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Notes -
General observation, not connected to Macgregor's current comments, but throughout the Ukraine War it has blown my mind how many of these pro-Russian pundits have been incredibly, flagrantly, continuously wrong in their predictions and continue to be cited by the cynical, oh-so-world-weary geopolitically aware independent thinkers again and again as if nothing had happened.
This has been how the constant "Russia is about to run out of money/missiles/vodka/conscripts" articles have read to me, too. I see people citing sources which claimed the Russians would have run out of materiel last year and people just don't seem to care that they were outputting unadulterated fiction not even a month ago.
Sure, that's stupid too, but the Western pro-Russians very specifically tend to pride themselves as independent thinkers who aren't just platitude-repeating NPCs like the "Reddit" pro-Ukrainians, so the incongruency tends to look bigger to me.
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In contrast to Bellendcat, which predicted Russia running out of PGMs for months in 2022. Or all the people who predicted this years's offensive would smash the Russians.
In general I'd say most of the people doing predictions on the war were absolutely off and kept at it.
link? I bet that it as not phrased this way, as it is known that they are producing new PGM
It was Christo Grozev, speaking on UA Tv early in the war.
To be honest, it does seem nobody had a handle on Russian production. They 'run out' of stockpile by summer probably because it wasn't very good. Pentagon 'thought' they wouldn't be able to make new ones because 'sanctions' which turned out to be BS as they're still flying.
Of course, how many are fired, intercepted and hit is hard to say because in Ukraine, they'll arrest you for posting videos of damage on the ground.
We'll see later this year. Russia is unlikely to run out because especially cruise missiles are not very high tech. They use early 1990s electronics. If you have access to Alibaba, you can make all the cruise missiles for which you can get engines and aluminum and man-hours.
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I'm actually a little surprised that someone hasn't tried to displace him to cash in on his silliness with an aggressive article like "Sit Down Mr Macgregor, It's Time to Stop Talking". Maybe there's enough grifting niches out there that there's no need to usurp an incumbent, just set up your own pitch next door? Maybe it's unexpectedly high risk and an attacker needs to build a network of allies before making an attempt? Maybe it's just too much work to thoroughly compile a list of failures and mistakes - there was that one guy who became "the global expert on Moldbug", with more than enough material to discredit his theories, and he didn't make a move. Maybe it's easy to take someone down, but uncertain that you'll be the one to pick up the freed niche.
Presumably there's people willing to say a message - they may even believe it! - and people who want that message said, and a finite budget allocated to getting those things said. Or maybe there's a finite amount of attention in the world to hear the mess. In either case it seems like, assuming there's an equilibrium to disrupt by discrediting someone already in the ecosystem, there's money to be made. So why hasn't someone made a move? What are the dynamics of this grift economy?
this is one for me
Yes, I would spends weeks on writing down why specific pro-Russian idiot is wrong, maybe someone would read it, and then what?
Effort/benefit ratio is worse than for many others things can do, including watching funny videos of cats. Not to say about some things that I could do where I am already sort-of established in position of some (very minor) importance.
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