Col. Crackpot wrote: ↑2022-02-21 03:13pmWhy won’t you apply it to Russia?
The Russians don't ask me to trust them. The US government does. The Russians cite sources outside their control. We know that their troops are in Belarus because journalists filmed them in Belarus, and the government of Belarus confirmed that's what is going on. They're in their country doing military exercises (and possibly discussing how best to set up those nukes mentioned earlier-- I mean, there is no way they would just announce something like that out of the blue, this is something they have almost certainly been talking about for months if not years).
(and yes, I know Belarus shares a border with Ukraine. Unlike most Americans, I can find these countries on a map)
The US government, when directly asked by journalists, cites
themselves as sources. The difference should be obvious: you can't make claims without argument or presenting evidence. At least the Russians are
trying, even if you don't trust them. There is a gradient in trustworthiness: uncontested fact -> trusted sources -> untrusted sources -> bullshit -> proven lies. The US, by citing itself as a source, lands in the category of bullshit, whereas Russia, by at least trying to show evidence, lands in the Untrusted category. And I'm sure on some level they know that, but you can crawl out of that category into "trusted" over time. You can't crawl out of the "bullshitter" category without trying. So when the Ukraine's own government says "no, Russia isn't going to invade", directly contradicting the White House, who am I supposed to believe? Neither one cites their sources, though the Ukrainians aren't citing themselves, they're directly saying their sources are secret.
And even if I don't trust Russian sources, I have Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and, oh yes,
those same American sources as proof that the Russians aren't lying when they say they aren't going to invade. Because the number of troops they have moved (even according to the US!) is too small for an invasion force, because as mentioned before, they haven't moved enough troops for an
occupation force. Certainly not one large enough to occupy the whole Ukraine. Their nuclear drills as discussed earlier aren't anything out of the ordinary, and I'm sure the US military quietly does the same. So the US isn't even trying to tell a consistent narrative, they're just trusting most citizens won't look too closely at the details of their narrative or lack the knowledge to analyze what is going on for themselves.
And besides that, there is the still unanswered question of why this is our problem. Why is the US Government on the warpath over this. Russia has understandable motives, even if you don't agree with them. The US talks about it as if we should take for granted that its up to us to stop them, making me suspicious of the ulterior motive. Or more to the point, makes the argument that our politicians are stuck in a Cold War mentality quite compelling. They don't want any other Great Powers competing with us, which is Imperialist thinking. Prove me wrong, Crackpot.
Prove. Me. Wrong.