Putin Government Moves To Take Control of Russia's largest space company Energia 252
schwit1 writes Vitaly Lopota, the president of Russia's largest space company Energia, was suspended Friday by the company's board of directors. From the article: "The move appears to be part of an effort by Russia's government to obtain majority control over Energia, of which it owns a 38-percent share. The directors elected Igor Komarov as its new chairman of the board. Komarov is chief of the Russian United Rocket and Space Corporation (URSC), the government-owned company tasked with consolidating Russia's sprawling space sector." The government is also conducting a criminal investigation of Lopota, which might be justified but appears to be a power play designed to both eliminate him from the game as well as make sure everyone else tows the line so that URSC can take complete control.
minutes to midnight (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone else here miss the 1980s USSR? Looks like Putin does ...
Re:minutes to midnight (Score:5, Interesting)
You might think it is funny, but this really is sort of the plan of Putin.
It has always been his plan, from the start.
He never made a secret of it and clearly states that this is what he is trying to do.
It might not be communism he wants. What he wants a is strong Russia, a country other countries respect (maybe this can be explained as: fear).
Which includes re-integrating most of the former USSR countries.
UN representation of CIS members (Score:2)
Which includes re-integrating most of the former USSR countries.
But in order to keep their representation in the United Nations, the members of the New USSR would have to remain sovereign states in a confederation [wikipedia.org] analogous to the European Union, not join into one sovereign state like the USA or the old USSR.
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That's not a bad idea. Could the USA reformulate itself as a confederation with the same legal structure and operations, but with 49 seats in the UN rather than one? (I think everyone would agree that not having Florida represented is in the best interests of everyone except comedians.)
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I'm aware of the history and, yes, I'm being sarcastic. Except about Florida.
Re:minutes to midnight (Score:4, Insightful)
In the 1980s Russia was run by KGB thugs, in the 2010s Russia is run by former KGB thugs
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Other than that - there is more media than back then but there is no more freedom of press now than it used to be - there is no state censorship but corporate one instead. Modern media are abused more than they server democracy and human rights.
What else - ah torture and extrajudicial killings by 'Securitate' - I recall the guys in the freedom movements were seriously pissed off by th
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Shot? In the 1980-ies USSR? Not bloody likely. Especially not when Gorbachev came to power. Worst case would be the psych ward, but the most probable outcome would be 6 months or so of prison. Death penalty was mostly reserved for murder, rape, organised crime and similar felonies, although also bribery and grand larceny.
You can actually see that while in the 1960ies there were over 2000 executions every year, in the 1980ies there were usually less than 500 a year.
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And since the USA also has the death penalty, how many executions where happening over there during that time? And of those, how many were in Texas alone?
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Much less. Texas had somewhat over 500 executions 1976-2014. Then again, Russia had no capital punishment since a serial killer has been executed in 1996.
False dichotomies (Score:2)
People are jumping to pull out the false dichotomies.
Are Russia and the US the same? No.
Are Russia and the US completely different? No.
Russia is worse. But sadly not by a lot.
Re:minutes to midnight (Score:4, Informative)
"No, we're already there. Name one thing the Russians did that the US Congress doesn't assume that it has the authority to do to a US company."
Since those companies _own_ congress, they would do it to themselves.
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Since those powerful companies _own_ congress, they would do it to their weaker competition.
FTFY
Re:minutes to midnight (Score:4, Insightful)
No we are not, not even close not even to todays Russia.
From personal experince in both countries.
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That seems to be the difference from my perspective.
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Company... as in limited liability corporation? As in, get their charter from the government?
And despite they being a figment of our collective imagination, companies are still deemed to have religious freedom and political speech freedom?
Yeah, that's exactly the same as the USSR, with central planning and state-owned and controlled industries.
I understand that some people on here probably weren't alive during the time of the Cold War, but at least peek at the USSR Wikipedia entry.
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Where in my comment do I mention either fascism or communism?
I'd argue that both the Democrat and Republican parties differ very little in actual practice - only the wedge issues show any real difference, and those are usually social issues with only a minor effect on the nation as a whole. For instance, I don't know how you can single out the Democrats as the socialist party when the Republican party is responsible for what at the time was the largest expansion of Medicare ever.
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You didn't thats why i was complled to. I won't deny that there is some overlap between the parites however the democrats are generally socialist by nature and the republicans are generally nationalist facists by nature.
Medicare part D was a giveaway of taxpayers dollars to big pharma. Yes Medicare is a socialist program and one that I could argue helps numerous people however the fascist party (republicans) used that program to funnel taxpayer dollars to big pharma at exorbitant prices in order to brea
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While I agree that pharma holds a lot of sway with Republicans*, you are overlooking a huge reason for Medicare expansion: most of their supporters were (and still are) elderly. US politics is more about what "team" you are on then it is ideological in nature, and the Republicans were simply making a play that was popular with their fans.
* and Democrats, for that matter - witness the ACA
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Gays I agree - but women and religion? Where do Republicans differ from Democrats on women's rights? Where do Republicans and Democrats differ on freedom of religion?
Gay marriage... while I fully support it, it is hardly an issue critical to the nation's future. I certainly would not make it my litmus test when selecting a politician unless the two were otherwise very similar. Which, incidentally, happens to be the case most of the time.
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"in a fascist country the corporations control the govt."
You made that up, or maybe it was fed to you. That is not what fascism is.
"The socialist party (Democrats) and the fascist party (Republicans)"
Ah, now I see; stumping for your side. Which means there is nothing you can say that is too outrageous or hateful. I guess all is fair in love, war, and politics...
Carry on then.
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You only missed my sarcasm. :)
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Drag someone off the street and shoot them in the head in plain daylight.
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This (presumed) takeover is actually a move back to the old days of government control, although I'd assume more as a way of establishing control rather than paying lip service to socialist ideals.
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Define basic stuff!?
Poland used ration stamps till 1985 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ration_stamp). Among rationed goods were: flour, sugar, butter, soap, gas - they seam quite basic stuff to me. Here is how your monthly supply looked:
http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reglamentacja_towar%C3%B3w_w_PRL#mediaviewer/Plik:Kartka_P3_11-83.jpeg
Add to above endless lines for even toilet paper and good luck living like that.
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Well, not USSR. Ration stamps were only used starting 1989.
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... and? Fredom of speech protects your ability to say what you want without reprecussions from the *government*. It doesn't protect you from all possible consequences of your speech from anyone else (nor should it).
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Re:minutes to midnight (Score:4, Insightful)
but they don't start wars.
- stares in disbelief at monitor -
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By that logic, the only moral problem with Iraq was that the opponent had the audacity to resist invasion. If they'd just surrendered, the US would have been in the right and could have gone further and annexed the territory.
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You forgot to put "referendum" in quotes.
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What about Georgia? And Chechnya (internal wars are still wars). And when you get to USSR there's the whole Afghanistan war as well.
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I know people from Soviet bloc but who were not USSR or Russian. They are very much happier now that the masters in Moscow are not in charge.
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Don't be too hard on him, he doesn't even know the difference between "your" and "you're".
Hypocrite (Score:2)
Jump start the US space industry again? (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe we'll finally stop relying on Russia for access to space...
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(insert "American components, Russian Components, ALL MADE IN TAIWAN!" joke here)
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Copenhagan... and I think another... well, they're not all that far behind SpaceX.
Privatization of space is coming, and bullshit like this is only going to push it harder.
Trillion-dollar boo-boo (Score:4, Informative)
This sort of thing is why shares of russian companies trade at a huge discount [economist.com] compared to shares of western and asian companies.
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Russia has a stock market?
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of course. It's used the same way as it is everywhere else, chiefly to transfer wealth from a large of small clients to a small number of large clients.
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This kind of rampant corruption and cronyism is also the same reason why, despite an abundance of available resources and labour, Russia can't drag its economy out of the doldrums and up to a level that it ought to be capable of achieving. Russia's GDP is on a par with the that of countries like the UK, Germany and France - realistically it ought to be at least an order of magnitude above that. Ultimately though this is mostly an asset grab - you watch as con
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Russia's GDP is on a par with the that of countries like the UK, Germany and France - realistically it ought to be at least an order of magnitude above that.
Russia's GDP is about half that of Germany, with almost twice the population. On a per capita basis it's less than half that of Germany or the UK.
You're right that it ought to be considerably higher, but absolutely nowhere *near* an order of magnitude larger.
Re:Trillion-dollar boo-boo (Score:4, Insightful)
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on a par with second world countries (which is what Russia really is these days)
The Second World [wikipedia.org] refers to the former Socialist, industrial states (formally the Eastern Bloc), mostly the territory and the influence of the Soviet Union. Following World War II, there were nineteen communist states, and after the fall of the Soviet Union, only five socialist states remained: China, Cuba, Laos, North Korea and Vietnam. Along with "First World" and "Third World", the term was used to divide the states of Earth into three broad categories. In other words, the concept of "Second World" was a
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I think you forgot to add "apart from Japan" somewhere in that sentence.
people who can't write because they didn't read... (Score:4, Insightful)
... really... you "toe the line" not "tow the line" as the submitter writes.
Re:people who can't write because they didn't read (Score:5, Funny)
In Soviet Russia, line tows you!
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v... [youtube.com]
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Maybe they graduated from The Derek Zoolander Center for Kids Who Can't Read Good and Wanna Learn to Do Other Stuff Good Too.
Russia = Fascism (Score:5, Insightful)
Anybody still seriously doubt that Russia is a neo-Fascist country?
Somebody mod this up (Score:5, Insightful)
Administrative takeover of corporations by autoritative central state, with intimidation through abuse of executive power, is textbook fascism. Mussolini would be proud.
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Anybody still seriously doubt that Russia is a neo-Fascist country?
They do! [slate.com]
"to take control" (Score:2, Insightful)
I like the "to take control" euphemism for steal.
Putin is stealing private property, that's the actual headline here. There can be no real economic development if private property rights are not protected, specifically not protected from government theft. This wouldn't be the first time Putin stole something, by the way, even before [cbssports.com] Crimea I mean. Of-course he basically stole democratic elections in Russia, I guess nothing can beat that.
Re:"to take control" (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:"to take control" (Score:5, Interesting)
Consolidating a fragmented industry can be a good idea and has worked to a greater or lesser extent in the past. The problem is that the government is usually too far behind the curve to make the best decisions and a good example would be some of the nationalisations that happened in the UK.
However, in Russia, it is about redistributing the assets privatised in the early nineties. The privatisations were a "fire-sale" in which only a favoured few could take part, however subsequently, the shares traded on a secondary market and became assets belonging to pension funds and the like. Unfortunately, in the early nineties, when Putin and his backers (the so-called Siloviki) came to power, they discovered there was nothing new to privatise so they took some companies back such as Yukos. On the smaller scale, many companies found themselves forced with new directors who had relationships with the Siloviki.
Either way, by undermining corporate governance and the protection of property, the government has made it far more difficult for a normal financial infrastructure to exist.
Re:"to take control" (Score:5, Insightful)
Nationalisation pays the previous owner. It's a compulsory purchase, not just seizing control.
What the Russians are doing is just theft, extralegal, unconstitutional, just as they did with all the energy companies which are the only thing propping up their economy, and media companies. The method is a variation on how organised crime takes over a business, but with the backing of the courts.
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What the Russians are doing is just theft
Eh, that's OK. The companies were essentially stolen from the state by oligarchs during the collapse of the USSR. It's all a wash really...
The method is a variation on how organised crime takes over a business,
Well, it is the putin government...
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It is also theft when the government gives away things to privileged individuals. Such as land rights for building railroads, or rights to the spectrum for privileged companies.
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Fighting over land in Europe means the taking of private business in North America?
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I like the "to take control" euphemism for steal.
I don't think you understand the complete situation.
The space agency was originally a national instution. OK, by your logic it was made with money stolen from the population, but that's not the point here. At the collapse of the USSR there wasn't so much a sell-off of institutions as outright theft by a bunch of oligarcs.
One could easily argue that it's simply reclaiming something those people stole in the first place.
Then again, Putin's a power mad oligarc,
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Considering how corrupt some of the privatisation was, with corrupt oligarchs colluding with western finance organisation to basically steal assets, this is more akin to repossession of stolen property. Privatisation has been pretty crooked across the globe with the only real winners being the corrupt banks that financed the mass media propaganda and the lobbyists as well as the off shore tax haven bribes. The illusion is 'private property', the reality is society allows individuals to control property for
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Not a bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, the way Russians go about nationalizing companies is not very nice or even subtle. But I wish my government did the same. Services that people need in order to live - energy, water, medical - shouldn't be on the free market. All that stuff should be publicly owned and the goal shouldn't to be to make money but to provide critical services to the people for the cheapest amount possible.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, the way Russians go about nationalizing companies is not very nice or even subtle. But I wish my government did the same. Services that people need in order to live - energy, water, medical - shouldn't be on the free market. All that stuff should be publicly owned and the goal shouldn't to be to make money but to provide critical services to the people for the cheapest amount possible.
While that is a laudable goal the reality is government owned utilities rarely view "cheapest amount possible" as a primary goal. Rather, they become tools for politicians to use to maintain themselves in office by providing jobs, subsidies , etc to please their voters and donors. That is not to say government owned utilities cannot provide lower cost services just that cost is often secondary to politics.
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In the US, maybe. In other countries, not so much. Did you never notice how the childish attitudes your politicians display are far above the levels displayed in other countries' politicians? Sure, some countries have political freak shows, but many others just get on with it - working with other parties for the good of the country.
Possible, but my experiences with politicians around the world its the "do what I have to to stay in power" gene tends to be dominant and the "work together for the good of the country even if it means I may lose" gene is recessive.
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That is not my experience, mind pointing to examples? My experience with government owned utilities is
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Services that people need in order to live should start off on the free market. Once it becomes clear which method of providing the service is most efficient, then it should be transitioned to a publicly-owned service. e.g. What's the best way
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Water being provided by the public sector makes sense for a completely separate reason: it's a thing that is very difficult to define property rights over. Who owns the groundwater under Tucson, AZ? Does your average Jose have the right to drill a well on his land and pump out however much he wants and sell it? What about slurping water out of the Santa Cruz River? (You're probably saying that you've never heard of the Santa Cruz River. That's because it's not there any more -- we poured it all on crops. It
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GSM is a good example of the trouble you can get yourself into if the government prematurely decides something should not be subject to market forces. The EU mandated all wireless phone carriers adhere to GSM.
[citation needed]
And eventually CDMA was incorporated into the GSM standard (most HSPA and HSDPA implementations use wideband CDMA - yes your GSM phone uses CDMA)
Yes, because the Japanese developed W-CDMA and released 3G upon the world, which was incorporated into the UMTS standard while CDMA2000 was still a snot-slow dog that still couldn't pass packet-switched data and run a phone call at the same time.
If the U.S. had gone along with the EU and required GSM, data services would've been several years behind where they are now, and we'd probably still be stuck at around 1 Mbps cellular data speeds.
No, the Japanese still would have utilized the fantastic Russian Code Division Multi-Access scheme known as CDMA to provide better services to their tech-savvy customers while also finding a way to incorporate it into the world standard of portabi
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Ok, so you talk about "Services that people need in order to live - energy, water, medical".
There is a lot that people need to live. Would you argue nationalising all of them? Energy, water and medical aren't the only things that would make that list. What about food, transportation and clothing? You'll die very soon if they aren't in order. Houses - in a lot of climates you need them for shelter and defects in houses could cause them to collapse so they are crucial to survival - hygienic products, etc.
Now,
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I won't have escaped you that the market is less and less regulated because, as the means of growth grow thin, you need to be more "open." Sure, let's make house loans a financial product - then you get the subprimes crisis and people lose their homes AND their retirement money. Pharmaceuticals don't do research on diseases that are not, literally, worth it. The meat sector you mention? Sure, let's shoot the cows with antibiotics and GMO crops. That'll make more meat per cow, better margins. Etc.
The problem
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Another poster discussed that letting government provide vital services often results in those services being used / abused for political gain. Abusing regulations is a lot less effective for politicians and so they tend to be manipulated less in my opinion.
Let the free market do the producing.
But let the government keep them in check with regulations. You are right that regulations tend to be thinned out when politicians see no other way to promote growth anymore but I'm still not convinced that that is in
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Sure, the way Russians go about nationalizing companies is not very nice or even subtle. But I wish my government did the same. Services that people need in order to live - energy, water, medical - shouldn't be on the free market. All that stuff should be publicly owned and the goal shouldn't to be to make money but to provide critical services to the people for the cheapest amount possible.
They most definitely should be in a free market as much as possible as that has proven time and again to be the only way to make it as cheap as possible. What you're looking for is "nonprofit".
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I notice that you don't list "food" here. It's very much something people need to live, it's on a mostly-free market almost everywhere, and it works just fine.
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See Venezuela.
If you can catch a flight (kinda tough at the moment because the Government has effectively nationalized airline ticket revenue so the airlines have canceled most regular service) you might take a trip and stay if you like it so much.
Bring extra toilet paper.
energy, water, medical
All of the above has either been or is under imminent threat of nationalization. Lets look at the results;
Energy: Venezuelan president’s live speech about blackouts interrupted by blackouts [nydailynews.com]
Water: Caracas Goes Thirsty as Taps Run Dry [bloomberg.com]
Remember when America used to be ... (Score:2)
... the subject of criticism?
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Tragic isn't it? Wasting Slashdot time-wasters time with non-US bashing stories.
Quick, someone find a Climate Change or Snowden story before these people lose it.
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Re:Response to sanctions (Score:4, Informative)
They always one up whatever move you do and the only way to end the cold war was when the US stopped the race and started de-escalating the conflict and offer a treaty after a treaty, until finally Russia felt safe enough to let go.
Erm...
The cold war ended because the Soviet Union was broke and in disarray.
Diplomacy was the only option left to Yetlsin. They couldn't feed an army, let alone civilians.
As it will be with Putin or Putin's successor. Breadlines, not hard-lines with break them.
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Lets not forget that Yeltsin came to power off the back of a semi-failed military coup against Gorbachev.
Re:Response to sanctions (Score:4, Interesting)
It is basically Putin's way of saying: "Look, I am in control of how to get to space."
He's not. I'm pretty sure Chinese, Indians, Americans and Europeans are going to continue to go to space with or without Putin.
US simply does not understand the Russians. Sanctions cannot possibly work against them.
US is not working against 'Russians'. It's just containing a power-hungry dictatorial imperialistic regime. Attacking the wealth of a regime is always a good way to reduce its ability to conquer neighboring nations.
They always one up whatever move you do
Do you seriously think they didn't consider all the options Putin has? Or maybe at least the obvious ones like cutting his exports and imports? It's just a typical reactionary BS
This time it is gonna be played to the utter economic destruction of one of the two nuclear super powers or an all out nuclear war.
Yeah, imagine US losing their 28th business partner by volume of trade [trade.gov]. Economic destruction my @ss.
It looked like such a smart move by the US state department to take over the Ukrainian government, too bad they didn't understand that the move would inevitably start a war. Now we will all pay the price.
Typical dictatorship thinking - if I lose control over a government it must be because some other country took it. There's no way people would just elect their own representatives...
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It is basically Putin's way of saying: "Look, I am in control of how to get to space."
He's not. I'm pretty sure Chinese, Indians, Americans and Europeans are going to continue to go to space with or without Putin.
Yes, others have some capability, in some extent. Nobody is close to what the Russians can do at this time. US would have to restart some abandoned programs to get to the same level, but they at least have the potential.
US simply does not understand the Russians. Sanctions cannot possibly work against them.
US is not working against 'Russians'. It's just containing a power-hungry dictatorial imperialistic regime. Attacking the wealth of a regime is always a good way to reduce its ability to conquer neighboring nations.
Attacking someone when your attack is doomed to fail, is never a good policy. Sanctions might have worked against Iran, once Russia and China started to cooperate, but they won't work against Russia. They just shift their economic activity. There is much more dependency of the EU and rest of
Re:Response to sanctions (Score:4, Insightful)
So, it is the Americans fault the new Russian Tsar stole back the Crimea, a piece of Georgia, is threatening a piece of Ukraine, is threatening Moldova, is threatening the Baltic states, and consolidating all power in the Kremlin.
Is there anything else you'd like to blame the U.S for?
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Yes. My cereal was soggy this morning. That's the fault of the Great Satan, too.
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"US does not understand russians"? My outside perspective as neither american nor russian is, yes, they do. It turns out Russians are people too!
Sting, is that you?
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"Putin Government" ... instead of just "Government"?
Because it happens right now, yes. 100 years ago it would gave been "Tsar's representatives".
It's exactly why "Obamacare" is mentioned as such, and not simply as "care".
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I see. So if you were privileged or able to work your way into a company supplied med insurance program. You win the lottery and all is well. However, if you were unprivileged or had to work your life away in low, menial jobs to support your poor family and never had a chance to work your way into a company supplied insurance program, then you lost the lottery of life; you should just accept that you will die early. Then there is the lottery of your company shipping your job overseas to some low wage countr
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What the hell are you talking about?
I am Romanian and we have healthcare for all our citizens. Not stellar but it's there.
I merely pointed out that a certain action with big impact is usually named after the high profile person who initiated, oversaw or approved it. It's a fact.
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