Russia Blocks Internet Sites of Putin Critics 309
An anonymous reader writes in with news about Russias censorship of internet sites critical of President Vladimir Putin. "Russia blocked access to the internet sites of prominent Kremlin foes Alexei Navalny and Garry Kasparov on Thursday under a new law critics say is designed to silence dissent in President Vladimir Putin's third term. The prosecutor general's office ordered Russian internet providers to block Navalny's blog, chess champion and Putin critic Kasparov's internet newspaper and two other sites, grani.ru and ej.ru, state regulator Roskomnadzor said. The move was the latest evidence of what government opponents see as a crackdown on independent media and particularly the internet, a platform for dissenting views in a nation where state channels dominate the airwaves. Ej.ru editor Alexander Ryklin called it 'monstrous' and a 'direct violation of all the principles of freedom of speech,' More at EFF, and in earlier stories at the The Huffington Post, and Deutsche Welle, which notes, 'This year's report by Reporters Without Borders on World Day against Cyber Censorship condemns Russia as one of the "Enemies of the Internet." "Russia has adopted dangerous legislation governing the flow of news and information and freedom of expression online," it concludes.'"
Reassembling the Soviet Union (Score:5, Insightful)
Sadly, Russia is turning more and more to Soviet ways. Putin was even rehabilitating Stalin.
Putin Reportedly Claims the Dissolution of the Soviet Union May Have Been Illegal [mediaite.com]
This may not end well.
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Re:Reassembling the Soviet Union (Score:5, Insightful)
As one of the great monsters of history, rehabilitating Stalin is an important bit of symbolism and tone. If Austria and Germany were to one day declare that they were reuniting in an act of self-determination by the German people, and then started making public pronouncements about the many great achievements of Der Führer, wouldn't that be cause for concern? Stalin killed far more than Der Führer.
Putin’s long game? Meet the Eurasian Union [bostonglobe.com]
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Putin’s long game? Meet the Eurasian Union [bostonglobe.com]
It's always struck me that being just outside the european union must kinda suck. Customers in the EU will be reluctant to buy from your buisness because they know they risk being stuck with stupid fees for collecting trivial ammount of VAT*. Travel into neighbouring countries is subject to restrictions decided by the block as a whole** rather than by your neighboughing country.
Putin aside I can see why the russians would not much like the idea of going from being the dominant force in a block to being the
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Russia has always had the option of joining the EU, in fact, after the fall of the USSR there was even a lot of talk about allowing it entry into NATO.
But that aint going to work for Putin because the EU is a largely democratic organisation, and Putin wants to run a dictatorship all by himself, so he's always chosen to pursue conflict with them rather than cooperation, unlike his predecessors post-USSR who were more progressive and more willing to look to eventually becoming a more integral part of Europe a
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but what does it have to do with rehabilitating Stalin?
Haven't seen the whitewashing of his crimes against the populace at large that they're pushing in the schools? Don't have friends or family that live in that part of the world who lived through it? Well that's okay. Stalin was a mass murderer, like many communist and socialist dictatorships he set the tone for all the other countries that followed that same ideology. However, what's happening these days isn't any different from fascist groups who whitewash their favorite fascist leader.
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communist and socialist dictatorships
I don't know what you understand under socialist and dictatorship, but these 2 terms are mutually exclusive. USSR was fascist.
Re:Reassembling the Soviet Union (Score:5, Insightful)
USSR was a secular theocracy. It treated Marxism - or "Dialectic Materialism" - as revealed truth, and as theocrats usually do, made more shit up as it went along. If and when reality disagreed with revelation, it got ignored or violently suppressed. And it never really changed: people got tired and disappointed with their prophet, just like they'd gotten tired and disappointed with the Czar earlier, and abandoned him. But the spirit of autocracy - the myth of divine leader - lived on, thus Putin is now enthroned as the new Czar, just like Stalin before him. Meet the new boss, the same as the old boss.
And no, USSR was not fascist. Fascism and Stalinism are both manifestations of something far older and nastier, a sickness that to some extent pervades all human societies. All who try to build a utopia reach the point where it seems the goal is just within range if they only sacrifice a few people to reach it. If they don't, the paradise remains flawed, and if they do, it turns into a nightmare - just like Soviet Union and various fascist regimes did.
Of course, the US also did exactly that to win the Cold War, and it seems the bill is now coming due. Time will tell how far the "land of the free" will fall before what it's unleashed is done with it.
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>USSR was a secular theocracy ... sounds a bit like the other superpower does it not (yeah, technically the US has 2 parties, but they are both controlled by the people with the money)
interesting points you make. but in practice, the ussr worked like a fascistic state: a small group of people controlling the whole of the state. throw in the militaristic tendencies and the nationalism
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Funny how all flavors of strong socialism end up fascistic. Almost like there was a basic defect in the philosophy.
Hint: the defect is excessive concentration of power.
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>excessive concentration of power.
That's exactly what socialism is NOT any system with a large concentration of power in few hands goes against the definition of socialism
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And what gave the British the right to set up colonies anyway? The (Amer)Indians were here first... (well long before the British, French and Spanish anyway.
The Vikings also reached North America before the other Europeans... Say who founded Russia in the first place?
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For a man who puts himself on his own, almost personal, state tv to the extent Putin does, we can probably safely assume that articles with the phrase "Putin reportedly claims" are full of it.
I don't understand why you keep going back to Soviet days -- your "née Soviet Union" line is almost never missing, though it doesn't make any sense (born as Soviet Union?). It is almost as if you feel you need to arouse ancient Cold War anxiety among the older readers.
Really the present Russian antics are scary en
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Well the West, thanks to the upstanding duo of Nixon & Kissinger, "rehabilitated" Mao's empire already in the mid-seventies and helped the fine western industrialists relocate their ("means of") production over to the PRC while helping their own profit margins in the process, at least for a while.
Mao Zedong, despite having achieved double the body count of Stalin, doesn't even need rehabilitation as his "Communi
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Soviet ways??
This is classic Russian Empire from the 1700's and 1800's. It's not something that Stalin or Lenin thought of all on their own.
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Nationalism must be eradicated for the good of the Humanity
At gun point if need be right? We've all heard it before, you don't need to try and package it up into something that will be easily digestible, nobody believes your bullshit outside of Russia.
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I feel for you, and I sincerely wish the best for you. I hope you wake up soon and join the rest of us in moving forward, and I hope the bodies have not been piled up so high that there will be no way back.
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It's also a driving force behind Putin's ideology that you seem to be defending.
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You seem to think state can be separated from it's leadership.
It can't, both are far too closely intertwined to make the absurd argument you're making that you can merge Ukraine and Russia and tell the Ukrainians not to worry about Putin.
If the Ukraine merges with Russia it ends up stuck with Putin. Ukrainians don't want Putin, so Ukrainians shouldn't have to merge with Russia. It really is no more complicated than that.
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Erm, because you want the Ukraine to become part of Russia and Putin is in charge of Russia, which would mean Putin would become in charge of the Ukraine?
The real question is why are you trying to pretend Putin ISN'T part of this equation?
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National borders don't need to separate people any more than, say, city limits do. In a free country, crossing the border is a formality, and many neighbour states have dispensed with even those. It's empires who make a huge deal of borders; normal nations treat them as legislation handover points.
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yes, but economic interests of a small, rich, minority of big country x is a reason to go to war, apparently. substitute x for a country of your choice.
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That's great, but whilst Putin IS in charge of Russia, the Ukrainians want fuck all to do with it, so stop insisting they should just sit under Putin and put up with him.
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What is the upside of existence of Ukraine as separate state? And any other national state for that matter..
The larger an empire gets the less representation each citizen of that empire has and the harder it gets to topple corrupt rulers. It can also mean that entities just outside the empire come under a lot of pressure to become part of it (in turn making the empire ever larger and more powefull).
Which I get the impression is the big problem for ukraine. It's presumablly very difficult to find compromises in politics when one side wants to be part of the russian block, the other side wants to be part of the EU
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Re:Reassembling the Soviet Union (Score:5, Interesting)
No side wants to be part of the Russian block, that's a key myth that Putin is desperately trying to peddle:
http://www.cityam.com/blog/139... [cityam.com]
The whole reason Putin has troops locking down Crimea and spreading propaganda left and right is precisely because he knows he could not win the referendum there legitimately. It's a sham, a stitch up, theft of Ukranian territory against the genuine will of the people. Even with a majority of 58% of ethnic Russian origin in Crimea most of those ethnic Russians still identify their nationality as Ukrainian, even though their ethnicity is Russian.
There is no division in the Ukraine, separatists across the whole nations are an absolute minority. It's no different to Scotland and the UK in this respect - the fact that 90% of the population there are Scottish doesn't mean 90% are in favour of independence, on the contrary, polling consistently puts only about 30% in favour of independence.
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Actually the latest polling on Scotland [bbc.com] gives more like 38-40% in the "yes" block.
I would like to see evidence for your claim that Ukraine is not really a divided country and that's all Putin's propaganda. Everything else I've seen suggests that Ukraine really is a highly divided country with a large population of people who would prefer to be a part of Russia than the EU. I'm not convinced this is something Putin is just making up.
The problem here is that the west has already decided it doesn't matter what
Re:Reassembling the Soviet Union (Score:5, Insightful)
"Naturally I don't ask them to give up their culture. But I don't want them to force it on unwilling people on territory of Ukraine. This is absolutely inadmissible. "
Yet you want to force it onto them and when you do it it's not inadmissible? You don't see the hypocrisy in that?
"This is the reason Crimea rebelled."
Accept it didn't. In polling in February before this all happened only 41% of Crimeans wanted to join Russia. What's going on in Crimea isn't rebellion, it's Russian occupation - it's forced annexation of Crimea against the will of the people there - you know, that thing that on one hand you're saying is inadmissible, and on the other you're arguing for?
"If Ukrainian state respected Russian people as much Russian Federation respects its own people of different nationalities"
Yeah because it's so nice being Jewish in Russia and suffering attacks from Neo Nazis? It's so nice being Chechnyan in Russia and getting bombed to fuck? Outside of nationalities it's so nice being gay in Russia and being legislated against and beaten to death with the blessing of the state? It's so nice having differing political views than Putin and being beaten, jailed, or killed?
The only thing Russians look after in Russia are straight white Russians who conform to the will of Putin. Anything else and you're fucked.
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There was no coup. The democratically elected Ukrainian parliament voted with a majority of 73% to oust Yanukovych. That's a democratic decision, not a coup.
There is no part of the Ukraine where a majority of people want to merge with Russia, that's why Russia is deploying troops and spreading propaganda in Crimea, because it's the only way they can rig the vote to make it look like that's the case.
See here, and stop spouting Putin's lies and propaganda for him:
http://www.cityam.com/blog/139... [cityam.com]
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The Berkut (acting as Yanukovych/Russian enforcers) were shooting at riot police AND protesters to try and provoke a bigger confrontation between the two - this is something eyewitnesses in both the police and protesters have both attested to witnessing. This did result in some police/protesters firing at each other in the confusion it caused.
"If it was in any way lawful Yanukovych wouldn't have to flee the country."
He didn't have to flee the country, no one made him flee the country. What he didn't want wa
Re:Reassembling the Soviet Union (Score:4, Interesting)
I grew up in the shadow of fucking Soviet warheads. When the abomination that was the Soviet Union collapsed (because that is what it was, a collapse that forced a dissolution), everyone were better off. We've never had it better here in fact, than since that monstrosity of a union disappeared, and Russians could have had it just as good, were it not for Putin.
There is no interest in "eradicating the old elements", Putin is one of those old elements himself. He's building himself a buffer zone that he can steal from without repercussions, because he wants a new empire and he can't afford it on Russian GDP alone. He needs vassals he can exploit without affecting the core of his new empire. He is in essence rebuilding the Soviet Union, one invasion at a time. He couldn't have done it without you though, and I'm sure he's grateful for your support (no, not really).
The way he is doing this is actually quite smart, although the end goal doesn't serve the widest of interests. He's filling the Russian media with macho propaganda and grand standing to seed the yearning for the old days of power. Ask almost any Russian and they'll have zero clue what the fuck is going on, except what Putin has made them believe. If he says green is red, that is what the Russians will walk into the future believing. "Solving" the world's problems isn't on the agenda for you great leader, it is a talking point - and nobody outside of Russia is buying it, but that's not the point of it. All that sauce is for you, not us, so you can stop regurgitating it, Putin already knows it's a sham and you sound ridiculous when you do.
When there are no protests at home, you can pretty much act as you wish. When you act like a dick and the negative responses start flooding in, you can always point to them and go: "everyone is afraid of us, they don't understand our grand design, we must continue on with our master plan". But what your great leader has forgotten to tell you is that his grand standing is hinging on a bluff, and an assumption that nobody is going to call it out of fear of "Old Russia".
If the gas revenue stream dries up, you guys are going to be seriously fucked. For the takers of the gas, the price of heating a living room will rise, but that is not the end of the world over here - we still have the money we're not giving to Putin in our hands. But for the Russian end of the transaction is a catastrophe. There will only be more gun point diplomacy or capitulation left, again. An argument can be made that those two options really are the same, the only difference is the length of time it takes the first option to merge into the second option, or you could count the number of bodies that has to pile up before that happens - your choice really.
What all this amounts to, is a massive failure in learning from your collective mistakes. All of this will not end well for anyone but Putin himself, he's already pocketed enough money to not care what happens to the rest of Russia, the worst that can happen (bar a gunshot wound to the head, launched from a mile out) is exile with pockets full of cash, so of course he's moving forward. Just don't keep kidding yourselves and thinking he's going to take you all with him.
What's more likely to happen down this path you're following, is another era of an isolated, poverty stricken Russia, and the really, really sad part is that you're all buying into it as the only way to go. I feel for you guys, I really do. It saddens me, because I remember the 80s. Do you?
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Yeah I thought as much. You don't remember, you only know what you've been told. You've got no education worth a damn so you can't tell a propaganda move from a donkey, even if one of them kicked you in the face. It is sad, both that you don't get it, and that it will take you the better part of your life to come to the realization that you don't get it. And while you're mulling it over you're letting someone else make all the big decisions for you, having you think they're your own thoughts. These are all
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Hearts and Minds (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winning_hearts_and_minds [wikipedia.org]
Hopefully Russians don't give up their freedoms (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Hopefully Russians don't give up their freedoms (Score:5, Insightful)
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Why should I trust polling figures produced by an organisation that is owned and run by the same government that is suppressing opposition media?
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It's really painful to see young, bright and generally decent people honestly protecting this shameless invasi
Re:Hopefully Russians don't give up their freedoms (Score:5, Insightful)
Normally I like to not try and blame the people for the actions of their leadership, but frankly I've lost all faith in the ability for the majority of the Russian populace to engage in any kind of rational thinking at this point. They are part the problem.
A couple of years back they were out in protest against Putin rigging the vote to put himself back in power and I thought hey, finally, the Russian people are taking responsibility for their state, and trying to deal with their dictator.
Now two years on, an Olympic games, a bit of propaganda, creating a hate target in homosexuals to blame societies ills on (just as Hitler did with the Jews etc.), an attempted annexation of Crimea, and the resurrection of Stalin as a popular deity and suddenly Putin has 70% approval ratings again.
So whilst there are clearly a good number of Russians that still want him out, at this point they're a minority by quite a stretch. It really is the Russian people that are the problem - you might as well just alias the nation as Dumbfuckland now, because it really is a nation mostly full of dumb fucks given the approval they're now giving Putin based on his fascist, dictatorial policies. I thought it was bad enough that my nation, the UK is full of people so easily swayed by populism, bigotry, and general ignorance peddled by the media, but the idiocy of many of my countrymen appears to pale compared to those in Russia. At least whilst our population recently argued against striking Syria by a decent margin. In contrast, the Russians positively support annexing the whole of the Ukraine, not just Crimea with about 59% support on latest polls.
I wouldn't put your faith in the Russian people, they mostly seem to be an extremely fickle, easily swayed bunch and Putin controls the media, so swaying them his way appears trivial.
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This is NOT intended to be a troll post.. I'm just pointing out the bias, hypocrisy and double standards.
And I'm really trying to not blame American people for what their Gov is doing. Going around conquering, stealing, raping cultures, and pillaging. What Hillary Clinton calls "bringing democracy". I'm not even gonna start on covert psy ops marketing shit cia does to manipulate people in other countries to start hating on their own leaders so that you can install puppet leader who will not do anything good
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Well ignoring the fact I'm not American, something I thought would be pretty clear from my post, where I say "my nation, the UK", what you say still applies to my nation, and I agree it is hypocritical for us to lecture on some issues.
This is not one of those issues, and the argument has worn thin. This government has been actively pulling us out of wars, and our current parliament was the one that put a stop to plans to bomb Syria when we voted against that.
As such I do (especially as someone who voted for
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Sure bigotry is commonplace, but there are different levels of it in different societies and some have a clearly much higher level of social acceptability of it than others. In terms of homosexuality as an example whilst much of the West has been moving towards more equality such as legalising gay marriage some states like Uganda and Russia have been going backwards and making some things related to homosexuality illegal so there is a disparity and some cultures most definitely can be called out as more big
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Except no coup has been staged. Yanukovych was kicked out by a similarly elected branch of government using the procedure of impeachment with a majority of 73% voting to oust him.
This was an entirely democratic act against a single individual who granted himself more powers than the people wanted him to have and no longer was representing the people. That's how it promotes freedom - by giving the majority what they want.
So I'll turn the question around on you, how does allowing Yanukovych to stay in power a
Self Defeating? (Score:2)
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I'm curious about this myself, obviously dedicated opposition will oppose Putin and evade blocks regardless, so I assume the target is slightly apathetic or undecided Russians. I suspect they're mostly trying to stop people from posting articles on the equivalent of the Russian Facebook.
China is probably the best example of blocking on a large scale (by a country that dominates the language), there's clearly a lot of Chinese who go to great lengths to evade the censorship, but what about the ordinary people
Tell Putin that you disapprove (Score:4, Interesting)
Commenting here is great, but Putin does not read Slashdot. Write to your country's Russian ambassador, tell him what you think. OK: what you say will be ignored, but if 10,000 of you write - then Putin may hear of it ... maybe no more than 2 lines at the bottom of some report, but that is better than nothing.
Just to make it easier for you: the UK Russian embassy contact page [rusemb.org.uk] (I would suggest Russia-UK relations queries); the USA Russian embassy contact page [russianembassy.org], post & 'phone only, unless someone can dig better than I can. Also feel free to reply to this comment with contact info for the Russian embassy in your country.
If you say nothing, then you will be ignored. Saying something cannot be worse than that !
Re:Tell Putin that you disapprove (Score:4, Insightful)
This is what I wrote. Do not copy this word for word, write it your way.
Dear sir,
I was aghast to learn that Russia has sought to stifle political dissent by blocking news sites and closing these sites. This is very much against the spirit of glasnost that the great Mikhail Gorbachev used some 25 years ago when he brought the Soviet Union into the modern world.
To be healthy a society needs its citizens to be able to speak freely, otherwise it will stagnate: innovation will suffer if new ideas are frowned upon, we live in a changing world, if we do not change then we slowly decline.
This is as much about science & technology as it is about politics. If you stifle political thought then you chill all thought and the country will suffer.
Mr Putin is putting his short term comfort before the long term health of Russia. Please tell him this this is neither good for Russia nor the rest of the world.
Please convey this email to the ambassador.
If you are not aware of what I talk about, please read: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/03/russia-blocks-access-major-independent-news-sites [eff.org]
Pity (Score:3)
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Why did Putin invade Crimea? (Score:2)
I have been reading a lot about the turmoil going on in Ukraine, from both English and Russian language sources. I still don't get it why Putin invaded Ukraine. I get it that returning Crimea back to the mother Russia will strike the chord with the Russian nationalists. One thing is certain that his popularity is hitting another high right now, so he and the rest of his ruling elite can sail through the next round of elections. But could Putin and other politicians in Russia be so shirt sighted that they w
Go find another thread to whine in (Score:4, Insightful)
There a topic that isn't about America? Well can't have that! Spin it to be about America! Redirect all topics to be on America, particularly whining about America!
Seriously, this American-centric bitching is really annoying. People need to knock it off. This is about Russia. That things are happening in America doesn't mean things aren't happening elsewhere. It also doesn't mean those things aren't of interest to the wider world. What is happening in Russia right now is of quite a bit of interest not just to Russians, but to Ukrainians, and to the whole of Europe. Also some people from the US might like to know too because hey, it is nice to be informed about the wider world.
So quit. Quit trying to make every thread about the US. There are lots and lots of those on Slashdot. When something comes up on a foreign country, let it be on that topic. The topic at hand is Russian media/internet censorship not NSA spying. That one is a little further down the front page.
Re:Go find another thread to whine in (Score:5, Insightful)
There a topic that isn't about America? Well can't have that! Spin it to be about America! Redirect all topics to be on America, particularly whining about America!
What's ironic is that the folks who tend to do this, are just as likely to sneer that Americans don't care about anything happening outside the US.
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There a topic that isn't about America? Well can't have that! Spin it to be about America! Redirect all topics to be on America, particularly whining about America!
What's ironic is that the folks who tend to do this, are just as likely to sneer that Americans don't care about anything happening outside the US.
Well, Americans don't really care about anything happening outside the US, unless it affects them. Even the US government is that way... why are they not in Ukraine right now while this democratic country is under attack by "unspecified" militants? The US was happy to roll into Afghanistan (for revenge) and Iraq (for oil) at a moments notice. No problems helping dispose of their old enemy Gaddafi either. (Libya has oil, right?)
The Europeans can't complain much though as they are even softer on military i
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I wish I had points to mod you up. Absolutely right.
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There a topic that isn't about America? Well can't have that! Spin it to be about America! Redirect all topics to be on America, particularly whining about America!
Yep, welcome to Slashdot. You could have an article about the most hellish police state on earth, where visiting a site like Reddit could have your grandmother tortured to death and the second comment post (after the GNAA and frosty piss comments) will be "YEAH, but the USA is WAY WORSE."
Usually these posts are by basement-dwellers who have
Re:Hypocrisy is always on topic (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Until the NSA stops spying on America... (Score:5, Insightful)
There are other stories about the NSA and related matters on the page now, and over the last several days. I find it odd that you apparently didn't post in them. You kind of went off topic there.
Or just trying to deflect the heat off Russia? You even got there with a first post.
Is the rule we can't discuss anything other than the NSA? Are you felling personally oppressed?
Other parts of the world have problems besides the US. They can be discussed too. It isn't a "hollow" problem.
Re:Until the NSA stops spying on America... (Score:5, Informative)
Until we stop living in a mass surviellence state, this all rings hollow.
The US (and the West in general) differs from Russia not in our inclination towards surveillance -- pretty much all governments do that -- but in the fact that it's controversial here.
You do know that it's possible to criticize bad things done by the US government, and criticize bad things done by other governments, right? Because your statement seems to indicate that you're unaware of this option.
Unlike Russia, we don't need to ban critics. We can just stalk and harrass them, until then ruin their lifes.
Tell that to Alexander Litvinenko [wikipedia.org], Viktor Yuschenko [wikipedia.org], Anna Politkovskaya [wikipedia.org], Yuri Shchekochikhin [wikipedia.org], Yuri Shchekochikhin [wikipedia.org], and many others.
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However well it may have worked out, Snowden's actions in distributing documents clearly violate some laws, and he clearly should face trial in the USA. Whether he should be convicted of anything or not is a separate matter.
Assange is accused of rape in Sweden. Nothing to do with the USA, unless you spend your life walking around with a tin foil hat.
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Sure it is. How's that working out for Assange and Snowden?
Making public a ton of classified documents is not criticism. It might be right, it might be wrong, it might be some of both, but it's not accurate to describe it as "criticism".
How's criticizing the government going for all the people who criticize their handling of Manning? For the people who are criticizing the NSA now?
Re:Until the NSA stops spying on America... (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh don't be so stupid. I'm no fan of the NSA's surveillance either but pretending that has any bearing this is complete nonsense.
About the only connection is that Putin's Russia is a warning about how bad it can get, so yes the NSA and CIA need to be reigned in somewhat, but the US isn't exactly as bad as Russia where the KGB, sorry, "FSB" as they prefer to be called nowadays, have their man in charge and basically run the entire show. At least there's still some semblance of separation between US intelligence agencies, the courts and the people who run the country still. In Russia it's all one big completely KGB orchestrated machine. The very fact the CIA had to try and meddle with the senate in itself shows they don't have that level of control over them yet, in Putin's Russia they'd have just had Feinstein and co. arrested on some trumped up charges and that would be the end of it.
So yes, whilst the US has lost it's right to preach on some issues (i.e. bitching at China for hacking) this is at least one area where it's hardly reached Putin-esque levels of dictatorship.
Stalking and being harassed even if that were happening on a widespread scale to all critics (it's not, people are still free to criticise - that's what you're doing for fucks sake and I doubt anyone is stalking or harassing you) is even then still a far cry from being beaten senseless and chucked in jail, or just outright assassinated with a bullet to the head by an assailant that never gets found (because they don't want to find him).
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Tell you what - If America is so fucking awful, why don't you renounce your citizenship, and move to Russia, because it's obviously so much better a place, and you have finally thrown off the shackles of the terrible conditions you are made to live under in the states. I'll pay for your one way ticket
Otherwise, at least stay on topic.
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Russia is still inhabited by a lot of people who still have power AND who were trained in the Soviet version of MAD (Mutual Assured Distruction, for those who didn't spot or don't grok the acronym already) . This means that, when people in the west start classifying Putin as another possible 'classic nutcase leader', along the lines of Saddam Hussein, Moammar Kadafi or the Ayatollah Khomeini , they should remember, Putin has some very different reasons why he might just want to give the appearance of being
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It's nice that we've had 25 year break from facing global thermonuclear war, but Russia is an expansionist aggressive nation again. Mutually assured destruction may not work this time if Putin would rather die and take the rest of the world out with him rather then relinquish power.
I suspect you're quite wrong. Men like Putin (megalomaniac psychopaths) adore and respect military strength in others and, as with all psychopaths, they love themselves far to much to risk dying. If Obama had responded by moving intermediate range nuclear missiles into Poland and the Baltic countries thus enabling a faster first strike capability, Putin might have been angry at first, but the US would have won his respect in the long run.
If history is anything to go by Putin is going to keep doing land grab
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It's far too early to say but I'm hopeful that this isn't the only solution. The risk with brinkmanship is that it only takes a tiny mistake to turn into a global catastrophe. What we might be seeing at the moment is a credible attempt to move beyond hard power politics by the west and if it works it could set a far better precedent for diplomacy t
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We can hope that Putin will be satisfied with Crimea, but it looks like Moldova is next on his list. One can hope that that will be all that he takes and that he wouldn't for example risk invading Lithuania, a NATO country. But on the other hand, what could be a greater victory for Putin and his dream of breaking the west's dominance than invading a NATO country Crimea-style, without a shot fired? It would shatter the idea that NATO is a strong and relevant player in one fell swoop.
The thing that is both ho
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Snowden might be a Sealand double agent for all I know, the point is: were his revelations made up or he spit the truth? The truth is way more damaging of course. Well, a strange kind of damage. Knowing about the excesses of surveillance state is a benefit to the people and does not hinder in any way the agencies to keep doing what they do, because they always de facto operate above the law in every place. So you have a double agent aiding the enemy. Hmmm?
Besides... If there had been the hint of the smell o
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Based on this post it seems likely to me that you can't express a point effectively and rather than resolve that you've decided it must be the fault of other people that yo
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