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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)C
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2
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605
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • And before that, the worry was Malthusian overpopulation. (Which would be a much bigger problem if it had happened)

  • That makes sense. I guess what I was thinking is a strategic use of a small, tactical-ish nuke, probably framed as tactical. Basically, cross the red line but as minimally as possible, in order to put NATO on the spot.

    In a way that was Russia's strategy before the full-scale invasion, and it was working flawlessly. Since then NATO has become much more determined and active, but also more unstable.

  • Ukraine could absolutely be fighting a dirtier war than it is.

    Doing war crimes is bad strategy. It's not free, it doesn't effect enemy military operations and, as we've seen in with Russia's actions in Ukraine, is effective propaganda for the enemy. If the Russian government can provoke Ukraine into it, it's absolutely in their interest to do so.

    Ukraine is fighting total war about optimally. Or at least, I don't have any notes for them.

    Because they clearly didn’t use them at points where there were more concentrated Ukrainian defences that might at least at a simple tactical level, have an argument for their use if you turned off your brain and soul and thought like a Russian does, for a minute.

    Because actual Russians care about far more than just winning. There's also degrees of loss, and MAD is a very significant one. I don't know to what degree they're worried about preserving the value of Ukraine as territory at this point, but if they do that would be another consideration, you're right.

    Again, it was a very "technically increases chance of victory" kind of answer.

    They’re not going to use nukes of any kind.

    Yep, probably not.

  • TBH I'm unclear on the exact specifics of how you use tactical nukes, but it's something different that would end the geopolitical stalemate. If they get lucky, and after whatever Trump-NATO drama clears the West is willing to abandon Ukraine, it's a victory. That doesn't seem like the most likely outcome, but there's more chance than none.

    It doesn't seem like Ukraine is "pulling it's punches" in any real way right now, so from the Russian side making them angrier doesn't matter. (Hey, you wanted no platitudes)

    China would be pissed. Unless they invade it's a different problem for later, though. Basically, the question was narrowly defined to be about chance of victory, so it gets a bit of a narrow-minded answer. If you're asking what the best option for Russia's general welfare is, it's to make a big show of renouncing expansionism, say sorry and going home. If you're asking what's best for Putin, at this point it might be exactly what he's doing.

  • Ukraine has been on the brink of collapsing several times and only heroic efforts on their part and the persistence of their allies have staved off the worst.

    Aside from the very first months, do you have a citation for that? The roughest time for them since I can think of was when they couldn't get shells, and even then it didn't really translate into much movement of the front lines (since that's the main metric of short-term success or failure that's public).

    It's a full scale war and conditions have been terrible, of course, but there's a difference between suffering and actually losing.

    My sense is that Putin is hoping that another crisis will open up in the future, and that it will finally bring about Ukraine’s surrender.

    Yup. The general vibe is that even a tiny chance of an opening and a few more months to live is worth more than whatever conceding would bring Putin.

  • High-end ammunition (interceptors mostly, I don't think Ukraine ever depended on that stuff for strikes) my well run into a bottleneck. Ukraine is aiming to trade some off of Middle Eastern countries in exchange for a much larger supply of interceptor drones, which they can apparently spare, but who knows how well that will work or if it will last.

    Supplies of cheap ammunition haven't really been touched by the war with Iran.

  • Initially, their theory was "many Ukrainians will welcome us, and we'll be able to rush their capital before they can do anything". TBF they got close on the second point. Then it revolved around outlasting the West's attention span.

    Now it publicly seems to be "well, maybe if we blow up their power grid one more time", or "we couldn't possibly lose to Ukraine". Internally, Putin knows shit hits the fan as soon as the war stops short of victory, or seems like it's about to stop, so it continues. You can also see systems being moved to Moscow and St.Petersburg in open source intel, which is preparation for a possible civil war.

    The spirit of this question might be more "how would you win", though. It's tricky, by all accounts Russia is running out of manpower and seems afraid to conscript more aggressively. Their foreign reserves will run out eventually too (although they're deeper than I had realised). Most conventional tactics or strategies that are scalable are being tried and not working. I guess they could try bombing some new things.

    That leaves escalating to tactical nuclear weapons, and hoping Europe doesn't respond by directly fighting Russia. Of course, potentially ending the world might be too heavy a cost if you're not just a Lemming running a hypothetical.

  • Shit, I wrote that wrong. Trying to do too many things at once.

  • Wow, I've never had this problem. The tricky one is Australia vs. NZ.

  • I mean, every dialect is just a bastardised version of an older dialect, including your own.

  • I mean, it is really big and looks like it's in the way, although I wonder if it's also parked wrong.

    Maybe the owner needs a large pickup, but relatively few owners of large pickups do. For the rest it's conspicuous consumption, which is always gross, and in cars seems to correlate with antisocial behavior.

  • The name might well have come from the community, since the whole app store model is as old as the modern smartphone, and downloading a different way is new, while possible, was always for power users.

    If there had been a more normal software ecosystem from the get-go that would have been nice. Actual regulation to enforce device freedom would also be good.

  • Ah yes, the old "I own a book" defense. Or maybe the "I'm also vaguely non-Western" defence (maybe you have Tatar heritage?). Either way, you are what you pretend to hate.

  • It's not like it's a unique offering at this point either. Everyone and their dog has complicated syrupy coffee/tea drinks on their menu.

    I don't know, maybe the busy-but-nicer-than-McDonalds ambiance is worth it to some people. If it's anything like Tim Hortons, lots of people just buy out of pure habit as well. Either way, that's their business, not the person selling it.

  • You could in theory make a channel with a bunch of different stable whistle frequencies, and add some other aerodynamic feature that kicks it through them. I doubt you could reasonably do more than a few notes that way, though, and you probably have to hit them in order.

    More likely it's just multiple bullets, as the other reply said.

  • I'm going to guess the military wasn't the main audience here, but rather your typical gun nuts.

  • Come for the jokes, stay for the unprompted washing machine reviews.

  • Flew over the may day rally in San Francisco.

    Don't take the bait.

  • So not off-grid, exactly. (Although the grid in any poor country's cities will not be up bougie, Western specs on reliability)

  • Lemmy Integrations @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Is there a version of RemindMe bot for Lemmy?