A Ruby Developer's Life In Kharkiv, Ukraine (theregister.com) 144
In an interview with The Register, Victor Shepelev, a Ruby developer and software architect who lives in Kharkiv, Ukraine, shares his experience living in a country being invaded by Russia. He hopes that his situation will encourage international political action to help Ukraine prevail. Here's an excerpt from the interview: The Register: Has your technical knowledge proven useful in your current situation and if so in what way?
Shepelev: Not directly, unfortunately. I am mostly experienced in writing expressive code, designing architectures of long-living systems, and mentoring people, not the most required abilities in wartime.
The Register: Does the Ruby/open source community provide community and support in wartime? Should it function any differently than it has in the context of a crisis?
Shepelev: Sad to say, but I don't feel much support. There are some people in my social circles in the Ruby community who do a lot, but as for the community as a whole, I think it stays mostly indifferent. My pleas to spread the information are by and large ignored. Maybe I am being selfish here, but I see that even small steps that could be done (like banners on sites of big projects, tweets from prominent Rubyists, mentions in newsletters) -- those steps aren't done even by a lot of people I know personally. I know some of them are sending money or helping in some other private ways, but I really lack the feeling of public support, people still mostly think it is some "politics they shouldn't mix with their everyday life." There are others, of course, and to them, I am eternally grateful.
The Register: Is there anything else you'd want people outside Ukraine to know?
Shepelev: We are standing, and we will not fall. But we need as much help as the world can give: with spreading information, with supporting the Ukrainian army, refugees, and humanitarian causes, and with pressuring Russia with any measures that are available. The more help we get, the sooner it will end, the less innocent people struggle or die.
Shepelev: Not directly, unfortunately. I am mostly experienced in writing expressive code, designing architectures of long-living systems, and mentoring people, not the most required abilities in wartime.
The Register: Does the Ruby/open source community provide community and support in wartime? Should it function any differently than it has in the context of a crisis?
Shepelev: Sad to say, but I don't feel much support. There are some people in my social circles in the Ruby community who do a lot, but as for the community as a whole, I think it stays mostly indifferent. My pleas to spread the information are by and large ignored. Maybe I am being selfish here, but I see that even small steps that could be done (like banners on sites of big projects, tweets from prominent Rubyists, mentions in newsletters) -- those steps aren't done even by a lot of people I know personally. I know some of them are sending money or helping in some other private ways, but I really lack the feeling of public support, people still mostly think it is some "politics they shouldn't mix with their everyday life." There are others, of course, and to them, I am eternally grateful.
The Register: Is there anything else you'd want people outside Ukraine to know?
Shepelev: We are standing, and we will not fall. But we need as much help as the world can give: with spreading information, with supporting the Ukrainian army, refugees, and humanitarian causes, and with pressuring Russia with any measures that are available. The more help we get, the sooner it will end, the less innocent people struggle or die.
Well (Score:2)
The more help we get, the sooner it will end, the less innocent people struggle or die.
That ... doesn't follow.
It's just as possible that with more help, it will just prolong the conflict. Sad, but true.
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Re: Well (Score:2)
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And they get it. Russia alone will have good chunk of its army smashed. Complications are, they are luring around.
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russian troll is russian.
how does it feel to be so hated, BORIS?
Re: Well (Score:2)
Peace (Score:2)
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Still TODAY, Russia are still claiming that they did not invade Ukraine! What negotiation can you have with these people? Their word is worth nothing, and they are morally bankrupt.
Re: Peace (Score:2)
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1) Ukraine isn't a province of Russia. If they want to join NATO, they have all the rights to do so. Ukraine is a subject, not an object.
2) Ukraine isn't in NATO. Yet Russia have already invaded them twice, and conquered three important pieces of its territory. Conquest isn't recognized by the UN as a legitimate means to alter international borders.
3) NATO being a defensive alliance, it can't be a threat to any country; it can be a threat, if anything, to a country's aims o
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Negotiations don't work when the other side refuses to acknowledge the validity of Russia's concerns; namely, Russia doesn't accept Ukraine being brought in to NATO or defacto becoming a nuclear weapons armed vassal state of the US.
Do you really believe that there was a possibility of Ukraine joining NATO?
NATO doesn't accept countries with active territorial disputes, much less active territorial disputes with Russia. At least since 2014 NATO membership for Ukraine would have been impossible.
The US has shown, in very recent history, a willingness to invade and destroy whom ever they wish. The US has a much more aggressive and recent history of invading countries through direct and indirect means. Why isn't that acknowledged as a legitimate concern for Russia?
Concern in what sense? That the US would invade Russia? That the US would invade Ukraine?
Can you understand why Ukraine and other former USSR members would want to join NATO?
Re: Peace (Score:2)
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If Ukraine wasn't going to join NATO, why not just agree to Russia's very basic demand that they don't join NATO? It's clear there were plans as billions of dollars of weapons were flooding into Ukraine.
For one thing it was a matter of principal. Russia has no right to tell Ukraine it can't join NATO, for Ukraine to agree to that condition implies that it's a valid request, so it's definitely not something you give away.
Moreover, even though NATO membership is impossible there is a very strong Ukrainian desire to join NATO since the threat of invasion from Russia is so dire, so it's a very painful concession to make.
And most importantly, the demand was never just about NATO. It was:
1) Don't join NATO.
2) Gi
Re: Peace (Score:2)
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So for one thing you're still ignoring the fact that Ukraine joining NATO was an impossibility. They were literally at war with two Russian supplied "breakaway states".
And even if Ukraine had joined NATO, the US doesn't station Nukes in many NATO countries, certainly none of the ones close to Russia. [wikipedia.org]
Finally, just imagine you were a citizen of Mexico, or Canada (as I am). Would you feel threatened by US invasion? I don't.
Now imagine you were a member of the former USSR. Don't you think you'd have a credible
Re: Peace (Score:2)
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If Ukraine wasn't ever going to be a part of NATO, why not give Russia that assurance?
You're repeating yourself. I already answered that question. Russia had no right to make that demand, accepting the demand implies it was justified, and it was far from Russia's only demand. Giving in would have achieved nothing but make Ukraine weaker in the future.
Re: Peace (Score:2)
Provoking Russia on ideological grounds is
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2014 wasn't a coup. It was a revolution driven by Ukrainians and ultimately caused by the incompetence of pro-Russian President Yanukovych. And even if it was a coup did that really justify the invasion of Ukraine, annexation of Crimea, and creation of the two breakaway states?
If you really cared about your Ukrainian friends you'd advocate for sincere peace negotiations.
What do you think "sincere peace negotiations" entail? Ukraine poses zero threat to Russia. It wasn't a threat in 2014 and it wasn't a threat in 2022. The only threat was to Putin himself since a Democratic Ukraine showed Russians tha
Re: Peace (Score:2)
> And you saw the article about what's going on in Donetsk, if you were Ukrainian would you be willing to lay down arms and subject yourself to that?
What article?
Re: Peace (Score:2)
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Ok, I'm ignoring 80% of your comment as it's so extremely biased towards the obviously western MSM narrative. We will likely find out neither side was reporting the situation accurately, but the reporting by western MSM is so extremely biased it's not possible to just split the middle and find the truth.
Western MSM isn't perfect. But you seem to be taking the position that the truth lies in the middle between the western MSM and a regime with a history of killing inconvenient journalists and were you can go to jail for 15 years for calling the war a war.
> And you saw the article about what's going on in Donetsk, if you were Ukrainian would you be willing to lay down arms and subject yourself to that?
What article?
Maybe it was in another thread but this [aljazeera.com]. That's not the only account I assure you. Russia has a fairly well documented history of using widespread torture and murder to pacify populations. That's why Ukraine is specifically preparing for an insurgency where [vice.com]
Re: Peace (Score:2)
Well, since you mentioned Iraq, what made it more defensible? How many civilians died through direct US/NATO military action in Iraq? What about the funding of Syrian separatists that ultimately turned into
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Well, since you mentioned Iraq, what made it more defensible? How many civilians died through direct US/NATO military action in Iraq?
US invaded Iraq to depose a dictator and create a Democracy. Russia invaded Ukraine to install a dictator and destroy a Democracy.
Easily more defensible.
Now, there's a huge body count because Bush was a moron, though it's hard to tell the eventual body count of Putin's actions now.
What about the funding of Syrian separatists that ultimately turned into ISIL?
ISIL came from Iraq, not Syria. And the US funded the good Syrian faction.
What actually happened is Assad released the Jihadists from jail to help ISIL then focused his forces (and Russia's) on the more secular Democratic minded f
Re: Peace (Score:2)
Re: Peace (Score:2)
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You are sick. I mean, I know you are trolling to try to stop people just going out and doing something, like donating to help Ukraine [ukraine.ua] but don't you just wake up in the morning, look at the mirror and think "oh god, that guy I see, I wish someone would kill him for me"? If I had to pretend there's no difference between what goes on in the USA and deliberately bombing a theatre where over 1000 children were sheltering from a war [heraldscotland.com] then I'd certainly feel that way.
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You are trying to stop Ukrainians of being "Nazis" by supporting the country, Russia, which was literally allied with the Nazis during WWII???
* Ukraine - has some Neo-Nazis
* is democratic, unlike the Nazis
* Russia - started WWII together with the actual Nazis
* Russia - worked with the actual Nazis to divide up Europe under the Molotov-Ribbentrop [wikipedia.org] pact
* Russia - is invading other countries which have not attacked it, taking some land and setting up puppet states, just like the actual Nazis
* Russia - runs a po
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Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:2)
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:5, Informative)
False, WW2 was started as a conspiracy between Russia and Germany to invade Poland. Germany may not have started the war if they weren't sure how Russia would react. Look up the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact. It's a historical fact.
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:2)
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Non agression treaties are normal. Most of Europe and many international corporations and oligarchs did far more/less to contribute to the Nazis rise
Non-aggression pacts sure, but invading the same country at the same time with a preexisting agreement on how to divide the spoils? That's almost an alliance.
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:2)
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How many Soviets died fighting the Nazis?
\
Many many Soviets, Russians, Ukranians, Chechens, Uzbekis etc. died fighting in the war that the Soviet Union started, mostly after the Nazi ally they collaborated with to divide up Europe betrayed them. Many more Soviet citizens - not just soldiers - died of starvation.
That's not discussing prisoners of war or similar. Just Soviet citizens most of those will be political prisoners murder
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Ukraine, who lost 8 million fighting Nazis, has a Jew for a president, and somehow this makes Ukraine a Nazi country? Truly this is Russian logic.
Look at polling and election and results for the last 20 years in Europe. When it comes to the amount of far-right support, you'll find Ukraine at the bottom. Whatever right wing idiots exist in Ukraine, they are utterly irrelevant to anyone except Russia and Western politicians who's game is to see Nazis hiding behind every rock and tree.
Many politicians acros
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:2)
I only donate to Jewish Nazis. White Nazis are losers and proven themselves a degenerate race.
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:2)
Sure. Delete the comment that gives mine context and leave mine there jumping in with a non-sequiter about Jewish Nazis.
Re:Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:4, Informative)
Utter bullshit. There was some rioting in particular places but "many areas have been destroyed by black criminals" is an outright lie.
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I wish I could agree with you but I've also visited Detroit. He has a point. I've seen many economically depressed areas, but very few where the local population takes part in such savage destruction and murder of each other. They seemed strangely proud of it.
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Cherrypick much? I've been in plenty of major cities in the USA, and have never seen an area that looks like a war zone or was "destroyed by black criminals".
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Apparently you are a liar. Pics or STFU you hack.
Your shit isn't working anymore. The world is on to you. You like getting slapped down, hard? Russia is getting it's face pushed into the dirt by farmers. Humiliated on the international stage. People used to fear Russia, now they are laughing at you.
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Of course, the shareholders of the vast US corporation I work for (as an example) enjoy many millions of dollars in profits from their Russian holdings, and really don't want to give that money up.
Lets pretend race has something to do with it shall we?
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:3)
Interesting.
I see for weeks now love updates from CNN, NYT, AP, Reuters and others about this.
I see actual costs as companies pull out entirely from Russia.
How is the US corporate response smaller than with BLM?
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And as to people saying "well, they're pulling out of Russia" -- it's called sanctions. It's not worth the hassle for a tiny market.
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:2)
I can't speak to the relative difference in banner ads, but I specifically got a humble Ukraine support bundle email today.
It's been like 4 weeks. If this goes on for months we'll start to see it, corporate "activision" takes time.
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With the exception of a few Putin supporters like Tucker Carlson, most of the United States is behind sanctions on Russia. BLM is much more divisive, with a majority in supporting the movement but not by huge margins.
BLM is also just the latest phase of a movement that has been going for decades, centuries even. There are a lot of organisations that took a stance on civil rights long ago and aren't making a fresh decision about them now.
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The entire US corporate world fell over itself to publicly declare their allegiance to BLM
"Declaring allegiance" costs nothing. It is just talk.
Sanctions on Russia cost real money.
The two situations are not comparable.
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The sanctions are really hurting our airlines and aerospace industries now. Russia was the main source of really high quality titanium parts. Russian sanctions now prevent their export.
Can't just switch to getting them elsewhere. Aside from Russia having a technological advantage, parts made elsewhere aren't certified for aeronautical use.
Fortunately Russia will be hurt much more, and going forward nobody will want to source parts from them, at least until Putin is gone.
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everything is comparable, but some things are just not very similar. this is a way to say that i don't have any modpoints for an insightful comment.
Fool. (Score:2)
If you think US corporations care about anyone then you are as dumb as they hoped. Corporations care about profits and nothing else. Not human dignity, not the sanctity of life, not even if their product is destroying the global ecosystem. They would still use slave labor if they could. Do you honestly thing they care if their products are made using overseas child labor?
US corporations do not have ethical limits or morals to abide. What they have is avarice on the highest order.
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Normally I just ignore comments like this, but I know you're an intelligent, open-minded person. So you might be able to accept new information and add it to what you've heard elsewhere.
I've been on the board of two corporations. The board is the print who hire and fire the CEO and president. One of the two corporations was created primarily for the purpose of hiring all of the employees who had been laid off from another company after an acquisition. There were some good people, who worked well together, s
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Normally I just ignore comments like this, but I know you're an intelligent, open-minded person.
Quite the silver-tongue.
I've been on the board of two corporations.
And from your post you sound like a good guy. This is likely my fault because I wasn't specific enough as the type of corporation I was speaking about was a publicly traded company.
There is a very distinct difference between public and private corps because like you said, there are people who want to help their fellow man. After an IPO, the company's become solely focused on profits. It's not an overnight change but after a few years, people in leadership positions get swapped out
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It sounds like you may have worked for some shitty companies.
I never have, but I think there are regional differences in culture.
Southern California, by chance?
I said I I never have worked for a shitty company. There WAS *one* that tried SO hard to politically correct and all that it created real problems. The DAILY emails about promoting LGBTQ and celebrating when a man was removed and replaced by a woman backfired to some extent. Created some resentment. I left after a few months and went to a company wh
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It sounds like you may have worked for some shitty companies.
Actually, no. I have spent a good deal of time trying to understand the mechanisms behind the largest corporations after I noticed behavioral changes after a company I liked went public. Turns out that the internal culture on the executive level begins to change over time which then permeates though management. The speed of transformation is highly dependent on the CEO at the time of the IPO. Someone with flexible morals will lean into the change while others can go years before change becomes apparent.
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Thanks for the interesting chat. It's nice to have a polite conversation with someone who sees a different side of things.
I better get back to my thesis now. (Finally getting my masters 30 years after I started college).
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Thanks for the interesting chat. It's nice to have a polite conversation with someone who sees a different side of things.
Glad to oblige. In parting, do not trust a publicly traded company more than you must, lest you find out the limitation of your value to them.
I better get back to my thesis now. (Finally getting my masters 30 years after I started college).
Oh, good for you! Our intellect only stops growing when we stop learning and the truth of what we learn is limited only by our willingness to question, investigate, and analyze. Vis-à-vis, our stupidity is only limited by our ignorance and arrogance (on a good day).
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Do white lives not matter?
According to Christians such as Cucker Carlson [newsweek.com] and Marjorie Taylor Greene [salon.com], no they don't. If they did, these, and many other Christians, wouldn't be cheering on Putin's military exploits which are deliberately targeting civilians [cbsnews.com].
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"You do not know who controls the Ukraine either and if they are any better than Putin is. "
Putin invaded Ukraine.
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again, boris, how many times do we have to smak your borscht ass down?
stfu already. we know who and WHAT you are.
gig's up.
how does it feel to be a pariah?
lets just give this a bit more time, shall we? lets see you starve slowly.
russian tears are the sweetest. better than conservatives (actually, they mix well).
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The entire US corporate world fell over itself to publicly declare their allegiance to BLM but the response to a devastating invasion of a peaceful European country by a reincarnated Hitler is getting a far more muted response. Do white lives not matter?
Uh, dude, most US companies with a presence in Russia have pulled out. And I also know (without dropping names) of many of those companies trying to care for their employees in Russia (and Ukraine.)
There is a human angle here, with companies and managers having workers over there who all of a sudden they cannot even pay. And companies have to be very careful on what to say (and not risk harm and retribution against their Russian employees.)
A company could throw its weight on the BLM issue without feari
Re:Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:4, Funny)
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hey that's the joke i wanted to write!
Re: Indeed, what are the priorities (Score:4, Informative)
he must be a happy person then and not following any news then, because the lot of corporations queueing up to announce how they pull out/end service from/in russia is as hard to miss as a fanfare in your face.
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ok, i'm at a loss here. i don't really know what the "blm organization" is. as far as i know "blm" was just a slogan, and black people in the us have a huge lot of reasons to be very angry with the status quo, a situation which exploded with some random event that somehow caught media attention. of course these events are golden opportunities for all kind of exploiters and i really don't know (nor am particularly interested in) the details about that. i assume the rage passed, some made a few bucks with the
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they lie to us??? don't tell! who!!??
i'm not from the u.s. "the media" still doesn't end with cnn+fox and whatever their youtube counterparts are. not yet! :D tbh i watch those very sparingly and in specific situations.
to help you situate me in any spectrum, i like john oliver's show a lot, and he has covered those events quite extensively in a way that has resonated with my on views. i really don't think any lobbying that any organization could do would influence that picture.
now to be clear, between me an
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ok. yes. genius. go fuck yourself. yes. yes, so what? his team's investigative journalism is very good, and as wretched as our society is i fin it very apt that it is described by a comedian, and a pretty good one at that. fuck jesus christ. actually i'm starting to be concerned about ways to die, but thanks for nothing.
btw you didn't answer the question. double sad.
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Also of note, BLM was triggered by the death of one person and protested the treatment of fewer than 20 individuals per year (per atty general Bill Barr).
The "special military operation" is just about ukrainian nazis (per pres. Vladimir Putin).
Lol. There's a historic pattern of discrimination, mistreatment, harsher sentences, and mistreatment for black suspects.These abuses are then routinely covered up or ignored.
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Unfortunately, Russia has enough people who agree with Putin's politics that he is going to be difficult to vote out. Even if elections were fair and equitable.
*Search for the term "Vatnik". Russia has plenty of them.
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The time for action is when your head of state finds a way to abrogate term limits and/or overturn a legitimate election. Russia passed that point a long time ago. So did China. I'm glad we didn't have full-blown civil war after 1/6, but frankly it would be the only sane course of action. Heads of state that commit the aforementioned offense should not be allowed to rule with any kind of order. Any citizen, in any country that experiences such a thing has a duty to disrupt the system as much as possibl
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"If everybody knew that allowing a "leader for life" had such consequences, it might not happen so often."
Unfortunately, there's a significant portion of populations that *like* having a Big Man telling them what to do, and think that a dictator is the way to go, and admire the Russian system. They are, ofc, of the same group of said dictator. They certainly wouldn't want some other group's dictator to come to power.
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"Other nation states should regard such states as pariahs, and refuse to deal with them. It should be a resolution to which all UN member states sign--no head of state, or proxy for such, shall serve more than 10 years, and if they do then maximum sanctions should be imposed like we're doing now with Russia. ."
I like the idea of term limits for dictators. But I think they would get around it with some legal maneuvering, such as Putin did when he switched from Big Boss to President for a term, before swappin
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Honduras has that directly incorporated into their constitution. In 2009 their president was removed for violating it.
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> 1999: First premiership
> 1999–2000: Acting presidency
> 2000–2004: First presidential term
> 2004–2008: Second presidential term
> 2008–2012: Second premiership --- HERE is where he gets creative
> 2012–2018: Third presidential term
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Hence the "or proxy for such" in my proposal. While it's conceivable that a policy clone could be put in place, the original head of state would be required to retire from government in any fashion. They would still have freedom of speech and could be "elder statesmen", but they would not be allowed to have a position where their mandates carry any force, or to run for another term once they had served the 10 years. So for example, a 1-term US president who holds a cabinet position or party chairmanship
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We *had* an authoritarian in office. We didn't like it. Your "stories" don't carry weight any more.
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dementia is more of a problem for a world leader (Score:5, Insightful)
If a world leader can't distinguish Ukranian people from Iranian people or the First Lady from the Vice President, then I think that is more of a problem.
That would raise the question who is really in control behind the scenes?
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That would raise the question who is really in control behind the scenes?
Sergey Lavrov and the FSB.
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"I am persuaded by a lot of medical advice that he is an ill man and the most persuasive diagnosis is that he has early Parkinsonia. I happen to live with a clinical neurological psychologist, my wife who has spent 30 years dealing with people who have had degenerative brain diseases."
"It means people become disinhibited, it means they have all or nothing thinking, that they cannot take in other information, and he is showing all that type of behavior."
https://www.waleson [walesonline.co.uk]
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A load of mindless blabbering from an anonymous coward.
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Because otherwise he'd have surrendered? The rest of your monologue makes as much sense...
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Yes without a steady stream of anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons. I think there is pretty good chance he / Ukraine would have. Those things gave them some initial wins and the sense they have a chance at survival.
The reality though is its increased the civilian deaths by a lot by prolonging the conflict. Russia would not have bombed a hospital and building full of Children had they stopped fighting already. Yes that sounds exactly like the guy who beats his wife and says she made me do it. Well anyone w
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By the way, without Europe as a business partner, the USA isn't much. So you should give more than just a flying fsck.
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Especially the EU/NATO has been telling Zelensky nothing but lies for a very long time, making him believe that the EU and NATO would come to the rescue.
I don't think this is the case. They've been helping him prepare his military but they never implied they would fight on his behalf. The reason Zelensky keeps talking EU/NATO is because he's desperate to save his country.
The goal of the US is to prolong this war as long as possible to create some sort of Afghanistan situation for Russia.
That is also the goal of many Ukrainians, they are willing to fight and die for their country.
And the Western media is eagerly playing along, reporting the news by quoting dubious sources like Bellingcat or not even fact checking anything at all.
Fog of war I'm sure mistakes in reporting have been made. But it seems pretty uncontroversial that Russia is either targeting civilians or waging war with very little regard as to civilians.
All the economic sanctions are only in the best interest of the US itself, the US couldn't care less about Ukraine itself.
US is F
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You post as Anonymous because of all the blow back expected for your opinion.
That's very brave of you then to just quote Putin's propaganda!
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How is sending more weapons to Ukraine helping to stop this war?
If Russia wins, they won't stop in Ukraine. They will pause, lick their wounds, spend Ukraine's money rebuilding their military...
Ukraine can't win this conflict militarily, the imbalance is just too great.
That would be true if Russian military equipment weren't literally falling apart in the Ukrainian mud, if the Russian army weren't out of fuel and food, etc. The oligarchs bled Russia dry to the point it can't even afford to properly carry out its core competency, slaughtering people who have the resources it wants. Consequently they've had to resort to bombing hospitals and day
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