The democratic socialist Melat Kiros unseated the long-serving US representative Diana DeGette in Coloradoās primary elections held on Tuesday, the latest in a string of high-profile victories for the partyās insurgent left.
The Associated Press reported that Kiros had defeated DeGette for the Democratic nomination in the deep-blue first congressional district centered on Denver. Kirosās triumph came a week after New York voters unseated two Democratic congressional incumbents and replaced a third who was retiring with candidates who had campaigned on standing up to Israel amid accusations that it was carrying out a genocide in Gaza.



Oh look, three other people submitted opposite opinions in the same letters section? Letās have look:
So printing a pro-russian piece is just good balance right?
Itās not a pro-russian piece.
Throughout every paragraph, the author makes sideways jabs at Russia intended to make clear that itās a war that they started, and that Ukraine is defending itself.
Their only point, which is the point that youāre contending with, is that Ukraine should still maintain the moral high ground by minimizing civilian casualties.
Literally, from the article you cited:
That doesnāt sound pro-russianā¦
And yet. What does the letter call out? Russian attacks on civilians? (Donāt you dare say yes because itās obliquely referenced. That is not how it works.)
Russia isnāt spending hundreds of millions of dollars every single year to bring reasoned debate into the world. Theyāre doing it to accomplish what Cambridge Analytica proved without a doubt: convince 50.1% of the voters that something outrageous āsoundsā true and nothing else matters.
You can continue to throw the third largest military (by budget) against the 43rd largest (in 2021, before the genocide started) and professors in Southampton can express qualms over the danger of unintentional casualties in the aggressor nation. Sure! RUN THAT BABY. We need to publish more garbage that keeps this thing going.
Yeah⦠as Iāve already pointed out, yes, they do call that out. And you trying to preempt me by calling that āobliqueā doesnāt change that.
Literally the whole argument is āUkraine shouldnāt tarnish its moral high ground in its defensive retaliations by indiscriminately targeting civilians they way russia does to them in the war that russia started.ā
His word choice may have been hamfisted in places, but that is not what russian propaganda sounds like.
And theyāre not doing that to post opinion pieces in The Guardian, either. Theyāre funding troll farms where people make disingenuous arguments like what youāre doing. Literally the shit youāre saying is exactly how that stuff sounds.
Sometimes itās even so convoluted that I wouldnāt be surprised if youāre claiming āMinimize civilian casualtiesā is a pro-russian statement, specifically to shame Ukraine-supporters into saying āNah, fuck those civiliansā just so that russia has something to point to and say āSee, I told you theyāre evil aggressors!ā and tarnish that moral high ground that the author discussed.
I certainly donāt think the kremlin would give a fuck if their disinfo gets more russian civilians killed, if they think it will gain them more leverage over negotiations or worldwide public opinion.
At best - okay, granting a ludicrous amount of good intent - at best thatās a delusional position from someone who hasnāt been near weapons fire in decades if ever. What does our illustrious professor think WAR is? Huuh! Good gawd, yāall.
I never said I agree with his position in its entirety. I even called it hamfisted in places. I think the three opposing opinions in the other piece I linked were much better.
But that doesnāt change the fact that the original was not a pro-russian piece, and the guardian is not a pro-russian outlet; nor a billionaire-sponsored media outlet, to bring this discussion back to where it started before you led us down this trail of red herrings.