Mar 21, 2025 -- 1:51PM, edy wrote:
Fact of the matter is also that Russia could have withdrawn its troops at any point and everyone would have lived happily ever after.
Unlikely, isn't it? Because the population of Ukraine - indeed, Crimea itself - is a product of its long union with Russia and a good number prefer Putin to Zelensky. What number we don't know, since Ukraine cancelled elections.
Mar 21, 2025 -- 3:34PM, edy wrote:
In what way would Russia not have been able to live happily ever after?
This is quite circular: Ukraine has as its leader (and no prospect of losing an election because there are no elections in Ukraine) someone who has set himself up, or been set up as the nemesis of Russia; therefore it would be delinquent for those responsible for the security of Russia to live "Happily ever after" with the proximity of such a threat. Zelensky is purposed to yoke Ukraine to an alliance CREATED in opposition to Russia.
My thoughts on people taking up Russian citizenship is that they should be free to do so, or not, in advance of any partition within Ukraine's current borders.
Like India/Pakistan: if they can't live together, let them live under the flag which which they align themselves. Everybody's happy.
Mar 21, 2025 -- 5:59PM, edy wrote:
Maybe we can work on it not being a convoluted mess. In one of the posts you quoted incompletely it also contained thisedy • October 13, 2023 11:46 AM BSTNo, Russia would then have gotten it as part of the peace treaty and it would be theirs and they'd have the most supreme right and claim to it as the entity who was given the land contractually by its former owner.I already told you repeatedly I'm not into that mythical and very wishwash historical claim thing and think it's a very silly thing. All sorts of entities, tribes and people ruled or inhabited all sorts of land at one time or another. From that long history of different rulers and inhabitants, how do you then determine who has the superior claim to it? Current demographic? Is a simply majority enough? Demographic a hundred years ago? The ones with the most consistent inhabitation? The first ones to really settle there knowingly? How small do we do also? Do Pommeranians get their own land? Do they share it with Sweden who once ruled parts of Pommerania?Germany in itself is a construct of multiple much smaller entities just coming together to get more powerful. There isn't really this one German entity or tribe or culture.Can you clarify and make it less of a convoluted mess on the bold part to convince me historical claims should reign supreme over international law? You blanked me on it at the time...and other times I tried to extract even any remote clarification.
From that long history of different rulers and inhabitants, how do you then determine who has the superior claim to it?
1) Common language.
2) Religious belief.
3) Historical land title.
These factors are probably more delineated and apparent to us in the UK.
Nevertheless, you display a pretty weak notion of pride in being German if you would happily accept a peace-treaty that ceded the very ground you stand on to Russia. But that is a contradiction for you reconcile in your own time.