yah.I'm sure this series of events will foment a lot of 20/20 hindsight questions. Things like:
1. We don't live in a post-World War II world any more. So why is the other side of the world so reliant upon the United States to keep the peace, rather than people/countries on their same continent?
2. Why did Ukraine not do more to militarize and protect themselves against this issue?
3. How could anyone believe that Putin would do anything differently than he's done, given his leadership history?
4. Will the world quietly take the nuclear "threats" that Putin is making?
5. When will the US eventually graduate to a country filled with citizens that identify as Americans, and not as some other ethnic group where their ancestry hails from - thereby creating some sort of larger affection for a country other than their own, and leading to groups of citizens demanding action by the US when it may not necessarily be the smartest thing long term for the country?
6. Who invented caviar and why?
7. Will baseball ever be played again?
And before you castrate me for asking the above questions - DON'T. THEY'RE JUST FREAKING QUESTIONS. You're welcome to theorize about them or even answer them from your perspective, but if you even so much as throw any shade at me for asking the questions that should be being asked from the perspective of a United States citizen, I will report your sorry tushy.
today. tomorrow. all spring and summer, to the world series in October.
Russians. In cold weather, a big calorie boost. Something to do with the stuff.
OK, from the top. WWII was the mother of the UN, and a lot of arrangements worldwide. Globalism's birth.
2. Lots of pretensions about diplomacy.
3. I believed he was smarter than this. But maybe he is, and I'm stupider than I thought.
4. Our politicians will absorb nukes rather than fund military stuff.
5. We will never graduate on those terms. We love being different somehow.

