• ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    I’m saying that what your sources claim has never been stated by Russia, and none of these sources actually link to anything ever stated by Russia. Since you’re claiming Russian red lines have been crossed, I asked you many times to provide the red lines that Russia actually stated. The fact that you keep doing mental gymnastics here instead of either providing red lines as stated by Russia or admitting you’re wrong is phenomenal.

    I’ll ask you one last time. Please provide examples of Russia stating red lines that the west has crossed and Russia hasn’t reacted to. As far as I’m aware, Russia’s red line was NATO expansion into Ukraine and the reaction was the start of the war. The other red line that Russia has actually articulated was deep strikes into Russian territory using NATO weapons. This hasn’t happened so far which seems to be an indicator that NATO is not willing to cross this line.

    • sweng@programming.dev
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      6 months ago

      I’m saying that what your sources claim has never been stated by Russia, and none of these sources actually link to anything ever stated by Russia.

      Yes, that is a claim you make. It is up to you to support that claim that you are making. That is how discussions generally work.

      1. I make a claim
      2. I provide sources for said claim
      3. You refute the sources
      4. You provide an argument for why the sources should not be believed.

      Step 4 is what is missing, unless you count “because I say so” as a valid argument.

      It would be easy to take a source, look at e.g. a quote in the source, it’s attribution and source, and then check if such a person in fact did make such a claim. If e.g. an article claim person X working for ministry Y made a pressrelease on date Z, but that person is know to work somewhere else, and no press release was made at all that day, then it’s easy to disprove the source. That is how you discuss. Not just “sure, you provided a source, but not the source I wanted, so therefore I will ignore it”. That kind of argumentation is not the least bit productive

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        To sum up, you said Russian red lines have been crossed. I asked you to point to statements from Russia where these red lines you’re talking about are being declared. You have not been able to do that. Instead, you’ve spent two whole days doing sophistry. You’re not fooling anybody here.

        To make an analogy, it would be like me claiming that you say that you love to fuck goats because a friend of mine says that you said you love to fuck goats. Then when you ask me to point where you actually said that, I just keep insisting that I trust what my friend said.

        • sweng@programming.dev
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          5 months ago

          Great analogy! See, I could easily argue that your friend does not know who I am, and thus can’t possibly know if I fuck goats or not. I could also e.g. ask for details, e.g. can your friend tell when I fucked a goat? If yes, great, because maybe I can show that I was, in fact, not fucking goats at the time.

          Note how I don’t dismiss your friend as a source simply because they are your friend, as that would be an ad-hominen logical fallacy.

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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            5 months ago

            Note how nothing my friend says has any relation to whether you fuck goats or not the same way as your source has nothing to do with Russia’s actual red lines.

            • sweng@programming.dev
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              5 months ago

              I’m not sure I follow? Are you saying your friend says I fuck goats, but in fact they do not? Would it not be quite simple to ask them, and dismiss them as a source since they themselves say they aren’t one?

              Regardless, when given a source, one looks at the content, not who or what the source is (ad hominem). If there is no argument for rejecting the source based on the content, it should be accepted.

              You still have not given a reasoning for rejecting the sources, and instead went on a tangent about my sexual exploits.

              I still think you made a good analogy, and as I stated, one should look at what your friend had to say about the goats: if they deny having said anything related to my goats the situation is clear. If they claim it is true, I can check the veracity of their claim. What I don’t do is reject them without first hearing them or expect anyone else to just blindly reject them.

              • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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                5 months ago

                You still have not given a reasoning for rejecting the sources, and instead went on a tangent about my sexual exploits.

                I did repeatedly, and you keep doing mental gymnastics trying to avoid acknowledging what I said. And what I said, for the hundredths time, is that Russia never made the statements that your source attributes to it.

                What I don’t do is reject them without first hearing them or expect anyone else to just blindly reject them.

                That is absolutely not what I did. In fact, I looked through several of the linked sources trying to find links to original statements from Russia which they do not provide.

                Since all you’re capable of doing is lying there’s clearly no point continuing. Feel free to write another word salad though.

                • sweng@programming.dev
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                  5 months ago

                  I open the very first source for the most recent red line in the wikipedia article: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_lines_in_the_Russo-Ukrainian_War#cite_note-46

                  Whst does it say?

                  In a briefing on Thursday, Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova added that Russia “reserves the right to defend its territory”.

                  If Washington decides to supply longer-range missiles to Kyiv, then it will be crossing a red line, and will become a direct party to the conflict,” Zakharova said.

                  Is your claim that Zakharova said no such thing?