Why would Putin want to show weakness and trap nato?
Maybe he appears weak because he knows he could just level the place and so why send in so many troops?
I'm replying with my own post because Alex is erasing my posts:
Let me explain it to you in a way you can understand, Alex. Your neighbor has bought his teenage boys hand guns. They're feeling pretty macho these days setting up a practice range in their yard, and they don't appreciate your complaints.
Did I tell you that dad is on the city council, at its head, and in a position to do favors for the other neighbors whose kids are also gathering at the shooting range in your neighbor's backyard. What'chu gonna do, Alex, start a war?
I think that we've covered this ground together already.
P.S. Check out Sarvastivada, an ancient school now defunct as far as I know. The Sarvastivadins taught that the past, present, and future stand together as a unity. It seems that their school stumbled and collapsed when it could not account for freedom of will, or at least a multitude of many different futures for any given set of spatiotemporal coordinates (x, y, z, t). This problem has been overcome. Cosmological presentism [sic] will fall.
Why would Putin want to show weakness and trap nato?
Maybe he appears weak because he knows he could just level the place and so why send in so many troops?
Maybe most of his generals have been chess players and understand the concept of the sacrifice.
He needs to beware of a fool's mate and similar mistakes, though.
I'm replying with my own post because Alex is erasing my posts:
Let me explain it to you in a way you can understand, Alex. Your neighbor has bought his teenage boys hand guns. They're feeling pretty macho these days setting up a practice range in their yard, and they don't appreciate your complaints.
Did I tell you that dad is on the city council, at its head, and in a position to do favors for the other neighbors whose kids are also gathering at the shooting range in your neighbor's backyard. What'chu gonna do, Alex, start a war?
I think that we've covered this ground together already.
P.S. Check out Sarvastivada, an ancient school now defunct as far as I know. The Sarvastivadins taught that the past, present, and future stand together as a unity. It seems that their school stumbled and collapsed when it could not account for freedom of will, or at least a multitude of many different futures for any given set of spatiotemporal coordinates (x, y, z, t). This problem has been overcome. Cosmological presentism [sic] will fall.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_presentism
This person is just a troll. This is the 7th time at least this comment has been posted.