This is, again, the exact same article we have already discussed. I would, again, point you to my and other responses, so that you are free to see the other excerpts, from which it should be clear that you drew entirely the wrong conclusion from the headline.ousdahl wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 6:41 pmtwocoach wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 2:31 pm
JFC, this has been explained to you multiple times. Ukraine is not being "investigated for genocide". The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has ruled that parts of Ukraine’s case against Russia arguing that Moscow baselessly accused Kyiv of genocide to justify the 2022 invasion can move forward. This means that UKRAINE has asked for the opportunity to make their case that Russian claims of genocide are baseless. "Being investigated for genocide" is far different than "asking for a baseless claim of genocide to be investigated".so the NYT article in question is now behind a paywall for me. So now, all I can see is the title, which is:twocoach wrote: ↑Thu Apr 04, 2024 2:48 pm My god, no kidding. I try to avoid posting on this thread of idiocy because it makes my eyes bleed and my brain hurt. Just such a stunning lack of effort to read and comprehend. The side effects of reading everything in search of a zippy one liner, I suppose.
Scenario 1: A person is investigated for raping a child because there is credible evidence to believe that it has ha[[ened.
Scenario 2: A person asks a court to rule on whether a third party's baseless claim of them being a child rapist are true or whether the third party making the claim is using the claim to discredit you and justify their own illegal behavior.
Scenario 1 and Scenario 2 are completely different. Referring to them both as "being investigated for the rap of a child" is either deliberately ignorant or lazy.
"U.N. Court to Rule on Whether Ukraine Committed Genocide"
To me, I read that as, the U.N. Court is going to rule on whether Ukraine committed genocide. But if my Putin-poisoned mind is misinterpreting the headline, let me know!
viewtopic.php?p=382826&hilit=genocide#p382826
And this is the whole point: you drew an entirely wrong conclusion (but, a conclusion that confirms your priors) from a source that presented only a small part of the story in a very particular way. This is an example of confirmation bias.
You then used that (entirely wrong) conclusion to make a broader argument. When you do that, your broader argument (which might be well-meaning) is without foundation.
This is precisely what I meant when I said that Russia is using disinformation to exploit people who sincerely hold anti-war positions. Russia is counting on people who sincerely hold anti-war positions to adopt and parrot Russia's talking points (which are disinformation).