The children will be located wherever the most powerful bully forces them, and they'll have access to whatever drinking source the most powerful bully allows them access to. — Isaac
So in ruffian controlled territory, families ought to just up sticks and move? — Isaac
People have their freedom restricted either way. — Isaac
Even if we all agree anarchy was morally superior, how do we suppose the world remains in anarchy? — Marchesk
It's not ideal that such violence-supported impositions are needed, but its being non-ideal is irrelevant unless there's a better alternative. — Isaac
Therefore, I assume you will fly the anarchist banner. — Bitter Crank
Now, you also express antipathy to this idea of the "social contract". A lot of people dislike the term. Fine -- one can get alone without using that term. — Bitter Crank
There are states which fail to meet my expectations: quite a few states, really. Burma, Afghanistan, Russia, China, North Korea, Mexico, El Salvador, Ethiopia, and Somalia, for example. Not a complete list at all. At any given time in history, most states have managed to meet your expectations of violence and exploitation including the United States and the various nations in the European community. — Bitter Crank
The root of the problem is not in the existence of states per se. It is in the perverse behavior of those who wield power. — Bitter Crank
Your vision of family (at least as you have projected it here) expects violence and ruthless exploitation. It isn't that ruthlessly exploitative families never have existed. — Bitter Crank
Families are generally nurturing and loving. — Bitter Crank
The social contract (which is, granted, not a signed document. and nobody thinks it is) yields mutual support and benefit. That's how a functioning society works.
The social contract of mutually beneficial behavior would exist in an anarchist society as much as, maybe more than, it does in a hierarchical society. Our human ability to mirror other people's needs, desires, pains, etc. long preceded civil society. — Bitter Crank
No. Without a functioning social contract, you have chaos, and all you can do is try to stay alive. — Bitter Crank
Societies have an implied social contracts which bind citizens to treating each other more or less civilly (and most of the time, the contract is honored). There are mutual obligations which are understood. The law, however, is not an IMPLIED social contract -- it is explicit. We understand that if we violate the law, there may well be quite unpleasant consequences. Prison is one of the possible consequences. — Bitter Crank
Imprisonment is coercive, certainly, but coercion is not the same as violence (beatings, torture, execution etc.). — Bitter Crank
Force and coercive measures are not inherently violent. — Bitter Crank
Violence or nothing is a false binary. Societies use coercion (fines, for instance) to enforce rules. Leave your car on the street after a snow storm, and it might get towed away--a coercive measure people find quite aversive. Coercion yes, but the streets cannot be cleared of snow if people don't move their cars out of the way. — Bitter Crank
Governments have violence as the last resort, but have several options before the beating and shooting begin. — Bitter Crank
You've got Zelensky negotiating from a position of power. — frank
It's just far fetched that the Russians would divest themselves of their assets prior to official negotiations. — frank
I don't know. — frank
They didn't. They were forced to give it up. — frank
That is not what Tzeentch is saying though. — Olivier5
He cannot imagine (or admit) that the Russians are forced to leave Kherson — Olivier5
However unjust it might be, Russia is going to get what it wants, and the only variable is how much of Ukraine will be destroyed in the process. — Tzeentch
Nice self-criticism. — Olivier5
There are those who are obviously emotionally invested in the idea of a powerful Russia, as a force of nature. — frank
Let us reconvene in a month, and see how that particular prediction panned out. — Olivier5
Of course you do. It's just that your rose-tinted glasses are Russian made, and so are your 'good guys'. — Olivier5
Xi nixed the nuclear option. — frank
Tzeentch is unable to imagine a world where brutal dictators don't win. — Olivier5
What makes you think so? — neomac
What is odd? — ssu
By what judgement you made this idea that Russia gave a "guarantee"? — ssu
The Ukrainians had made it impossible for Russia to supply over the Dniepr a huge force as it's dependence on rail lines made this totally obvious. — ssu
Prior to the midterm elections. Now the situation doesn't look so bad for the Democrats though. — neomac
Likely the deal has already been struck.
The United States pressured Ukraine to show willingness to negotiate a few weeks ago.
Then Russia gives up Kherson as a form of 'guarantee' that no offensives for Odessa or Transnistria will take place.
Russia is probably well-prepared to defend against any Ukrainian offensives (apparently several defensive lines have been created), thus this situation with Kherson in Ukrainian hands is a stable state of affairs for both sides.
My guess is some form of peace talks are going to take place soon.
