Ukraine targets specialized components to keep Russian refineries shut longer
Posted by vatsel 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by brokenmachine 1 day ago
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris
Comment by drysine 1 day ago
The "childish delusion" that they could ship drones to the Ukraine unpunished will end one day.
Comment by brokenmachine 16 hours ago
Why shouldn't "the West", actually many separate autonomous countries, be able to sell to whoever they want?
Literally nobody is interested in invading Russia. Nobody wants any part of that shitshow.
Russia needs to start worrying about their own internal problems, which are both significant and numerous.
Comment by drysine 5 hours ago
I don't know, why aren't companies from "many separate autonomous countries" able to sell to Russia whatever they want? They would be punished by American and the EU's primary and secondary sanctions for that
Comment by Schiendelman 1 day ago
Comment by RetroTechie 23 hours ago
Comment by Schiendelman 8 hours ago
Sources differ (Rosstat is very very questionable), but consensus is that there were 145 million people in Russia in 2022, and this year there are only 143 million. That trend line is devastating and unrecoverable, especially with the rate of decline increasing.
There are also now 8+ million Ukrainian refugees. I think that's the main reason they invaded, frankly - to move the mostly ethnically Russian population from eastern Ukraine into Russia. If you didn't count them, they'd be well under 140 million.
Russia's trading - they're killing off their prison population and the less talented/connected of their young men, and losing emigrants, and getting Ukrainian refugees. It would have been a good trade for them, if it had actually been a short war. But at this point, it's killed their future.
Comment by drysine 6 hours ago
So what is that? Sources differ or there is "consensus"? What are these "sources" and how can they possibly know the size of Russian population?
>That trend line is devastating and unrecoverable, especially with the rate of decline increasing.
So more propaganda promising Russia's collapse/implosion/other_scary_words. There has been a lot of such scaremongering in the last 35 years and today it's just a marker of Western propaganda.
Comment by RetroTechie 5 hours ago
Dispute numbers all you want. But the overall trend got bad enough that Russia's government even stopped publishing population figures. Would a normal functioning country do that?
Worse: a big share is people in their 20s or 30s. Many survivors come back with PTSD or handicapped for life. Smart ones have left the country & are building a new life elsewhere. All the funds poured into the war effort are not put into education, IT sector, infrastructure, building houses, science, etc etc.
This is not something any country can recover from quickly. Replenish weapon stocks, sure. But the brain drain, social & economic effects will keep hurting Russia for decades to come.
Comment by Schiendelman 5 hours ago
Comment by drysine 18 hours ago
These are all emigrants, they tell each other (and you) these stories to make themselves feel better.
>The best knowledge workers left.
To Armenia? ))
Comment by Schiendelman 11 hours ago
Expats are usually right about their home countries - they're the ones with the most data points.
Comment by drysine 10 hours ago
How so?
They don't live in the country and don't have a clue about what life is like there now. They read Western media and "opposition" news sites (living off State Department and EU grants) and those sources validate their decision to leave Russia.
There are over million of Ukrainian expats in Russia and the ones I know hate post-2014 Kiev regime with passion. Is that the case where expats are right?
Comment by Schiendelman 9 hours ago
Comment by drysine 6 hours ago
Comment by Schiendelman 5 hours ago
Comment by drysine 5 hours ago
>Expats are usually right about their home countries - they're the ones with the most data points.
These are your own words. I'm just asking if they apply to the opinion of some of the Ukrainian expats living in Russia