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PNH 6000
Jake Broe
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Comments by "PNH 6000" (@PNH-sf4jz) on "Putin thinks he is Julius Caesar" video.
A really considered and heartfelt synopsis. I really like the way that you have presented your thoughts on the topic that is important, about Ukraine.
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A stylish expressive piece of writing which seems very appropriate.
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Here we go with the "looses" word again. You realise that with this terminology you are showing yourself up as another Poo-tin-bot or cremlin-creep. Maybe you are one of those westerners who now play pro-Poo-tin Polly-ball or cremlin-cricket.
1
An interesting viewpoint, but no substantive facts to support those views, which leaves them with about as much value as hot air in a balloon.
1
At least by the use of a proxy. Maybe that is the reason for the enormously long table.
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@buddy1155 Sorry, I am not familiar with the reference. Winnie the Poe. Is it to do with the enormously long table. I have read a good deal of Edgar Allan Poe's writing.
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Thank you very much Brad Slowgrove. This issue has been stewing in my mind for weeks. I understood intuitively or from previous reading that such an imperative existed, yet had no way of knowing how to find it. Consequently, any of Putin's "ill-gotten gains" appear to be illegal under international law. While I have no way of knowing the likelihood or otherwise of Russia doing so, is this likely to increase or decrease the likelihood of Russia using nuclear weapons to push their goal. As I write the question I am aware that it is rhetorical and really, could only be answered, if at all by any other than the Kremlin, as an opinion. Thank you so much for the information and the detail about how it has been, in some way, distorted by certain interpretations of what has recently been stated.
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Personally, I would prefer the latter.
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It seems to me that had he wanted to make a name for himself, he would have been better off putting the pre-war value of Russia's oil and gas into improving conditions for the population and the production capacity of the country. It now appears that Russia has to sell its oil at a discounted rate to what it was receiving from western European countries, which they can now possibly buy at a reduced rate. All this at a time when the world's use of oil and gas is likely to be decreasing, that situation having now been hastened. Should aspirations toward Ukraine be unfulfilled, which is my hope, Ukraine's oil and gas resources may be tapped and supplied at a more equitable price than Moscow would prefer to price their resources. The real outcome, I hope for, is that Ukraine will have proved herself capable, be able to restart with a relatively clean slate, develop their cultural identity and proceed to be an accomplished and well recognised state in its own rite.
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Very likely, however, I do do not like that idea any more than I like the idea of Russia succeeding in its attempt to subvert the sovereignty of Ukraine.
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