But sooner or later, the West will stand up, and there will be a war. I know I shall be on the barricades the day Putin threaten my beloved European Union. And I hope I won't have to shoot any of you.
I'm very much tempted to sig this, but it might be even more inflammatory than what I currently have. Is it not sad that the days of the International Brigades are gone? Well, no, because those were the days of fascism, but I believe the Western world could use some more pathos of that type.
And, Knit, stuff like that is why I like these threads:
In Russia threads some flowers grow
Between the shitposts, row on row
That we write; and though we fight,
Entire days, entire nights,
Some flowers grow.
@Mictlan: what if I were to say that what's going on in Ukraine is simply two Great Powers squabbling, with one using armed rebels and another unarmed protesters? And that one's not particularly better than the other, in general?
Killing people is generally frowned upon.
Here's a poll that says that only 16% of Russians approve of helping Novorossia with troops, just as I said.
This also puts strain on my previous theory that Putin's support would plummet if he were to let the rebels fall: if only a minority of Russians approve of Russia officially getting involved in the Ukrainian civil war, then Putin's involvement there cannot be motivated by fears of his image shattering if he lets the separatists lose. But what can his motive be, then? Perhaps he seeks confrontation with the West out of sheer Cold War oppositionism? Or is it all a plan to challenge the political hegemony of NATO? Or is it all very simple, and Putin just doesn't want a pro-western EU member country right across the border? But then, why interfere with the rebels' war?
Why did Napoleon march on Moscow? Why did the Japanese seek to conquer all of Eastern Asia? For what reason did Alexander set out to find the borders of the earth and declare war upon them?
Combine that with an inferiority complex towards the West, manifesting itself as contempt and disgust, and BAM! you got yourself an explanation.
Since Putin's actions defy all rational imperatives, their reason must be irrational. Maybe a bullet between his eyes would save many other pairs of eyes from being treated the same way.
EDIT: If the situation was switched around and the US was supporting the same rebels wanting to become the 51st state, I would certainly condemn the US as well. The "They'd do the same thing!" defense is whataboutism in the purest form, just with an added conjunctive.