Nobody has the intention to invade Ukraine

Rhinox

too old for this
Citizen
So with Facebook blocked and Russia left with few options to pay their 'for hire' trolls and voices, just how quieter has it gotten in right wing circles? I assume Tucker is still doing his lord and master's work, but how many others have gone quiet or completely recanted their pro putin bullshit?
 

Anonymous X

Well-known member
Citizen
One of my girlfriend’s former colleagues (who’s since left the UK due to Brexit) drove to Berlin station yesterday to take in some of the Ukrainian refugees arriving into Germany by train. Proud of her for doing that.
 

LiamA

Active member
Citizen
I have a question. Are any comic companies doing special comics about this situation and donating the money to the Ukrainian refugees?
 

Nevermore

Well-known member
Citizen
So with Facebook blocked and Russia left with few options to pay their 'for hire' trolls and voices, just how quieter has it gotten in right wing circles? I assume Tucker is still doing his lord and master's work, but how many others have gone quiet or completely recanted their pro putin bullshit?
 

Rust

Slightly Off
Citizen
So with Facebook blocked and Russia left with few options to pay their 'for hire' trolls and voices, just how quieter has it gotten in right wing circles? I assume Tucker is still doing his lord and master's work, but how many others have gone quiet or completely recanted their pro putin bullshit?

I can't find it right off hand, but someone had a metric of the top trending Tweets the day before the Invasion and the day after Russia shut down Twitter. Prior it was a bunch of Ben Sharpio and right wing morons. Afterwards it was Occupy Democrats, Elizabeth Warren, etc. Ben Sharpio was still on the list too but he was literally the only representative and I imagine people retweet his stuff the same way you slowly drive by the scene of a car wreck.
 

The Mighty Mollusk

Scream all you like, 'cause we're all mad here
Citizen
Could the world focus on one disaster at a time for a while? Instead of having a pandemic, the spiraling climate crisis, late-stage capitalism's slow but inevitable collapse, and a madman on the verge of starting World War Three, plus probably at least three or four more I can't remember right now, all at the same time? I can't even keep up with which apocalypse is going to finish us off anymore and it's more than a little exhausting.
 

Nevermore

Well-known member
Citizen
 

Pale Rider

...and Hell followed with him.
Citizen
Hey, remember when the most important news in the world was a dangerous pandemic? Good times.
I wonder if the Russian army is vaccinated or if we're going to start hearing stories about how they're being devastated by covid infections.
 

Nevermore

Well-known member
Citizen
Man. Imagine Putin does press the red button, and it turns out none of Russia's nuclear missiles are working.
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
The dude might be slapping it hourly right now: if none of his nukes WORK, then we never know they don't work. Plus, military intelligence works against use in this case. We HAVE to assume they still all work as expected because even if someone from the insides leaks the failure of them: we wouldn't believe them anyway. It's nuclear warfare you literally cannot take the chance that their infrastructure has failed so spectacularly.
 

Ungnome

Grand Empress of the Empire of One Square Foot.
Citizen
I've often wondered that myself. Putin surrounded himself with corrupt officials who tell him what he wants to hear and skim a good chunk of the nations budget into their own pockets. If the equipment they are using in Ukraine is any indication, there's a good chance their nuclear arsenal is in similar shape.
 

Wheelimus

Administrator
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
I have no doubt that Russia has starved it's people enough to keep most of their nukes working. Anything else is wishful thinking.
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
As an aside: there is no chance of a nuclear strike... unless putin really has gone absolutely insane.

He can't nuke ukraine; not only because he wants it, it'll poison russia and the ukraine; both literally and politically. He can't nuke anyone else without starting a war he literally cannot win, and cannot finish. Any talk about nuclear weapons is just a dick waving bluff.
 

The Mighty Mollusk

Scream all you like, 'cause we're all mad here
Citizen
And yet nobody can afford to take the chance of calling the bluff, because there are no second chances with a nuke. We all know it'd be madness to use them, but what if he IS that mad?
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
Then we hope there are rational and intelligent people in his command chain whom aren't interested in dying to atomic hellfire.

Worked during the cold war.
 

CoffeeHorse

Exhausted, but still standing.
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
Yeah, cut them off from Steam and the masses will have nothing left to grief but the rich.

Reportedly, the Russian government has found a solution to that.

Just legalize piracy and let the masses figure it out.

According to the plan, to support Russian information technologies, a compulsory licensing mechanism is proposed for software, databases and topologies for integrated circuits. They may be subject to Art. 1360 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation (according to it, the government of the Russian Federation has the right "in case of emergency" to decide on the use of an invention, utility model or industrial design without the consent of the patent owner). The authorities also propose to abolish criminal and administrative liability for the use of software unlicensed in the Russian Federation, "belonging to a copyright holder from countries that have supported the sanctions."

[...]

Apparently, the idea is to compulsorily license and put into circulation foreign software without any remuneration to the copyright holder if he supported sanctions against the Russian Federation, Alexandra Orekhovich, director of legal initiatives at the Internet Initiatives Development Fund, explained.
 


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