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07:11
Been following the crisis closely for the past month... it is unbelievable ... :/
Since 2019, it has just been one unwelcomed crisis after another
India has abstained twice in UNSC from directly condemning Putin's actions. (Not that UNSC can actually do anything with Russia's veto power)
Well, huh, an all-out war is a somewhat logical conclusion to the shitstorm of a coiple of years...
BTW @OlegValteriswithUkraine is it safe for you to openly criticize your government? I remember you told me once that it wasn't safe:
in Userscript newbies and friends, Aug 18, 2021 at 20:16, by Oleg Valter
@Sabito錆兎 are you going out of your way to get me in trouble? :)
No, it still isn't :)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine :( world war in my lifetime ... damn...
@OlegValteriswithUkraine 😮
but it's not like anyone will go out of their way to check
Officially, we are not allowed to even call this a "war" under threat of penal law
07:24
hm... I felt really bad when people wanted to target Russians on SO with "micro-sanctions" and IP bans... from what I am seeing in the news, most Russians are either opposed to war or have been brainwashed with propagandanda on TV.
Only Putin and his Oligarchs benefit from this war. "Sanctioning" the common people won't do anything... So unless Putin decides to pick up programming as a side hobby along with his hobby to invade sovereign nations, IP bans won't really stop anything
@Sabito錆兎standswithUkraine I feel bad for these soldiers too. They are being forced to invade their brother nation. To be honest, this entire war is completely needless! 😣
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Damn, that sucks :(
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Out of curiosity - what is the allowed term?
07:45
Yesterday Putin brought TOS-1 Buratino thermobaric flamethrowers into Ukraine. Thermobaric weapons are inhumane.
Wiki (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermobaric_weapon):

> The [blast] kill mechanism against living targets is unique—and unpleasant. ... What kills is the pressure wave, and more importantly, the subsequent rarefaction [vacuum], which ruptures the lungs. ... If the fuel deflagrates but does not detonate, victims will be severely burned and will probably also inhale the burning fuel. Since the most common FAE fuels, ethylene oxide and propylene oxide, are highly toxic, undetonated FAE should prove as lethal to personnel caught within the cloud as with most chemical agents.
And here is the said weapon being used in Ukraine.
@Sabito錆兎standswithUkraine Let me tell you a story: it's of my father who grew up in the Eastern block during socialist times. The propaganda was in full force and painted the West as a dystopia where only the most "efficient" of people would be allowed to live. For example, my father had a minor ulcer and according to the Soviet propaganda, he wouldn't be allowed to work in the West. Because minor health issues hurt productivity and western employers couldn't abide that.
Thousands such lies were spread out that made the West look unappealing. And people even knew they were lied to but couldn't discern which was truth or fabrication - almost no access to the West meant almost no way to verify them. One time my father and his friends went by car to Eastern Germany. He said that there was a lot of checks on exiting the country but once out, it would have been exceptionally easy to just take a different route and end up on the other side of Soviet influence.
They didn't because they thought they wouldn't be welcome. And decades later he found out there were refugee camps set up at the easy to get to points for people fleeing the Soviet regime. The camps opened them with open arms and gave all of the support they could.
2
It is insane to see war unfold on youtube. War used to be something you read about in books with black and white pictures. Now I am seeing videos of missiles flying over people's heads and tanks crushing civilians.
Damn, thanks for sharing that story @VLAZ :O
So, I'm very much in opposition to barring information. I first-hand accounts of what it could do. And here is the bigger problem - nowadays access to information is vastly superior. Moreover, reliance on it has grown (given its accessibility). There is an ever going war over the internet to suppress or promote different views. You'd notice around election time in the US it kicks into high gear. It's done to influence people. Made easier if they don't have access to other information.
@VLAZ special operation - any other is explicitly outlawed
@Sabito錆兎standswithUkraine yeah, at least we can still express our discontent on international platforms :) which makes the rhetoric for blocking access even more bonkers
@Sabito錆兎standswithUkraine frankly, there is no such thing as "needed" war - there's never a justification for the sensless loss of life, broken relationships, and humanitarian crisis thst follows
08:27
@Sabito錆兎standswithUkraine ironically, that's not about us supporting or condemning the war effort - it's all about making some people feel righteous and that they "contribute" to making the aggressor's life harder. I've seen ridiculous arguments ranging from shared guilt to subverting weapons production of Russia - but they all boil down to a desire to "punish" someone (which is why I call any and all such actions acts of bigotry)
Makes sense
@VLAZ Very true
@Sabito錆兎standswithUkraine yeah, unfortunately, it does...
@OlegValteriswithUkraine It very much seems like searching for a way act. Getting to "punish the Russians" sounds very righteous...if it would actually accomplish anything. I don't believe in punishing Muslims for acts of Islamist terrorist groups. It doesn't accomplish anything positive. Might even escalate the situation.
I'm a firm believer that we shouldn't judge people based on their background: nationality, ethnicity, sex, religion, political orientation, hobbies, interests, etc. That's been my stance since I was maybe a teenager. I could even justify it. Nowadays, for any stereotype of "X are such and such" I've probably seen plenty of counter-examples. I've also been on the receiving end of it and it sucks (to put it mildly).
@VLAZ yeah, I do understand the desire to do something about it, and "punish 'em all" seems like an easy solution on the surface. Just... so immature. There are so many ways to do real help if one wants to - donations (money, humanitarian goods, blood, etc) being one of the most effective ways. Even just publicly condemning the war and explaining to anyone that supports or justifies it does more good than going around harassing users, yet here we are.
08:38
SO is almost the perfect platform to me. We don't judge users, we judge content. And that is what I believe. Actions are important, not the background. If a user's background is bad contributions then that is relevant. Not where they hail from or anything else.
5
That said, after the SEDE refresh, I did a little digging out of curiosity - and the comments causing this shitstorm are actually the only ones I found, so things aren't that bad overall (yet, at least)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Speaking of, do you (or anyone) know of a good list for how to lend support to Ukraine? I've added one to my profile which lists organisations that can be donated to, but perhaps there are more ways even non-monetary ones. I'd really like something I can point people to if they really want to make a difference.
3
@VLAZ can't agree more - it's actually a standard I wish was applied more in real life - judging someone by their actions, not their attributes/background
@VLAZ not at hand (I am on mobile and on the go right now) - but I can look something up later today - there are still some sources I trust to provide actual info abut humanitarian aid
09:08
..and nobody talks about Chechnya. I imagine in 10 years nobody will talk about Ukraine.
@OlegValter I think we made friends :) At least you can find me now :)
09:19
@Scratte yay, I noticed :) will be around later today to say hi
@Scratte nobody on the international arena, that is - we still feel the consequences of this "little" "anti-terror operation"
@Scratte It's a bit weird that there is so much reaction to this event. I don't really want to diminish what's happening with Ukraine but on the other hand, there hasn't been any similar response to other events like Syria or even Afghanistan/Iraq. Or any other political problem. Nobody demanded SO do much about those. Nobody demanded "sanctions". Yet, now with Ukraine it's different. Even though it shouldn't be.
Either SO should act against each act of political violence or...they don't. I'd prefer the latter option.
@VLAZ It's because we like Ukraine. And it's closer to us. We don't care about afghans or people from Chechnya. It's the same if something bad happens to your immediate neighbor.. people think it's worse than if the same happens to someone in the next town. It's an inherent selfish thing.
If humans really cared about each other, these things wouldn't happen.
Yes, I understand why people feel stronger about this than the Middle East or any other location. However, rather than showing righteousness, it's just demonstrating double standard. And bigotry towards Russia.
You mentioning Syria is a little funny. Just yesterday a family member of mine said the same thing: We'll help people from Ukraine. They'll be welcome. Not like Syrians that everyone hated even before they arrived.
@VLAZ I don't understand it at all. The pain is no less just because it happens to someone further away.
09:36
To be completely honest, this is the first time in XXI century a superpower is bold enough to invade a country in Europe - I can understand the general outcry specifically for the country. That's basically the same argument as @Scratte's - it's easier to be concerned about Ukraine than, say, Iraq or Syria for many people. What they think of the latter is "well, they are not us (culturally, politically, historically)", then suddenly war happens right in front of their doorstep
The fact that we don't really care is what enables it. We don't care about the hard and painful life of the person that is making our shoes. We buy then anyway. The shoes looks so cool, so we don't listen and don't care about the conditions they were made under. That's the attitude what makes the world go round in pain and enables leaders to do what they want.
...which is inherently a flawed way of thinking but it does boil down to "we don't care until it hits close to home"
At the event of 9-11 the entire western world was crying out. Not even two months earlier 800.000 people died during a war in Somalia. It hardly even made the news.
And why do people not help Ukraine? Well.. we don't want to risk the conflict. I mean that could happen us us! As long as it doesn't, we'll just talk about it.
to us, not us us :)
Oh, and I thought it was intentional :)
Naah.. I'm a typoist, remember :)
Makes one wonder why those ex-USSR states are so reluctant to be a part of NATO though :)
But it does seem like a good strategy if you want to take over the world. Pick a country one by one. Weaken it until it's hardly able to defend itself, then pick the next one. None of the strong ones will do anything because it doesn't effect them.
..I think I need to go before I get banned :)
 
12 hours later…
22:18

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