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Featured Replies

25 minutes ago, Arthur Jackson said:

 

It's a "Raelian" cult symbol. Reverse image searches are a very useful modern tool.

I'm not a member... of anything.

They claimed a couple of decades ago to be cloning human babies and were looking for women to serve as surrogates... I think the cult leader was just trying to get some trim (why else become a cult leader after all?).

 

I'm colorblind to earth tones.

Your lack of inclusivity is noted.

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  • This will end the war:  

  • Here's the truly hysterical part -- the current situation is ideal for the US. Russia's military is engaged and has been seriously degraded to the point that they have to bring in foreign troops. We a

  • Yes, not only do I not rely on the western media, I came to Ukraine to see for myself that there are no NSDAPs or neo NSDAPs. Nor are there stacks of violence anywhere there isn't Russian troops. Nor

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Just now, JohnSnowsHair said:

I'm colorblind to earth tones.

Your lack of inclusivity is noted.

If you had been paying attention to the modern progressive zeitgeist you'd know that even mentioning the term colorblind is itself a racist macroagression. 

1 minute ago, Arthur Jackson said:

If you had been paying attention to the modern progressive zeitgeist you'd know that even mentioning the term colorblind is itself a racist macroagression. 

Prejudiced against cultural anachronisms now? 

:nonono:

 

1 minute ago, JohnSnowsHair said:

Prejudiced against cultural anachronisms now? 

:nonono:

 

I'm only afraid of spiders because of an incident when I was very young :angry:.

5 hours ago, JohnSnowsHair said:

Prejudiced against cultural anachronisms now? 

:nonono:

 

He's subverting existing paradigms.

4 minutes ago, Eaglesfandan said:

He's subverting existing paradigms.

:blink:

41jYbjK-CKL.jpg

17 minutes ago, Arthur Jackson said:

:blink:

41jYbjK-CKL.jpg

Settle down Beavis.

49 minutes ago, Eaglesfandan said:

Settle down Beavis.

He's the great coin-holio

All of Artemovsk is nearly liberated. NATO forces are scurrying like rats. 

On to Kramatorsk!

@Abracadabra can't afford potatoes so he makes vodka from fermented horse semen that he collects himself.

Only took what, 8 months and tens of thousands of men? 🤣

Russian KIA is around 16k

Ukraine's is around 250k

No amount of propaganda will change the facts. 

14 minutes ago, Abracadabra said:

Russian KIA is around 16k

Ukraine's is around 250k

No amount of propaganda will change the facts. 

Yeah, because Russia is killing civilians.

:rolleyes:

19 minutes ago, Abracadabra said:

Russian KIA is around 16k

Ukraine's is around 250k

No amount of propaganda will change the facts. 

@Abracadabra has a $16 kilo-ruble KIA in his grandma's barn with a cooler containing 20 gallons of orally-collected, vodka-grade horse semen in the trunk

 

 

(whew)

16 hours ago, Abracadabra said:

Russian KIA is around 16k

Ukraine's is around 250k

No amount of propaganda will change the facts. 

:roll:

Everything is fine at Chernobyl. Just a tar fire on the roof. Trust me.

JDAAAAAAAMMMMMMM!


 

49 minutes ago, barho said:

JDAAAAAAAMMMMMMM!


 

Ok, fine. 16k and 1.  

Russian Conscript Opens Fire on His Comrades Near Ukraine Border

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/russian-conscript-opens-fire-on-his-comrades-near-ukraine-border-report/ar-AA18hfcr

Quote

According to preliminary reports, a 22-year-old conscript named Magomed M. thought he heard intruders near a guard post. He shouted "Stop, who's there?" and opened fire when there was no response.

A 19-year-old conscript from Tatarstan, Tamir G., was killed in the shooting, and a 22-year-old conscript from Novosibirsk, Vladislav K., was hospitalized.

"A misunderstanding between the soldiers arose," Baza, which regularly posts information about security issues within the country, reported, noting that the conscript opened fire using a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

 

At least the Russians still have enough bullets to shoot their own.

16k and 2 now.

On 3/5/2023 at 4:39 PM, Abracadabra said:

Russian KIA is around 16k

Ukraine's is around 250k

No amount of propaganda will change the facts. 

Lala la la la la, la la lala lahhhhhhhh.

Quote

MEDVEDEV: "The sharp blade of geopolitical turbulence has cut open an abscess of the old problems of our world... The time has come for international surgery to remove the malignant tumor of the colonial past... The main reason is that truly sovereign states are no longer afraid of the dictates of the notorious 'collective West'.

The new multipolar world will be much more difficult than a bipolar or unipolar dictate. We like this scheme. For Russia, there are no forbidden regions for dialogue, since we have never had colonies... and if the Soviet Union actively contributed to the death of the colonial system in the world, now we, together with other countries, can drive the last nail into the coffin of the neo-colonial aspirations of the Western world."

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you just like him because his name means "bear" abra

admit it, pedik

Starting to circulate. Russia killed a Ukrainian POW. It’s on video. 
 

they gave him a cigarette and told him to praise Russia. Instead he said "слава Україні” (Slava Ukraini, translates to "glory to Ukraine”). 
 

And then they shot him. 

Russia is finally bringing in the REAL tanks

Quote

Desperate Russian Forces Are Sticking 80-Year-Old Naval Guns On 70-Year-Old Armored Tractors

L7Kd77w.jpg

The Russian army is welding 80-year-old gun mounts, originally built to arm patrol boats, onto 70-year-old armored tractors—and sending them to Ukraine to get captured by the Ukrainian army.

 

The up-gunned, tracked MT-LBs are further evidence of the Kremlin’s worsening equipment crisis as it struggles to make good its losses in Ukraine.

 

The first of these weirdo MT-LBs started showing up in Ukraine last month. On or before Feb. 3, Ukrainian forces in Vuhledar captured from hapless Russian brigades a 13-ton, two-crew MT-LB sporting a 2M-7 gunboat turret.

 

The 2M-7 is an over-under pair of 14.5-millimeter machine guns behind a steel shield. It entered service with Soviet forces in 1945.

 

In early March, photos circulated online depicting MT-LBs with 2M-3 naval turrets welded to their roofs. The 2M-3 is two 25-millimeter auto-cannons, one atop the other in an enclosed casing. The 2M-3 made its debut in 1953.

To be clear, the Ukrainians also have bolted unusual weapons to some of their own MT-LBs. The Ukrainians favor MT-12 100-millimeter guns, however. These MT-LB-12s are, in essence, crude mobile howitzers.

The difference between a Russian MT-LB with a naval gun mount and a Ukrainian MT-LB-12 is range. An MT-LB-12 can fire as far as 9,000 yards. A Russian MT-LB/2M-3 shoots no farther than 2,700 yards while engaging targets on the ground.

So the Russian Frankenvehicle must get a lot closer to the enemy in order to be effective. The problem is that the MT-LB is thinly-armored. Its steel hull is half an inch thick at its thickest.

A determined Ukrainian machine-gunner could take out an MT-LB from 1,600 yards, giving the MT-LB crew a small range advantage in that particular match-up.

But Ukrainian missile teams, tankers and artillery gunners—including the crews of MT-LB-12s—can hit the weirdo Russian vehicles from thousands of yards beyond the weirdos’ own firing range. That might not be such a big problem if the MT-LB were better-protected.

Now, the Russian MT-LB/2M-3/7 might have an anti-aircraft role—which, of course, would obviate the armor problem. But the vehicle lacks a radar to guide its gunfire. So if it is an air-defense system, it’s a bad one.

It’s not hard to see why the Russian army has resorted to up-arming MT-LBs and sending them to the front. After losing more than 9,000 tanks, fighting vehicles, trucks and howitzers in the first year of its wider war on Ukraine, the Russians are running low on modern armored vehicles—and they can’t build new ones fast enough to make up for it.

Which is why the Kremlin is pulling out of long-term storage hundreds of 50-year-old T-62 tanks, 60-year-old BMP-1 fighting vehicles and 70-year-old BTR-50P armored tractors. These awkwardly up-gunned MT-LBs just further underscore the Russians’ growing desperation.

 

Ukraine Is Going To Lose

Quote

There’s a notion floating around the Internet that the current conflict in Ukraine is going to remain a static war of attrition that will bleed the Russian army dry. So what if it decimates Ukraine’s society and eradicates most of its population? At least the dreaded Russian war machine will have been ground to a halt in the killing fields of Ukraine.

Those believing this narrative are living in a fantasy. 

Fact is, the Ukrainian military is drained, the Western supply chains are strained, and the NATO stockpiles of critical weapons and ammunition are depleted. The war is transitioning, therefore, into a conflict in which the Russian side will enjoy several critical advantages. 

For those under the impression that the attritional warfare will lead to a negotiated settlement: Fat chance! 

Moscow is now totally all-in on this conflict. The window of opportunity to have gotten a settlement is closed. Unless Russia loses significantly soon (which it does not appear to be in danger of, if the Battle of Bakhmut is any indication), the Russians’ numerical superiority over Ukraine’s force structure alone will ensure that they achieve the victory they’ve been waiting for. 

The outcome of this war, a defeat for Ukraine and its NATO backers, was totally avoidable. Sensing the weakness of the West – and the fact that they’re woefully overextended – the Russians are going to use all means to break Ukraine and subdue it. The beginning of the end is likely happening right now in Bakhmut, a city in Ukraine’s far east (closest to the Russian border). 

Russian forces have spent months implementing an encirclement of the city. At the start of February, Ukraine’s embattled President Volodymyr Zelensky had insisted that his military would fight to the bitter end in Bakhmut. 

Yet such heroic declarations from Kiev must have fallen on deaf ears in the field, as reports are now circulating that the Ukrainian defenders are increasingly strained. Further, Ukrainian Defense Ministry officials have repeatedly said over the last few weeks that they will pull forces from Bakhmut if they believe the situation is getting untenable. 

A view of the destruction in Bakhmut. Image: CNBC / Screengrab
At the start of March, the Russian plan of bleeding the Ukrainians in Bakhmut dry appears to be working. So Ukraine is necessarily withdrawing its forces from the besieged city (which according to Ukrainian officials has been leveled after months of fighting there).

Of course, Bakhmut alone is unimportant for either side. What is important about the eastern Ukrainian village is that it lies on the path to the Dnieper River. A beating heart of trade and transportation, the Dnieper is a main artery for Ukraine.

It is a geo-strategic chokepoint within Ukraine as well. For several months, fighting has occurred between Ukrainian and Russian elements battling for control of the Dnieper River islands. 

Thus far, the Ukrainians have been unable to dislodge the Russian forces in the area. Should Bakhmut be pacified, as it seems it is about to be, with the weakening Ukrainian defenders being pushed back farther from the east, the real concern in the West must be for the fate of the Dnieper. 

The Russians’ strategy of attrition is working and their ultimate goal is, at the very least, to hold on to the eastern Russian-speaking portions of Ukraine as well as Crimea in the south.

Pushing Ukraine’s forces out of Bakhmut would conceivably allow Russia to race toward the Dnieper and cut the region off from the rest of Ukraine. Russian control over the Dnieper would also prevent the Ukrainians from launching an ill-advised assault on Crimea.

The slow and painful death of the Ukrainian state is at hand. Whether it happens in a few months or a year, the Russians aren’t going anywhere, and they are going to fight this war the same way they’ve fought every conflict in their history: with lots of manpower, brutality, and time. 

Ukrainian side of the rout at Bakhmut
Now, some on social media have lambasted my prognostications, telling me that Bakhmut was never as strategically important as I was saying it was. But that claim doesn’t pass the smell test. 

After all, if it was so unimportant, why would Ukraine even waste its limited resources and personnel holding the city for as long as it did? 

It has been said the goal was to bleed Russia out. Now that the situation in Bakhmut is untenable for the Ukrainians, they are moving their defenders to a new defensive line outside of the city, hoping to draw the Russians into a new meat grinder. 

This sounds an awful lot like the fantastical thinking that dominated at the end of the Third Reich in the Führerbunker (no, I am not saying the Ukrainian cause is the same as Adolf Hitler’s, calm down), where the German leadership ordered entire armies to defensive positions that existed only on the maps in the bunker.

Few German military leaders had the heart to tell their insane dictator the truth, that those units did not exist, and the situation was hopeless. 

Those who disagree with my take on the situation insist that the Ukrainian bleeding out of Russian forces is working. The Russians are believed to have lost more than 3,000 troops in the past four days alone of the fighting over Bakhmut.

And yet the Russian forces still took the city and are steadily advancing toward central Ukraine. Meanwhile, the Ukrainians have lost scores of troops that they will find increasingly hard to replace. 

The Russians who were killed in the fighting, on the other hand, were "criminals and conscripts” easily replaced by Moscow.

Even if the Ukrainians can kill more Russians who are less well trained than they are, numbers are numbers – and Russia’s higher numbers combined with Vladimir Putin’s apparent devotion to crushing Ukraine in the war that he started a year ago is stronger than whatever the North Atlantic Treaty Organization is doing. 

Ukraine can’t kill its way out of this mess
As my colleague Daniel Davis at the defense publication 1945 wrote of the situation in Bakhmut recently:

"The [Armed Forces of Ukraine have] long understood Bakhmut would be nearly impossible to hold, and as far back as May 2022, began to prepare new lines of defense in the Slovyansk-Kramatorsk area.

"Based on the loss of Soledar in January and the number of troops Russia had committed to the capture of Bakhmut by early February, the Ukrainian leaders could have withdrawn its troops in an orderly fashion to man new positions in the Slovyansk-Kramatorsk line by early to mid-February.”

And as for the glorious, hallowed tanks that the West promised Ukraine to great fanfare, they’ve committed barely one-third of the armor that Ukraine’s military had requested. Of that promised armor, hardly any has arrived – and at least for the Americans, the vaunted Abrams main battle tank (MBT) is unlikely to materialize on the battlefield for at least another year. 

M1 Abrams, a third-generation American main battle tanks, are seen in Poland in September 2022. Photo: Artur Widak / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images / The Conversation
Given the losses the Ukrainians have sustained fighting in the east – and will likely continue to sustain as the war slogs on – the tanks will make no difference for Ukraine’s defense when they finally do arrive.

Ukraine destroyed its own army
In Daniel Davis’ assessment, the losses that Ukraine’s military has sustained in the vain attempt to maintain control over Bakhmut has resulted in a severe reduction in Ukraine’s offensive capabilities that it is unlikely to restore any time soon (not without the introduction of Western forces, that is). 

Asia Times commentator Stephen Bryen has accurately assessed that as Ukraine’s position at Bakhmut collapses in the face of the Russian offensive, Kiev is plotting an assault on Russian-controlled Crimea. Even at full capacity, the Ukrainians would have found taking this hardened, Russian-controlled region tough to take. Under present conditions, any attempt by Ukraine to attack Crimea will result in total disaster for the West.

The Russians now have time on their side. Moscow does not have to negotiate. Ukraine is on the retreat and its forces are unlikely to be able to mount an effective offensive any time soon. Should the Ukrainians push to hit Crimea now, as they seem to be doing, their attack will fail.

Even if a miracle does happen in that potential battle for Crimea and Ukraine’s forces make significant headway, the risk of nuclear reprisals from Russia will be at an all-time high. 

The Russo-Ukrainian war is entering its next critical phase. It is a period in which the West must seriously reassess its commitment, as the Russians are not going to surrender or abandon their mission of crushing the Ukrainian state. While the Zelensky government could have been saved a year ago, the arrogance of Western leaders prevented a deal from moving forward. 

Alas, the Western side will lose in Ukraine. It just needs to determine how badly it wants to lose. Let’s hope there are some real reassessments going on right now in the White House and in Brussels.

Otherwise, we are truly staring down a third world war that will involve nukes – and it is a war that the United States is not going to be able to win without destroying itself first, just as the European great powers did in the First World War.

 

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