is either scared of their own shadow or simply refusing to understand what is going on.  

Russia as we know it, is gone.  I know people think they are not commies anymore, but they are and they are over.  

No one REALLY knew how f#&%ing weak they were after 1990, which makes sense, they are very closed off, but we see it now.  After this "war" with Ukraine ends and Putin is gone, it is all over.

What we are witnessing is something most of us have never seen, a total fall of a global power. 

In 25 years there will be college classes that cover "Soviet Russia 1990-2025" and it will chronicle what happened to those commies.  

They are gone, they will only be an oil producer, there will never be fear from them again. 

Most of us grew up with made for TV movies that scared us about the commies, so a lot of us are still "scared" those days are gone.  They are done.  

 
I don't think that's accurate. We all posted stats a couple of weeks ago. Pretty sure we have donated more than all the E U combined.

But I might have misremembered. Will check.


https://www.statista.com/chart/28489/ukrainian-military-humanitarian-and-financial-aid-donors/

The combined European union has given about the same amount as the US, albeit a little more. 
Sure, we are giving more in aggregate but that's not really a far comparison when the US has a larger economy/budget/ability to give. Adjusted as a percentage of GDP the EU as a whole would be out pacing the US, and there are several individual European countries that are giving more than the US as well.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/1303450/bilateral-aid-to-ukraine-in-a-percent-of-donor-gdp/

 
Back
Top