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  • Why do you say this?

    If 75% of russians support the "denazification" of Ukraine, that says a lot about them, no?

  • Is there anything else that you noticed beyond "aligns with US foreign policy objectives".

    Did you only read it in English? What other language services from them did you read.

  • Considering the points that you raised, what are your critiques of list experiment methodology (e.g. the one by LSE that I referenced earlier) and their findings that preference falsification is just 10%. I will note that you are the one who brought up personal safety.

    If the vast majority of your country are genocidal imperialists, it really doesn't matter that a tiny micro-minority are hiding their preferences does it? At the very least you can admit that this logic is consistent, no?

    Since you brought up Levada, they show that something like 84% of the Russian population supported the annexation of Crimea (i.e. at the very least they are committed imperialists). This data point has been consistent since 2014.

    In context of your critique of Levada, how is that list experiment research had a comparable level of support at 80% for the annexation of Crimea?

    The truth of the matter is that your have no evidence (quantitative or qualitative) or even a working theory to justify your view that the vast majority of russian are just poor souls who got stuck with putin.

    This is nothing new for me btw. On the English language internet, you constantly see comically dumb takes about russians being little angels and putin being solely responsible for all evils committed by the russians.

  • Agreed, that is an important point. That being said, it was raised in the article, a more "technical" comparison wasn't provided.

  • Wikipedia has a decent (albeit somewhat outdated?) comparison with other battery types.

    Seems like sodium-ion batteries are somewhat cheaper, require more space and have lower usable cycles.

  • The NYT article is aimed at western audiences, of course they are going to present a more humanistic pitch.

    English language content from the russian "opposition" is often misleading.

    In russian, Navalniy initially clearly stated that "Ukrainians, you should forget about Crimea" and that "Crimea is not a ham sandwich, you can't just give it back!"

    He later did a PR pass on his position with a call for an "independent referendum"; a typical russian imperialist mindset. The Ukrainian constitution only allows for national referendums on such matters.

    Navalniy own head goon even confirmed that they supported the annexation of Crimea because the vast majority of russian are imperialists:

    https://time.com/6162889/navalny-ukraine-russia-leonid-volkov/

    He was most definitely not anti-war. The russian invasion of Ukraine began with the annexation of Crimea; which was supported by Navaliy and his team.

    One of Yashin's responsibilities as a deputy in 2018 was conscription. Russia has been at war with Ukraine since 2014.

    Now I understand for Yashin the "real" war started in 2022 and he was just "looking to promote democracy by taking part in municipal politics".

    But that's irrelevant if you are from Donbas and your family was forced to leave in 2014. Or if you language and religion are being prosecuted In Crimea.

    Kara-Murza went a tired rant about how we sanctions need to be weakened

    Pivaovarov stated opposition minded Russians shouldn't donate to the AFU. Imagine dissidents of the Nazi regime (who took part in a prisoner exchange) stated that opposition minded Germans shouldn't be supporting the war effort against Nazi Germany.

  • Just a question, what do you know about RFE/RL?

    Do you follow any of their news program series?

    Do you speak any other languageslioe Ukrainian, Belarusian or Georgian?

  • You do understand that anecdotal findings don't mean anything, right? I've lived in russia for a decade; the three russians I still speak to are anti-war. That's not how any of this works!

    I've posted links and reference to various research works previously in this thread. You can start by looking at polling from Levada (lots of age group information), Russian Field and a paper by LSE that uses list experiments (URL in one of my comments in this thread).

    Even qualitative research by russian academics is damning for russian society. They find that even among those who don't actively support the invasion, a majority still want to see their army win (i.e. annexation Ukrainian territories, steal children, bomb children's cancer hospitals). This was a recent project done in a small town (15K) in Siberian russia, released just last month.

    A strong majority of russian are most definitely genocidal imperialists (including the 19-29 age group, although it may be more of a regular majority than a "strong majority"). You're really ignorant (of practically all quantitative and qualitative research as well as of history) and/or you are naive and not willing to ask yourself difficult questions.

  • I hear that all the time, "but what about the challenges of polling under an autocracy?", as if they were the first one to think about it.

    But if you show alternative methodologies that account for preference falsification and the estimates for preference falsification turn out to be low, you never hear back from people.

    But this approach is understandable, people in the west have a very primitive understanding of russian culture and russian constantly code switch when pushing polemics for western audiences and when speaking in russian.

  • A tiny % left and even among them there are many genocidal nationalists and fake opposition types.

    Look up any research on the topic Russian Field, Levada, LSE List Experiment on support from the war among Russians.

    I believe the general trend was that every age category had a majority and that at one point the 30-40 age group had slightly lower support for russian annexation and destruction of Ukrainian identity than the 18 -29 age group.

  • So when did senior US politicians call for extermination of Gazan identity, banning arabic in Gaza and annexing Gaza as a new state?

    You do understand that the term "genocidal imperialist" has actual meaning, right?

    The overwhelming majority of russian are genocidal imperialist because they support russia full scale invasion and they have always supported the annexation of Crimea.

    We can have a conversation about the bad and good things done by the US, but I don't see what this has to do with the topic at hand?

  • The majority of the young people in Russia are genocidal imperialists. Support for extermination of other countries is of course higher in the older generations, but that doesn't change the fact that a solid majority of young (e.g. 18 to 29) are genocidal imperialists.

    I understand that it might be reassuring to repeat platitudes like "young people of russia are against the war", but this is clearly not true.

    Even the framing is suspect. What do you mean by "the war"; the full-scale invasion? In Ukraine, the war started in 2014 with annexation of Crimea and russian invasion of Donbas.

  • What about so called russian "dissidents"? Navalniy and his team openly supported the annexation of Crimea (and destruction of Ukrainian and Crimean Tartar culture).

    The recently exchanged "dissidents" also showed their true colours by supporting the annexation of currently occupied territories in Ukraine.

    We are not discussing US right now! The US did not annex Basra state, steal all the local children, force everyone to speak English and send anyone caught talking Arabic to a torture chamber; all with support of somewhere between 65% to 85% of their population.

    The overwhelming majority of Russians are genocidal imperialists. They support invasions of foreign countries, annexations, attempts at elimatining local language and culture and setting up mass torture camps for anyone opposed to the yoke of russian degeneracy.

    The "trying to get by" pitch is a ruse. Both qualitative and quantitative research (different methodologies, including ones that attempt to account for preference falsification) show this is not true and that on an outcome basis, the overwhelming majority of russians are indeed genocidal imperialists.

  • While this is somewhat true (state funded, but with some level of independence), your statement doesn't jive with reality.

    I follow RFE/RL in both English and several other languages. Their reporting is far better than many multi-billion dollar private news companies in the West.

    And it's not a minor difference either, the western news companies are not even close.

  • Practically all russians have had access to fully uncensored YT just one click away on their smartphones for over a decade (until today).

    That didn't really change anything. Russia's problems lie in the attitude of the overwhelming majority of its people, not in the lack of access to information.

    They make a conscious and fully informed choice to be genocidal imperialists and embrace authoritarianism.

  • It's the russian government. There have been rumors that they are planning to shut down YT for good in the last few months.

  • A very interesting and unique metaphor. Very true too. :)

  • This is why I avoid opening up "service" devices to the broader internet.

    My current work around is to access a computer with TeamViewer on a given local network and manage things from there. There are probably flaws with this approach too, but it seems like a more manageable solution than giving IoT-type devices access to the open internet.

    I do wonder if protocol like Yggdrasil would be a good solution in the future.