Comments by "Black Cat Dungeon Master\x27s Familiar" (@blackcatdungeonmastersfami5311) on "Good Times Bad Times" channel.

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  11.  @dasbubba841  1) casualties - the BBC made a major effort to assess Russian casualties a couple of months ago and could identify only 4000 Russians killed. Obviously it will have increased slightly since then and does not include LPR/DPR/Wagner casualties. In contrast a leaked Ukrainian government report mentioned over 190,000 casualties (not broken down into killed/wounded). 2) Inflation isn't going away any time soon. Biden just signed the inflation reduction bill which is actually going to contribute to inflation because it spends lots of printed money. Inflation has already claimed the scalp of Boris Johnson in Britain and Draghi in Italy. There have been large protests in France, Italy, Germany and especially Netherlands. Canada and the USA look to be politically fragile. Heavy spending on Ukraine isn't sustainable. 3) EU countries have made only token preparations. Germany is now talking about needing to make a 20% reduction in electricity consumption over winter. That's impossible without throwing millions out of work. Fertiliser and aluminium production in Europe is already shutting down and we're still in the summer. Electricity prices in much of Europe are already up to seven times higher than two years ago and gas prices similar. Many people won't be able to afford to heat their houses in countries which get cold enough for the sea to freeze. Poles have been told to gather firewood because there won't be enough gas, you're wrong that Poland doesn't depend on Russia for energy. LPG imports to Europe aren't anywhere near enough to offset Russian gas. US LPG exports to Europe are already dropping because of the high LPG price in USA. I agree that the USA will not be directly affected except by higher prices. Unemployed Germans freezing and hungry over the winter will notice the unequal burden borne by the NATO effort to sanction Russia.
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  25. ​ @alexandermackie7621  The big picture is that before the war, America was the only superpower, the threat of devastating sanctions constrained other great powers like Russia and China. 1) America created this proxy war in Ukraine, Russia got pushed into an intolerable position and has now broken out of the post cold war era. Most of the world outside of the West is now detaching from the American order. 2) Armaments to Ukraine have prolonged the war but are straining Western economies already stretched from lockdowns. Inflation is out of control and even raising interest rates won't help as much as usual because much of the inflation comes from energy costs. Armaments to Ukraine have severely depleted Western militaries e.g. French generals warned their government they're currently too depleted to fight a war. 3) Financial and energy sanctions against Russia have backfired, we're looking at economic collapse in much of Europe this winter when the gas runs out. Energy intensive industries are already closing, just today Slovakia shut down aluminium production - aluminium will have be imported from Russia instead. Financial sanctions on Russia have pushed non Western countries into developing alternatives. China and Russia are now setting up international competition to SWIFT and a new BRICS currency for international transactions. Huge own goal by America there. For the first time, large amounts of oil and gas are being traded in a currency other than US dollars. 4) The totally insane timing of Pelosi's visit to Taiwan antagonises China and contributes to China's orientation away from the West and towards Russia. Far from Russia being isolated, the rest of the world is pivoting away from the West. Obviously there are plenty of small ones but that's the big picture. It'll be clearer by spring next year after Europe has had an economic meltdown, many current Western leaders have gone and Western solidarity against Russia is broken.
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  45.  @michaeltoms7040  If Ukraine is able to cut the water off to Crimea - and that's a big if - then that's going to convince Crimeans they should be part of Ukraine about as much as Russia is convincing the people of Kiev they should be part of Russia by cutting off their electricity. Actually cutting off the water before the war is a big reason why so many people in Crimea hate the Kiev regime As for rebuilding Ukraine - who's going to do that? Certainly not Britain. Britain's heading into probably the worst recession of our lives and is actually cutting military spending, foreign aid and raising taxes. Certainly not Germany. Germany is deindustrialising - its manufacturing model was built on cheap Russian gas. Certainly not America. America can't afford it either and the population is sick of foreign wars, they're still wondering how they managed to waste two trillion in Afghanistan with nothing to show for it. These tens of billions of aid given to Ukraine - the vast majority was actually loans, not presents. Ukraine started off amongst the poorest countries in Europe and is losing millions of people to emigration. If there isn't a negotiated peace soon, the Russians have already demonstrated they can easily cut off electricity to the cities, most people still remaining will leave over the winter because the alternative is sitting in a dark and literally freezing apartment block with no lifts, no water and for many, no ability to even earn money. Even before the war, a lot of Ukrainians were desperate to get to the EU. Once they actually make that step, most won't want to go back even if there is some kind of peace.
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