BigHornRam
Well-known member
They like their vodka and don't have a problem getting medieval to get it. Peace through strength wins every time.Sh*t nobody said anything about vodka shortage - sue for peace now!!
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They like their vodka and don't have a problem getting medieval to get it. Peace through strength wins every time.Sh*t nobody said anything about vodka shortage - sue for peace now!!
I believe that #2, 3 seem most likely to me. Regardless of outcome what are the future(5-10 year) ramifications?So, let's look at this from an outcomes basis:
1. Ukraine crumbles in first few days, Russia sets up puppet state, sanctions half-heartedly linger but not much changes on the world order -- Well, we now know this isn't happening.
2. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Folks settle into new normal, puppet in place, sanctions half-heartedly linger, Europe on notice they need to develop a "strong Russia plan" but not much changes on the world order -- I see this as unlikely. I think Ukraine will not passively accept puppet after a noble fight and the Russian atrocities that are underway.
3. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Ukraine settles in for a long-term insurgency situation. The west continues harsh sanctions and supplies insurgency but no direct action. This situation slowly saps Russia and in a decade or so a very desperate Russia either has an internal revolution or does something preemptively rash. Seems plausible, but will be an ugly and high-risk world.
4. The noble Ukraine resistance (by fellow "rus/slavs" and former countrymen), sanctions and poor performance in the attack causes the Russian army and/or oligarchs to push Putin out. The best possible outcome from a US perspective. Seems plausible but not particularly high probability at this point.
5. Ukraine outright wins but Putin survives and plots his next move - having learned from this one. Seems unlikely but would create a very dangerous world environment to navigate.
6. Ukraine outright wins and Putin is sacked from within. Seems extremely unlikely but also a good outcome for US.
7. NATO puts troops on the ground, restores Ukraine sovereignty but leaves Putin in place. Extremely unlikely. And seems like it just sets up the next dramatic chapter of conflict.
8. NATO puts troops on the ground and pushes to Moscow and forces regime change. Zero chance of this.
In my opinion, the only healthy outcomes from a global perspective with any real chance of happening are #4 and #6. So the "smart genius" play should be to do everything possible to support Ukraine self-defense and make Putin's blunder and atrocities hit home with key stakeholders and the Russian general public.
Seems 3 and 4 would have highest probability but people would place bets everywhere.So, let's look at this from an outcomes basis:
1. Ukraine crumbles in first few days, Russia sets up puppet state, sanctions half-heartedly linger but not much changes on the world order -- Well, we now know this isn't happening.
2. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Folks settle into new normal, puppet in place, sanctions half-heartedly linger, Europe on notice they need to develop a "strong Russia plan" but not much changes on the world order -- I see this as unlikely. I think Ukraine will not passively accept puppet after a noble fight and the Russian atrocities that are underway.
3. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Ukraine settles in for a long-term insurgency situation. The west continues harsh sanctions and supplies insurgency but no direct action. This situation slowly saps Russia and in a decade or so a very desperate Russia either has an internal revolution or does something preemptively rash. Seems plausible, but will be an ugly and high-risk world.
4. The noble Ukraine resistance (by fellow "rus/slavs" and former countrymen), sanctions and poor performance in the attack causes the Russian army and/or oligarchs to push Putin out. The best possible outcome from a US perspective. Seems plausible but not particularly high probability at this point.
5. Ukraine outright wins but Putin survives and plots his next move - having learned from this one. Seems unlikely but would create a very dangerous world environment to navigate.
6. Ukraine outright wins and Putin is sacked from within. Seems extremely unlikely but also a good outcome for US.
7. NATO puts troops on the ground, restores Ukraine sovereignty but leaves Putin in place. Extremely unlikely. And seems like it just sets up the next dramatic chapter of conflict.
8. NATO puts troops on the ground and pushes to Moscow and forces regime change. Zero chance of this.
In my opinion, the only healthy outcomes from a global perspective with any real chance of happening are #4 and #6. So the "smart genius" play should be to do everything possible to support Ukraine self-defense and make Putin's blunder and atrocities hit home with key stakeholders and the Russian general public.
Does this foreshadow a change to the US dollar as the world reserve economy?
Really good post. Your question is why SWIFT was the most severe option and generally avoided until it couldn't be. That will force Russia toward China's new alternative to SWIFT. Hard to see the dollar not being reserve currency completely, but you could see a slow move toward dollar and yuan competing. The sanctions put every other country on notice as to what economic sanctions could do, now they are thinking how to avoid them. It is not possible if 90% of the countries are on the same page. It is economic suicide.What are the ramifications of the SWIFT actions? Does this foreshadow a change to the US dollar as the world reserve economy? That would have massive implications here domestically.
another version: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60602936So, let's look at this from an outcomes basis:
1. Ukraine crumbles in first few days, Russia sets up puppet state, sanctions half-heartedly linger but not much changes on the world order -- Well, we now know this isn't happening.
2. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Folks settle into new normal, puppet in place, sanctions half-heartedly linger, Europe on notice they need to develop a "strong Russia plan" but not much changes on the world order -- I see this as unlikely. I think Ukraine will not passively accept puppet after a noble fight and the Russian atrocities that are underway.
3. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Ukraine settles in for a long-term insurgency situation. The west continues harsh sanctions and supplies insurgency but no direct action. This situation slowly saps Russia and in a decade or so a very desperate Russia either has an internal revolution or does something preemptively rash. Seems plausible, but will be an ugly and high-risk world.
4. The noble Ukraine resistance (by fellow "rus/slavs" and former countrymen), sanctions and poor performance in the attack causes the Russian army and/or oligarchs to push Putin out. The best possible outcome from a US perspective. Seems plausible but not particularly high probability at this point.
5. Ukraine outright wins but Putin survives and plots his next move - having learned from this one. Seems unlikely but would create a very dangerous world environment to navigate.
6. Ukraine outright wins and Putin is sacked from within. Seems extremely unlikely but also a good outcome for US.
7. NATO puts troops on the ground, restores Ukraine sovereignty but leaves Putin in place. Extremely unlikely. And seems like it just sets up the next dramatic chapter of conflict.
8. NATO puts troops on the ground and pushes to Moscow and forces regime change. Zero chance of this.
In my opinion, the only healthy outcomes from a global perspective with any real chance of happening are #4 and #6. So the "smart genius" play should be to do everything possible to support Ukraine self-defense and make Putin's blunder and atrocities hit home with key stakeholders and the Russian general public.
But with a role reversal from cold war 1.0. Now it is Russia that needs help from China.One thing to remember is China-Russian alliance wouldn't be a merger of equals and China doesn't trust Putin any more than anyone else.
On the bright side, it may be the only thing in the world the two sides agree on greater than 80%
I think Ukraine and Russia reach an agreement involving Russia keeping Donetsk, Luhansk, and Crimea. Allows Putin a way to save a little bit of face.So, let's look at this from an outcomes basis:
1. Ukraine crumbles in first few days, Russia sets up puppet state, sanctions half-heartedly linger but not much changes on the world order -- Well, we now know this isn't happening.
2. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Folks settle into new normal, puppet in place, sanctions half-heartedly linger, Europe on notice they need to develop a "strong Russia plan" but not much changes on the world order -- I see this as unlikely. I think Ukraine will not passively accept puppet after a noble fight and the Russian atrocities that are underway.
3. Ukraine puts up a grand fight but does not get NATO troops on the ground or in the air and ultimately is crushed by Russia. Ukraine settles in for a long-term insurgency situation. The west continues harsh sanctions and supplies insurgency but no direct action. This situation slowly saps Russia and in a decade or so a very desperate Russia either has an internal revolution or does something preemptively rash. Seems plausible, but will be an ugly and high-risk world.
4. The noble Ukraine resistance (by fellow "rus/slavs" and former countrymen), sanctions and poor performance in the attack causes the Russian army and/or oligarchs to push Putin out. The best possible outcome from a US perspective. Seems plausible but not particularly high probability at this point.
5. Ukraine outright wins but Putin survives and plots his next move - having learned from this one. Seems unlikely but would create a very dangerous world environment to navigate.
6. Ukraine outright wins and Putin is sacked from within. Seems extremely unlikely but also a good outcome for US.
7. NATO puts troops on the ground, restores Ukraine sovereignty but leaves Putin in place. Extremely unlikely. And seems like it just sets up the next dramatic chapter of conflict.
8. NATO puts troops on the ground and pushes to Moscow and forces regime change. Zero chance of this.
In my opinion, the only healthy outcomes from a global perspective with any real chance of happening are #4 and #6. So the "smart genius" play should be to do everything possible to support Ukraine self-defense and make Putin's blunder and atrocities hit home with key stakeholders and the Russian general public.
Alternate possibility: the "other" 15% thought they were ordering DoordashI guess 15% of Americans, regardless of party, would prefer fascism to democracy?
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Sh!t just got real.
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One other thing I meant to say.
It has been announced that China and Russia are banning fertilizer export until June 2022. Urea cost have gone from $600 to $900.
Wheat prices along with corn is rapidly going higher. Between higher inflation surging fuel cost and now an drastic increase in fertilizer cost the cost of food should theoretically sky rocket. I am sure that it will be hidden with smaller packaging etc. but those that can least afford this will be hurt the most.
A secondary effect: DEF for your diesel truck will more than likely go up as well, Urea is one of the two main ingredients the other being deionized water.
Do you know if the reports of fertilizer cost jumping are accurate?. As a nation do we import much fertilizer?I read a bit about China stopping urea exports. They did this last December, largely to bolster their own fertilizer supply. Urea is pretty easy to make, so I don't know if their move matters all that much.
Russia is a large producer of potash. Their exit from that market would tighten the supply of that. Canada also has very large reserves of potash, so it is likely a windfall, for a time, for their potash producers.
This is no longer the Russia of stoic indifference after your fourth child has died from an easily defeated disease.And before we start assuming everything from Russia is bad . . .
Do you know if the reports of fertilizer cost jumping are accurate?. As a nation do we import much fertilizer?