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Culture War Roundup for the week of September 19, 2022

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This looks like another serving of your isolated rigor. Not so long ago you jeered about Russian incapability to respond to possible blockade of Kaliningrad due to exhaustion of troops and materiel, especially in the region; now you mention the threat of draft dodgers (drafted, to begin with, due to further exhaustion) becoming an «oppressed minority» pretext for invasion (of a soon to be NATO country). Which army will be doing that?

A future army, because this is a future-threat consideration.

Now, you might disagree with me on the prospect of Russian re-armament post-war, but this is a subject that explains your perceived inconsistency.

(Unless we really wish to get semantic on my isolated rigor, as the topics I discuss are isolated by nature.)

And army of which state, seeing as Russia isn't likely to survive this?

I also disagree on this, though with the caveat that if Russia were to fracture, I can easily sketch out scenarios that could manifest in our lifetime in which the US-European alliance fractures for a lack of Russia, the inter-European alliance fractures as a result of a lack of common position on how to deal with a broken Russia, and that a balkanized Russia with nukes could see interests in destabilizing neighboring European nations as fractured Europe and fractured Russia interact.

So how exactly do they change incentives for another invasion? Will this framing be recognized as legitimate by any party of interest, after Ukraine? Certainly not, unless long COVID makes us all unable to form long-term memories.

Which 'they'? The Russians, or the Finns?

'No change' is not an improvement for the Finns, because the Russian nationalist paradigm was willing to accept the Ukrainian invasion basis as legitimate. To this date, there's been no Russian cultural turn against the basis of the Ukraine war, only the lack of a successful execution.

Is an invasion likely to be assisted from within by those who noped out of the current round of imperialist adventurism? I don't think so.

Not to put too fine a point on it, Ilforte, but less than a year ago you didn't think there was any chance that Russians would wage war on Ukrainians, and lectured me that I would never understand Russians or the region.

I'm going to advance another difference in world views: I do not believe the Russians who are noping out of the current round of imperialist adventurism oppose Russian imperialism in principle, as much as a personal skin-in-the-game that only applies so long as they do have skin in the game and can't go back to being mostly apolitical passive supporters, and I do not believe that migrants renounce everything about their origins even when they flee, let alone views that are odious to their new neighbors of choice.

Intra-American state, inter-EU migration, and inter-continental migration trends of the last decades do not support the later. The fact that the most recent Russian nopers are leaving now, and not a week ago, supports the later.

Will this pretext be recognized as less far-fetched than one relying on already-present Russian minorities who are clear civilians and not draft-dodgers? That's 1/4th of Latvian population, by the way. It will not. (From what I can tell, many of those Latvian Russians are USSR nostalgists, despise their host country and their disenfranchisement/deportation would be prudent, and same for their ilk in other countries; but this is another issue, and their genesis is different too)

It's not another issue, it's an extension and continuation of the same issue- a unloyal minority that approaches their host country from the perspective of cultural chauvenism and nostalgia for the external imperial oppressor. If this sounds at all familiar to the current Russian president who has had high support from the Russian public- from which these new migrants are coming- this is probably because Putin's support base is composed of, and has been cultivating, the same.

If one views the demographic issue as a problem, making the problem bigger does not make the problem better.

Anyway, I have one idea about precluding this scenario: don't give them citizenship or long-term permits. (Nobody intended to, of course.) And needless to say they could be kicked out once the war is over.

Except they wouldn't, because the modern Europeans don't have the same attitude towards ethnic cleansing from claimed sovereign territory as the modern Russians, even self-exiled ones.

Worse from the present-decision maker perception, even if they were inclined to do so (say that you are right and I am wrong), they might not be able to muster a political coalition to do so if more Russians are let in, as a new population inflow entails new economic interests that, once entrenched, are harder to expunge than to prevent forming in the first place.

Adjudicating their morality and stance on the war can be done on a more or less effortful case-by-case basis. Few of them will be ideological peaceniks willing to emigrate at personal cost just to protest etc., but few people ever deviate from vague my-country-right-or-wrong and my-family-comes-first mentality. Hopefully Europeans can tell a gopnik who pissed his imperial pants once asked to walk the walk from an autistic guy who's been learning Portuguese and Leetcoding the last six months (such as a few of my pals left behind); a 15-minute pen and paper test could suffice.

Alternatively, they could not make new case-by-case beuracratic systems for unknown thousands of potential applicants whose approval would make their domestic ethno-demographic instability functions worse for the sake of people who until last week were supportive of Russian imperialist revaunchism.

More importantly, this isn't only about them and their would-be hosts. All of them are non-combatants for now. In case of Europeans proceeding to assist the mobilization, they are getting drafted and sent down South as reinforcements.

No, not more importantly. The Russian emmigrees are the less important part of this balance of concerns.

The most important consideration of Russian migration to other nations isn't the Russian status as non-combatants, it's whether the other states give sovereign permission. Russians do not have an inherent right to freely migrate to neighboring countries and set up new lives amongst the Finns and the Balts or the Ukrainians or anywhere else at will. Ethnic russian migration interests do not pre-empt the interests, or sovereignty, of their non-Russian neighbors.

And if this is grand strategy, it's one you tactfully decided not to bring up: safer for Finns and Balts to have them die killing Ukrainians.

Well, yes, the Finns and the Balts governments are making decisions to prioritize their own safety. Why shouldn't they?

The responsibility of a nation is to its people, a state to its citizens, and a democracy to its voters. Ukrainians are none of these in the Baltize area. Neither are Russians.

You treat this as some betrayal of some broader solidarity, but there is none to be betrayed. The Russian nation demonstrated that, with the general approval of many who are now seeking to flee.

This is barely responsive to my post. Which I suppose happens when one's argument is shown to be without merit and there's no incentive to admit as much.

A future army, because this is a future-threat consideration.

I dismiss this, because a) in no realistic event can those Russians hope to get long-term residence in Finland or Latvia and b) nobody there is even arguing that this is a risk, instead complaining about being a transit country or that Russians have to take responsibility or some such.

Which 'they'? The Russians, or the Finns?

Why Finns, how could that fit the context? Those little miscommunications are a repeating pattern with you, and they are very telling.

Russians of course. Your starting thesis was: Putin has repeatedly used ethnic russians as pretexts to intervene, or threaten intervention, around the region... significantly increasing the Russian national population in the border states- who are almost certainly going to locate themselves to the ethnic russian enclaves- strengthens an ethnic-based framing of a future pre-conflict narrative

How, exactly, does this work? Surely you understand that wars of conquest waged by non-democratic states are not contingent on objective reality behind claimed moral justification, so this framing is as strong or as weak as the propaganda makes it. (Even absence of Russians can be spun into an ethnic cleansing story, if one tries). Your response on the same point to @hustlegrinder is similarly lacking in your usual causal clarity.

Not to put too fine a point on it, Ilforte, but less than a year ago you didn't think there was any chance that Russians would wage war on Ukrainians

Are you really one to talk so smugly of this, given that your specific explanations for the Russian military buildup (forcing the NS2 issue or something) didn't differ much from mine and also implied no war? Also, «any chance» sounds very strong. But okay, I never quantified it, and indeed it seemed implausible, which in retrospect was stupid of me.

I do not believe the Russians who are noping out of the current round of imperialist adventurism oppose Russian imperialism in principle, as much as a personal skin-in-the-game that only applies so long as they do have skin in the game and can't go back to being mostly apolitical passive supporters

And before:

passively supportive imperialists who are only not associating with imperialism because it risks a personal cost... and who, if safe from that cost, have no history/credibility that they won't just go right back to vaguely supporting russian imperialism, only from inside the border territories where they could serve as a casus belli

Assuming this is true: this is but a spin on the casus belli thesis (technically, was a spin on that thesis, now it's just a speculation on morality). The casus belli issue has already been addressed. Without it, what exactly does this add? If they consistently oppose being drafted for base egoistic reasons, they are even less likely to help out with the invasion of the host country (which would be even more personally dangerous). Is this about strategic security, helping Ukraine, or about punishing people who supposedly don't oppose Russian Imperialism in principle?

It's not another issue, it's an extension and continuation of the same issue- a unloyal minority that approaches their host country from the perspective of cultural chauvenism and nostalgia for the external imperial oppressor. If this sounds at all familiar to the current Russian presiden

Wut? This if literary fluff in the shape of a coherent argument. I believe you can do better in distinguishing issues.

Except they wouldn't, because the modern Europeans don't have the same attitude towards ethnic cleansing from claimed sovereign territory as the modern Russians, even self-exiled ones.

This gave me a pause. Perhaps we have differences in worldview regarding what constitutes ethnic cleansing, too? Wiki sounds about right: «Ethnic cleansing is the systematic forced removal of ethnic, racial, and religious groups from a given area, with the intent of making a region ethnically homogeneous». I don't know man, this doesn't sound like, um, issuing short-term residence permits or erecting refugee camps for draft dodgers from a multinational neighboring state.

I imagine in a more equanimous state you'd have remembered that, and managed not to make this into another cause for a lame attempt at deadpan comedy.

they could not make new case-by-case beuracratic systems for unknown thousands of potential applicants whose approval would make their domestic ethno-demographic instability functions worse for the sake of people who until last week were supportive of Russian imperialist revaunchism

This is some heavy stuff.

In any case, if Europeans do not believe in ethnic cleansing, like you assert, they might not believe in collective ethnic responsibility like you do, either.

No, not more importantly. The most important consideration of Russian migration to other nations isn't the Russian status as non-combatants, it's whether the other states give sovereign permission. Russians do not have an inherent right to freely migrate to neighboring countries and set up new lives amongst the Finns and the Balts or the Ukrainians or anywhere else at will. Ethnic russian migration interests do not pre-empt the interests, or sovereignty, of their non-Russian neighbors.

Right, thanks. Admittedly I suspected this will be how you'll read it, which is why I wrote it ambiguously like this, and I know this isn't my broken English but your blinding, zoological ethnic prejudice that predictably determined this queer reading. Pease spare me more snark; few things could be funnier than what you're doing here on reflex, condescendingly explaining sovereignty to an imagined petulant Imperialist who asserts such a right to freely immigrate and colonize. (I don't believe in the usefulness of the doctrine of rights at all, in any case – at the bedrock, there are only interests and capabilities).

My claim here was that the subset of Russian males attempting escape and not posing current military threat will, in the case of being turned back, be mobilized for war (primarily in Ukraine), reinforcing Russian forces that are currently attempting annexation of parts of Ukraine. Which is, indeed, from the official European point of view, somewhat bad and more important than welfare of those males, and (I argue) more important than special pleading about ethnic blocs of the far future, weird definitions of ethnic cleansing, low moral qualities of all ruskies who leave home when staying becomes immediately life-threatening, and other 300 IQ bullshit.

Well, yes, the Finns and the Balts governments are making decisions to prioritize their own safety. Why shouldn't they? The responsibility of a nation is to its people, a state to its citizens, and a democracy to its voters. Ukrainians are none of these in the Baltize area.

Sure, they take care of their own. Can't say anything against it! I don't believe in the doctrine of rights, after all.

And of course they're under no obligation to spell it out. Because there is a pretension of broader solidarity, and it's convenient in many ways.

This is barely responsive to my post. Which I suppose happens when one's argument is shown to be without merit and there's no incentive to admit as much.

Since my point began with that you misremembered my position, which de-merited your argument, I suppose this is a nice admission on your part without having to admit it.

I dismiss this, because a) in no realistic event can those Russians hope to get long-term residence in Finland or Latvia and b) nobody there is even arguing that this is a risk, instead complaining about being a transit country or that Russians have to take responsibility or some such.

Your dismissal is irrelevant, because you are not a Finn or Baltic country citizen whose perspective and endorsement is the source of legitimacy for border policy.

Why Finns, how could that fit the context? Those little miscommunications are a repeating pattern with you, and they are very telling.

Hopefully they tell you what I've repeatedly raised, which is that you occasionally use ambiguous conjugation and references that can be interpreted in different ways. This is a common translation issue of non-native speakers, and in your case regularly comes in the direction of intent when discussing multiple subjects that you treat with similar tone.

When I face confusion with your language, I raise that there is a question, go from the context I believe fit in the broader theme (objection to the Finns/Baltics), and work with that. I've no particular objection to dropping anything based on a mis-translation.

Not to put too fine a point on it, Ilforte, but less than a year ago you didn't think there was any chance that Russians would wage war on Ukrainians

Are you really one to talk so smugly of this, given that your specific explanations for the Russian military buildup (forcing the NS2 issue or something) didn't differ much from mine and also implied no war?

Yes, since that [or something] carries quite a lot of ground, ground which has stood well enough since to not but at the time earned me a lecture from you about how I would never understand Slaavic brotherhood and how much it mattered.

Now, I may not share your sense of collective ethnic responsibility, but I think that my lack of sense of collective ethnic responsibility was not only vindicated since late February, but continues to be validated now, given how the other Slaavic brotherhood regions reject such premise ethnic collective solidarity. You wrote one of your best works as a self-analysis of how your world view was undermined and fundamentally shifted by the start of the war. By contrast, I've felt generally vindicated in my understanding of how other people in the region view Russia.

So yes, I believe I am possibly the best person to talk so smugly of this to you, since this has continuity with how I talked about it before. I do not defer to your interpretation of the reasonableness or rationality of Russia's neighbors and their views of Russia.

This gave me a pause. Perhaps we have differences in worldview regarding what constitutes ethnic cleansing, too? Wiki sounds about right: «Ethnic cleansing is the systematic forced removal of ethnic, racial, and religious groups from a given area, with the intent of making a region ethnically homogeneous». I don't know man, this doesn't sound like, um, issuing short-term residence permits or erecting refugee camps for draft dodgers from a multinational neighboring state.

This would be indeed a difference in attitude, because the European/North American norm is that in practice there is no such thing in practice as a short-term refugee permit and that ejecting refugees by force is verboten. Categorically, once an ethnic, racial, or religious group (Russians) are located in a given area (the state), especially one where the minority already exists (local ethnic russians), ejecting them out would make the region (the state) more ethnically homogenous (less Russian). This would, by European standards, be easily legally suspect for anyone willing to finance a lawsuite (such as interested Russians), even without considering the other fact of European law on the right to asylum, the request almost any given Russian arrival would make once on the states.

European humanitarian law basically follows that to expel someone who has tried to claim asylum, there must be someone willing to accept them who won't put them back in danger, or ship them back to the home country. In this case, you have not answered 'who' or 'where' the Europeans would expel the Russian draft dodgers back to.

I realize you've raised in the past the idea of Russian coders being a high value to European countries, but the question of the rest would remain the problem under the first-point-of-arrival policy that Europe implemented to deal with African migrants, and thus the border state's problems.

In any case, if Europeans do not believe in ethnic cleansing, like you assert, they might not believe in collective ethnic responsibility like you do, either.

Them not believing in collective ethnic responsiblity is rather the point. They do not believe they are collectively responsible for, or to, ethnic russians collectively.

Right, thanks. Admittedly I suspected this will be how you'll read it, which is why I wrote it ambiguously like this, and I know this isn't my broken English but your blinding, zoological ethnic prejudice

I reject your characterization of zoological or ethnic prejudice in this matter of describing other people's security perspectives. I may find the modern Russian state morally bankrupt, and the modern Russian culture generally uninteresting in it's acceptance of it, but I never deny the Russian humanity or that the Russians are the second biggest losers of Ukraine.

that predictably determined this queer reading. Pease spare me more snark; few things could be funnier than what you're doing here on reflex, condescendingly explaining sovereignty to an imagined petulant Imperialist who asserts such a right to freely immigrate and colonize. (I don't believe in the usefulness of the doctrine of rights at all, in any case – at the bedrock, there are only interests and capabilities).

Since you find it amusing, and I'm sure you didn't accidentally reverse your adjectives again, I'll increase your levity. I believe you're a cultural chauvenist, not an imperialist, and have pointed others to your writings with that distinction.

My claim here was that the subset of Russian males attempting escape and not posing current military threat will, in the case of being turned back, be mobilized for war (primarily in Ukraine), reinforcing Russian forces that are currently attempting annexation of parts of Ukraine. Which is, indeed, from the official European point of view, somewhat bad and more important than welfare of those males, '

This I don't generally disagree with.

and (I argue) more important than special pleading about ethnic blocs of the far future, weird definitions of ethnic cleansing, low moral qualities of all ruskies who leave home when staying becomes immediately life-threatening, and other 300 IQ bullshit.

And this I note other states reject, as past examples of future ethnic blocks (Russification policy effects and migration waves), weird definitions of ethnic cleansing (ones that currently serve as war justification), and low moral qualities of ruskies (such as those who supported Putin when it was cost-free) leaving home (trying to enter other countries without permission) is exactly how they- and we- have reached this current position.

Repeating steps that brought them to the present widens the chance of it reoccuring in the future. They do not view it as them having an obligation to Ukraine to host Russian refugee camps under international laws and agreements tailored for Africans. They will reject it, and send the Ukrainians more aid to make up the difference of the Russian manpower.

And of course they're under no obligation to spell it out. Because there is a pretension of broader solidarity, and it's convenient in many ways.

I don't believe they've made any pretension about being a good place for a Russian refugee column. Quite the opposite.

Your dismissal is irrelevant, because you are not a Finn or Baltic country citizen whose perspective and endorsement is the source of legitimacy for border policy.

Was your speculation on future settlements and such meant to merely communicate the personal opinion of a Latvian or a Finn, or did you present it as an argument about security open to rational discussion on a neutral platform? You did the latter, of course, and now you're defending it with the sovereign right to endorse a policy that belongs to citizens of those states, not missing the chance to insinuate disrespect for that right on my part. Pretty lame, IMO.

but at the time earned me a lecture from you about how I would never understand Slaavic brotherhood and how much it mattered.

I think that my lack of sense of collective ethnic responsibility was not only vindicated since late February, but continues to be validated now, given how the other Slaavic brotherhood regions reject such premise ethnic collective solidarity.

...Speaking of collective responsibility. This reminds me of that one time @HlynkaCG accused me of having predicted quick surrender of «globo homo Ukraine», then apologized for having confabulated it due to clustering me together with advocates of that view.

You seem to be playing a game of equivocation and derailment, using a very clear term «collective ethnic responsibility» (such as your belief in collectively punishing Russians) interchangeably with a term «ethnic collective solidarity» that's less clear in context and has something to do with my past or present belief in «Slavic Brotherhood». I'd like to ask you to either be less creative with accusations in the future, or kindly use https://camas.unddit.com to quote the specific position that you refer to, not pull a Kulak or Hlynka (although, whatever I think about Pan-Slavism can't have much to do with the topic of collective responsibility, so this is an unproductive tangent).

European humanitarian law basically follows that to expel someone who has tried to claim asylum, there must be someone willing to accept them who won't put them back in danger, or ship them back to the home country.

Russia is not deemed to be a zone of humanitarian emergency (nor is dodging draft in Russia a «right») so the issue of shipping them back to Russia shouldn't be at conflict with humanitarian law, and indeed people are getting deported just fine now; it'll only detract from the purpose of sabotaging mobilization. Anyway. I recommend an approach that is expedient in this situation of mobilization, not legal asylum, precisely because rights or welfare of Russians cannot be expected to matter to Europeans now. Besides there already exist procedures for asylum seekers and they are used, but it'd be unrealistic to extend those to fleeing Russians in general – although Germany seems to flirt with the idea.

There are very many ways for Europeans to allow limited-term residence at risk of deportation, starting with frameworks of Schengen and worker visas. More naively, I don't believe a war is a proper time for EU bureaucracy; a good-enough (i.e. no concentration camps) legal grounds for temporary hosting of would-be Russian soldier refugees that's devoid of your speculative risks (and also precludes submitting an asylum request) can be drafted in a weekend, just like another sanctions package.

I'll increase your levity. I believe you're a cultural chauvenist, not an imperialist

I don't believe this is the sort of belief that's amenable to refutation, as it amounts to not liking people of a particular group who display the universal and normal trait of ingroup cultural preference (which is inherently zero-sum).

And how is that an increase. In my impression, patting oneself on the back for old poetry or "sovl" and sneering at provinciality of hohols (or cowardice of the frog-eaters, or barbarity of... whoever) is a lesser transgression than attempts at imperial irredentism, unless one cares more about status signals than material insults.

If anything, the big issue with Russian chauvinism is that it is sadly inseparable from Imperialism, since for some reason – probably lack of non-imperial symbols of success – it consistently leads to Imperial fetishism and absurd delusions on the topic of Russia's capabilities and entitlements (demonstrated by our president and his support base). I clearly do not share this attitude (proven by consistent hatred of our president's support base and the reputation of a doomer), thus I reject this accusation as well.

And this I note other states reject, as past examples of future ethnic blocks (Russification policy effects and migration waves), weird definitions of ethnic cleansing (ones that currently serve as war justification), and low moral qualities of ruskies (such as those who supported Putin when it was cost-free) leaving home (trying to enter other countries without permission) is exactly how they- and we- have reached this current position. Repeating steps that brought them to the present widens the chance of it reoccuring in the future.

This is an extraordinary show of bad faith and low-quality reasoning (you still haven't addressed the vacuity of your argument on «justifications» too). But since you opt to hide behind ventriloquism, it's not meaningful to continue.