Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

What specifically about the Crimea referendum is "illegitimate" in the eyes of the in

12357

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    It's terribly ironic that the people that hate the US the most take it's actions (often cherry picked from it's worst and distant past) is the line everyone else should toe to be moral. Of course I'm sure if it were an action from a Western state that were being defended here there would be a very different tune if someone tried to use

    Also pretty ironic that the people that seem to get most worked up about America's "hypocrisy" are often the most hypocritical themselves in their evaluation of international event. If they, as an individual, can barely keep the same opinion about similar events why would a nation constituting hundreds of millions of people, over multiple administrations find it possible, much less feasible.

    Further, why is any other states "hypocrisy" any less evident? It's very strange to me that people who seem to want to hate the US/American's the most, to the point of seeing CIA agents under their bed, hold them to a far higher standard than they would dare hold even our own country, let alone a place like Russia.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    As regards the poll there is only one reason a state would not allow international observers. The amount of people that voted in the capitol was 4 times more than THE POPULATION, that is to say many times more the voting base.

    It is laughable how often the people to first start scoffing at others being "American stooges" or "faux news" viewers are the first to swallow hook line and sinker any statement from the Kremlin, then quickly switch to RT to get the "truth". As though the definition of what is true is the news that best aligns with how they believe the world should be. They are exactly the same people as the worst fox news viewers, exactly the same failures in critical thinking with added arrogance, that they somehow hope will replace the need for well informed views.

    I'm curious how many defending these polls would say that a poll in Cuba, were US troops to move out of Gitmo and occupy the country, then refuse any international observers in had any validity. I don't think it takes much thought to see they would be the most up in arms about such an action. And yet it's everyone else who is the "hypocrite" .


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    First Up wrote: »
    Well a poll in 2008 showed 65% support for joining (sorry - re-joining) Russia but the one that mattered was last week's.

    Even if it were the case that a majority supported joining Russia, this particular poll was a complete fraud to anyone with an eye towards reality. I'm going to go ahead and assume that anyone who believes it is completely free and fair does not have a "neutral" view towards the West in general and the US in particular. That should set alarm bells ringing to anyone on the lookout for bias.

    Regardless, far more is needed for a poll to be legitimate than "most people voted for it". This is always the case, the other criteria only dissapears when the observers desperately want it to be so, dictated by their politics.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    SamHarris wrote: »
    As regards the poll there is only one reason a state would not allow international observers. The amount of people that voted in the capitol was 4 times more than THE POPULATION, that is to say many times more the voting base.

    It is laughable how often the people to first start scoffing at others being "American stooges" or "faux news" viewers are the first to swallow hook line and sinker any statement from the Kremlin, then quickly switch to RT to get the "truth". As though the definition of what is true is the news that best aligns with how they believe the world should be. They are exactly the same people as the worst fox news viewers, exactly the same failures in critical thinking with added arrogance, that they somehow hope will replace the need for well informed views.

    I'm curious how many defending these polls would say that a poll in Cuba, were US troops to move out of Gitmo and occupy the country, then refuse any international observers in had any validity. I don't think it takes much thought to see they would be the most up in arms about such an action. And yet it's everyone else who is the "hypocrite" .

    The OSCE was invited. They declined.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    SamHarris wrote: »
    It's terribly ironic that the people that hate the US the most take it's actions (often cherry picked from it's worst and distant past) is the line everyone else should toe to be moral. Of course I'm sure if it were an action from a Western state that were being defended here there would be a very different tune if someone tried to use

    Also pretty ironic that the people that seem to get most worked up about America's "hypocrisy" are often the most hypocritical themselves in their evaluation of international event. If they, as an individual, can barely keep the same opinion about similar events why would a nation constituting hundreds of millions of people, over multiple administrations find it possible, much less feasible.

    Further, why is any other states "hypocrisy" any less evident? It's very strange to me that people who seem to want to hate the US/American's the most, to the point of seeing CIA agents under their bed, hold them to a far higher standard than they would dare hold even our own country, let alone a place like Russia.

    Most of the anti-Americanism is not real. It's mostly a debating tactic.

    I'm fairly sure it's down to cultural misunderstanding/isolation on behalf of the Kremlin bots*.

    They have as little grasp on Irish mentality as we have on Uzbek mentality.
    They don't understand about our own irredentist claims or about our neutrality.

    They assume that the way to argue with Irish people is as a rival - as part of 'The West!', the same as they would argue with an American.

    They don't understand that we do not even conceive of ourselves as rivals, with the EU or without it.
    Or that Irish people don't have a jingoistic bone in our bodies. Actually culturally we're quite similar to the Russians in many ways, but without the jingoism/xenophobia.

    They cannot understand that what we care about is the law, fairness, justice - Or why that would matter to a small and defenseless country like ours.


    So you get a lot of really weird arguments that could bait an American or a Brit, but just seem completely silly to us.


    *I'm not accusing anyone of being a Kremlin bot - but it's pretty obvious they are operating on Boards.ie

    http://www.sptimes.ru/story/38052
    http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/asia/article3891720.ece


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    SamHarris wrote: »
    As regards the poll there is only one reason a state would not allow international observers. The amount of people that voted in the capitol was 4 times more than THE POPULATION, that is to say many times more the voting base.

    It is laughable how often the people to first start scoffing at others being "American stooges" or "faux news" viewers are the first to swallow hook line and sinker any statement from the Kremlin, then quickly switch to RT to get the "truth". As though the definition of what is true is the news that best aligns with how they believe the world should be. They are exactly the same people as the worst fox news viewers, exactly the same failures in critical thinking with added arrogance, that they somehow hope will replace the need for well informed views.

    I'm curious how many defending these polls would say that a poll in Cuba, were US troops to move out of Gitmo and occupy the country, then refuse any international observers in had any validity. I don't think it takes much thought to see they would be the most up in arms about such an action. And yet it's everyone else who is the "hypocrite" .


    Where did you get your four times the population figure? A complete and utter fabrication.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    That's not correct -

    Option 2 on the ballot paper explicitly revokes Your First option a) Remain as an autonomous region within Ukraine......
    How does Option 2 revoke the idea of "an autonomous region within Ukraine" ??
    The '92 constitution describes an autonomous republic within Ukraine.
    On 5 May 1992 parliament declared Crimea independent (which was yet to be approved by a referendum to be held 2 August 1992) and passed the first Crimean constitution the same day. On 6 May 1992 the same parliament inserted a new sentence into this constitution that declared that Crimea was part of Ukraine. On 13 May 1992 the Verkhovna Rada (the Ukrainian parliament) annulled Crimea's independence declaration and gave its Crimean counterpart one week to do the same. In June 1992 the parties reached a compromise and Crimea was given the status of "Autonomous Republic".
    From wiki.
    So they were forced to retract their Declaration of Independence, and they accepted being an "autonomous" region instead. The amended '92 constitution applied then.
    Option 2 on the ballot paper refers to this. In case their was any doubt (considering there was an amendment to that constitution) the ballot paper specifically includes the words "a part of Ukraine". Which you translated for us.
    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    You're assuming that Option 2 offers membership of Ukraine under the 98 constitution (the status quo).
    Unfortunately, it explicitly says part of the Ukraine under the 92 constitution.
    No, I am not assuming that. The '98 constitution does not offer autonomy. It forbids Crimea from having different laws to Ukraine.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    First Up wrote: »
    The OSCE was invited. They declined.

    No, the OCSE wasn't invited. Territories of a country have no legal authority to invite them nor do the OCSE have a legal basis to either accept or decline such an illegal attempt to involve them in an illegal action in one of their member countries.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    recedite wrote: »
    How does Option 2 revoke the idea of "an autonomous region within Ukraine" ??
    The '92 constitution describes an autonomous republic within Ukraine.

    You actually answer this yourself in the following section:
    From wiki.
    So they were forced to retract their Declaration of Independence, and they accepted being an "autonomous" region instead.

    In June 1992 the parties reached a compromise and Crimea was given the status of "Autonomous Republic"

    May 1994. The Crimean parliament voted to restore the May 1992 Constitution.


    Further reading, if you're interested:
    http://books.google.ie/books?id=i1C2MHgujb4C&pg=PA194&dq=26+February+1992++Crimean+constitution&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=b1RUUaWcMMGxPPibgagD&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=26%20February%201992%20%20Crimean%20constitution&f=false

    No, I am not assuming that. The '98 constitution does not offer autonomy. It forbids Crimea from having different laws to Ukraine.

    "After an interim constitution lasting from 4 April 1996 to 23 December 1998, the current constitution was put into effect, changing the territory's name to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea."

    The constitution of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Ukrainian: Конституція Автономної Республіки Крим; Russian: Конституция Автономной Республики Крым) is the basic law of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, a republic within southern Ukraine. The constitution establishes the republic's status and authority within Ukraine. It grants Crimea the right to draft a budget and manage its own property.[1]


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    recedite wrote: »
    The '98 constitution does not offer autonomy. It forbids Crimea from having different laws to Ukraine.

    So, did the Crimean parliament vote in favour of this constitution? YES.

    Have they operated in Crimea under this constitution for over 15 years? YES.

    Did the local or general election results in Crimea show strong support for a regional separatist or pro-Russian unification? NO.

    How many seats did the pro-Russian unification party achieve in the last election there? 3/100.

    Who did the Crimeans tend to vote for? Well, they were so disaffected, they voted for the largest party in the Ukrainian parliament (the one most Ukrainians voted for).

    Who formed the government in Crimea before this external intervention? The largest Ukrainian party, the one the Crimeans largely voted for.

    Who formed the government in Crimea after the external intervention?? That small pro-Russian unification party, the one the Crimeans largely did NOT vote for.

    Oh, and whatever happened to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea? Well, it no longer exists as it that small pro-Russian unification party voted to abolish their autonomy as soon as they could.

    So, so much for the "deep concern" for Crimea's autonomy.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    First Up wrote: »
    Where did you get your four times the population figure? A complete and utter fabrication.

    In this debate by the notoriously pro-Western Washington mouth piece al Jazeera.

    And to whoever it was that said external monitors were invited, no, your wrong. That people are still convinced by many nations "elections" and "referendums" is laughable. Either they are incredibly naive or basically are convinced that the world is what they want it to be - I have a feeling they are the same type that concoct incredibly contrived conspiracy theories to explain any event that does not jive with how they usually think things should go down.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    SamHarris wrote: »
    In this debate by the notoriously pro-Western Washington mouth piece al Jazeera.

    And to whoever it was that said external monitors were invited, no, your wrong. That people are still convinced by many nations "elections" and "referendums" is laughable. Either they are incredibly naive or basically are convinced that the world is what they want it to be - I have a feeling they are the same type that concoct incredibly contrived conspiracy theories to explain any event that does not jive with how they usually think things should go down.

    Al Jazeera said nothing of the sort. They are reporting the same figures a everyone else - turnout of 83%, yes vote of 96%. There was a brief period of a few hours during which the ITAR TASS news agency got their sums wrong and made it look like the numbers were bigger than they were (123%). It was quickly amended but of course this was seized upon by those anxious to deny reality.
    An invitation to send election observers was issued to the Swiss OSCE office (current chair) and was declined.
    If you want to see a good, balanced and informed background piece on what brought Crimea to where it is, have another look at Al Jazeera. But warning - it contains facts.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    First Up wrote: »
    Al Jazeera said nothing of the sort. They are reporting the same figures a everyone else - turnout of 83%, yes vote of 96%. There was a brief period of a few hours during which the ITAR TASS news agency got their sums wrong and made it look like the numbers were bigger than they were (123%). It was quickly amended but of course this was seized upon by those anxious to deny reality.
    An invitation to send election observers was issued to the Swiss OSCE office (current chair) and was declined.
    If you want to see a good, balanced and informed background piece on what brought Crimea to where it is, have another look at Al Jazeera. But warning - it contains facts.

    Whatever, it was in a round table discussion on the legality of the occupation (everyone agreed it and the referendum were entirely illegal and invalid) but honestly I couldn't care enough to dig it up for you. The "warning - it contains facts." tells me everything I need to know about the attitude you would have discussing anything with you. Believe what you want, I'll wait for someone more interesting and adult to debate this with.

    Given that it is the policy of those observers not to attend what it views as illegal referendums and that this was known by the Crimean authorities before the invitation was extended makes the entire exercise patently a smokescreen. I honestly thought the ham fisted attempts by the Russian government to create a veneer of authenticity to this entire episode were so transparent as to be laughable. Looks like the usual type swallowed it all hook line and sinker. I would ask if you still think those many thousands of armed men with APCs are spontaneous "Self defense" groups, but I don't even want to know the answer.

    Just in the future, the strategy you attempted here, common among various conspiracy theorist proponents, of forcing a scoffing attitude at those that have the temerity to point out the massive fallacies in their arguments, in place of actually having something substantive to say beside "Watch the news", doesn't fool anyone past the age of 16.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    In June 1992 the parties reached a compromise and Crimea was given the status of "Autonomous Republic"
    Further reading, if you're interested:
    http://books.google.ie/books?id=i1C2MHgujb4C&pg=PA194&dq=26+February+1992++Crimean+constitution&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=b1RUUaWcMMGxPPibgagD&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=26%20February%201992%20%20Crimean%20constitution&f=false
    "After an interim constitution lasting from 4 April 1996 to 23 December 1998, the current constitution was put into effect, changing the territory's name to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea....
    "The constitution establishes the republic's status and authority within Ukraine. It grants Crimea the right to draft a budget and manage its own property.[1]

    If we can just focus in on that period in June 1992, which is the "restore point" offered to the people in this recent referendum.
    The declaration of independence has just been withdrawn (under duress), and an amendment to the constitution affirms that Crimea is "a part of Ukraine".

    Are you saying that the situation pertaining then was not actually compatible with Crimea being in Ukraine, because the constitution made it effectively an independent state, despite the wording of the amendment?

    Your link has some interesting comment on this very point;
    "...The parliament inserted a new sentence into the new constitution to the effect that the Crimean republic is a constituent part of the Ukrainian republic. The relationship between the two independent republics, the one contained in the other, should in the view of the legislators have been based both on treaty and various agreements. This position was no less paradoxical than the Ukrainian concept of Ukraine as a unitary state containing an autonomous formation.."


    And in conclusion he acknowledges
    "The different roles played by the 14th Army and the Black Sea Navy"....but... "the peaceful containment of the Crimean conflict up to the time of writing seems to owe much to sheer good luck."

    I think we can safely say now, with the benefit of hindsight, that it was the powerful Russian military presence that has prevented the region from descending into anarchy and civil war, and not “sheer good luck” at all.

    The whole concept of an autonomous free state within another state, is somewhat paradoxical, but it can go as far as the two parties want it to go. For example Australia today functions much as an independent republic, yet is still technically subject to the British Crown. The "danger" of allowing an autonomous region that kind of freedom is that they can declare full independence at any time. As the Irish Free State did in 1937. By then, they are so used to independent actions that it becomes too late to influence or stop them.


    And on that '98 constitution, those powers to manage a budget and own property are what we would give to a county council here.

    So the idea of that constitution being the legal basis for the "Autonomous Republic of Crimea" is equally paradoxical, as was pointed out by the author above.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    Would another example of a free state within a state not be, for example, the Native American states with the US or the First Nations regions in Canada (not sure how much autonomy the second has)? There seems to be many forms in which it can take.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    SamHarris wrote: »
    Whatever, it was in a round table discussion on the legality of the occupation (everyone agreed it and the referendum were entirely illegal and invalid) but honestly I couldn't care enough to dig it up for you. The "warning - it contains facts." tells me everything I need to know about the attitude you would have discussing anything with you. Believe what you want, I'll wait for someone more interesting and adult to debate this with.

    Given that it is the policy of those observers not to attend what it views as illegal referendums and that this was known by the Crimean authorities before the invitation was extended makes the entire exercise patently a smokescreen. I honestly thought the ham fisted attempts by the Russian government to create a veneer of authenticity to this entire episode were so transparent as to be laughable. Looks like the usual type swallowed it all hook line and sinker. I would ask if you still think those many thousands of armed men with APCs are spontaneous "Self defense" groups, but I don't even want to know the answer.

    Just in the future, the strategy you attempted here, common among various conspiracy theorist proponents, of forcing a scoffing attitude at those that have the temerity to point out the massive fallacies in their arguments, in place of actually having something substantive to say beside "Watch the news", doesn't fool anyone past the age of 16.


    I'll take that as a retraction then.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    First Up wrote: »
    I'll take that as a retraction then.

    I'm sure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,797 ✭✭✭✭hatrickpatrick


    View wrote: »
    So, did the Crimean parliament vote in favour of this constitution? YES.

    Have they operated in Crimea under this constitution for over 15 years? YES.

    Did the local or general election results in Crimea show strong support for a regional separatist or pro-Russian unification? NO.

    How many seats did the pro-Russian unification party achieve in the last election there? 3/100.

    Who did the Crimeans tend to vote for? Well, they were so disaffected, they voted for the largest party in the Ukrainian parliament (the one most Ukrainians voted for).

    Who formed the government in Crimea before this external intervention? The largest Ukrainian party, the one the Crimeans largely voted for.

    Who formed the government in Crimea after the external intervention?? That small pro-Russian unification party, the one the Crimeans largely did NOT vote for.

    Oh, and whatever happened to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea? Well, it no longer exists as it that small pro-Russian unification party voted to abolish their autonomy as soon as they could.

    So, so much for the "deep concern" for Crimea's autonomy.

    And yet in a referendum, they voted overwhelmingly to join Russia, overwhelmingly enough to pretty much ensure they'd still have won even without the various reasons put forth for this vote to be considered as being held under duress or anything like that.

    So your post, if anything, illustrates how representative democracy is a pretty bad marker of what the people actually want, in a lot of cases. The issue of course is that pro-unification politicians might not have been elected because of other, unrelated policies they have. The "mixed bag" nature of parliamentary representation is always going to mean that who does and doesn't get elected isn't a good marker of what the people do and do not want.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,996 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    Einhard wrote: »
    It's pretty disturbing when people are willing to turn a blind eye to, or excuse, or obfuscate wrongs simply because it fits their world view. Wrong is wrong- American policy or hypocrisy or whatever shouldn't come into it.

    Correct, but i note some of the very people thanking your post go out of their way to excuse wrongdoing by America because it fits their world view;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,753 ✭✭✭comongethappy


    Correct, but i note some of the very people thanking your post go out of their way to excuse wrongdoing by America because it fits their world view;)

    Prove that.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,996 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    Prove that.

    ok. do you believe American foreign policy is littered with shameful episodes?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 785 ✭✭✭ILikeBananas


    First Up wrote: »
    That still doesn't explain why 83% of the electorate voted 96-4 to join Russia.

    There doesn't seem to have been much scrutiny of these figures but even a basic analysis of Crimea's demographics would show that these figures have been "rounded up" significantly.

    Firstly the Crimean Tatars, who comprise 12% of the population of Crimea, boycotted the vote. So that would mean to get an 83% overall turnout there would need to have been a 94% turnout amongst the remainder of the population to make up for the absent Tatars.

    This might actually have been possible if the rest of the population was 100% ethnic russian but in reality 30% of them were ethnic Ukranians who were either going to abstain or vote against joining russia.


    So in reality I suspect that although the 96% figure may have been accurate to achieve that value the actual turnout was probably nearer to 50%. Of course that's not that impressive sounding so hence the 80% figure that was announced.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    There doesn't seem to have been much scrutiny of these figures but even a basic analysis of Crimea's demographics would show that these figures have been "rounded up" significantly.

    Firstly the Crimean Tatars, who comprise 12% of the population of Crimea, boycotted the vote. So that would mean to get an 83% overall turnout there would need to have been a 94% turnout amongst the remainder of the population to make up for the absent Tatars.

    This might actually have been possible if the rest of the population was 100% ethnic russian but in reality 30% of them were ethnic Ukranians who were either going to abstain or vote against joining russia.


    So in reality I suspect that although the 96% figure may have been accurate to achieve that value the actual turnout was probably nearer to 50%. Of course that's not that impressive sounding so hence the 80% figure that was announced.

    For whatever reason the people who want to see all this as perfectly normal and right will be the type to "forget" that the vast majority of elections all over the world mean little or nothing every year, and that given the complete absence of any oversight on this particular poll (why not allow it unless you were planning something?) gives us no reason to believe it is in any way different.

    It wouldnt matter if pictures came out of people filling out the form with a gun to their head, the people still determined to see this as legitimate always will(despite how many of them even now complain how the US is evil for invading other states, almost in the midst of saying how different this is, barely able to contain themselves for a paragraph to not display the hypocrisy they feel so slighted by in others).

    Or at least say they do. The unchanging narrative (that we can all guess at) that they have for world affairs demands it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    ok. do you believe American foreign policy is littered with shameful episodes?

    Hmmm before he answers I'm curious is invading another state a shameful episode or does it really depend :rolleyes: ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,753 ✭✭✭comongethappy


    ok. do you believe American foreign policy is littered with shameful episodes?

    Yes.

    Next!


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,633 ✭✭✭SamHarris


    Yes.

    Next!

    I think he was meant to address a point you made with that.

    No more or less shameful than any other state I know a lot about over the last 250 years. We are talking about a time that includes the Belgian Congo.

    I have a feeling people think that the US has a specially nefarious history because they know more about it. I'm afraid this has more to do with people watching too much TV than with any factual information. A good example of this would be slavery - I would not doubt at all that the vast majority of Irish people think the US experience with it was particularly special - maybe the last to ban it or the only Western state to engage. It's sad that only the countries that bother to remember the wrongs of it's past get reminded of it by others, for example far more people would be aware of Germany's Nazi past than the very similar death toll taken by the Japanese in the same period. Not least because Germans engage with it in a far more direct level. By the same token I notice many Irish people who tut at the imperial past of many European countries deign not to remember Ireland was just as involved as part of the UK, up to and including things like the scramble for Africa.

    My ultimate point being nacho libre is grasping at straws and does not have a point himself. This entire thread has been a bunch of "But what about..." from people defending Russia. Not one cogent argument only engaging with the event itself. More proof, if proof were needed that for the vast majority of them are basing this entirely on the most petty of politics, not the tiny hook of "right and wrong" they would desperately like to.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    recedite wrote: »
    If we can just focus in on that period in June 1992, which is the "restore point" offered to the people in this recent referendum.

    Do you have a source for that?

    I don't understand how it would be possible to restore the June '92 arrangement...Ukraine has operated on a new constitution since 12th June 1999. That Ukrainian constitution was abolished on the 17th March '95.

    Did Ukraine also agree to restore their previous constitution to facilitate Crimea?
    I've never heard of any of this before.
    Can you provide a source for these claims please?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,797 ✭✭✭✭hatrickpatrick


    This might actually have been possible if the rest of the population was 100% ethnic russian but in reality 30% of them were ethnic Ukranians who were either going to abstain or vote against joining russia.

    One slight issue with this - you're assuming that people who are ethnic Ukrainian and/or have a background which would suggest being anti-unification are automatically going to vote no without considering other factors. For example, and this is just hypothetical so don't accuse me of being unpatriotic, morally and ideologically if I lived in Northern Ireland I'd be 100% in favour of living in a United Ireland, but being honest if a poll was held tomorrow to that effect there's no way I'd vote yes in it. Regardless of my ideological feelings on it, pragmatically it'd be fairly insane to vote in favour of joining a country until it's got its ridiculous financial crises in order to some extent.

    That's just one example - I'm sure there are plenty more - of why the "You're ethnically X, so you must obviously be voting in favour of Y" argument is flawed. Just because someone belongs to a demographic which has reasons for voting in a particular direction, doesn't necessarily mean that individual will vote that way.

    In fact, am I not correct in thinking that when NI in fact had a referendum on re-unification during the Troubles, the result was so overwhelmingly against that one had to consider that some nationalists voted against, as well as unionists? I'd assume this was due to not wanting to deal with the inevitable eruption of hostilities and extremism if re-unification had happened in the midst of everything that was going on, although I'm sure there were other reasons at the time. Point is, you can't really infer anything about how someone will vote based on their background.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    http://www.russia-direct.org/content/assessing-cost-crimea
    As above, wages and pensions doubled overnight, which makes it probable that at least some Russian speaking ethnic Ukranians would have voted to join Russia.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 12,813 Mod ✭✭✭✭riffmongous


    It does work both ways though surely, would every single ethnic russian want to rejoin russia? I doubt it.

    All the more reason why it's a pity we didnt get a legitimate referendum to find out.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,439 ✭✭✭Richard


    In fact, am I not correct in thinking that when NI in fact had a referendum on re-unification during the Troubles, the result was so overwhelmingly against that one had to consider that some nationalists voted against, as well as unionists? I'd assume this was due to not wanting to deal with the inevitable eruption of hostilities and extremism if re-unification had happened in the midst of everything that was going on, although I'm sure there were other reasons at the time. Point is, you can't really infer anything about how someone will vote based on their background.

    That's true, and you may well be right about some nationalists voting for the status quo in that 70s referendum, although the overwhelming pro-union vote was also largely due to a boycott by nationalist parties.

    But that referendum was an example of exactly when NOT to carry one out. The situation with NI then and Crimea now are VERY different, but carrying out a referendum on the future of a region when there are armed groups involved is never going to end well.

    Russia could have has what they wanted without all their muscle-flexing. I suspect that Putin just enjoys it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    For example, and this is just hypothetical so don't accuse me of being unpatriotic, morally and ideologically if I lived in Northern Ireland I'd be 100% in favour of living in a United Ireland, but being honest if a poll was held tomorrow to that effect there's no way I'd vote yes in it.

    In fact there's excellent and fairly consistent polling evidence that many, many people who are "from a Nationalist (or Republican) background", and who furthermore vote for parties that advocate a united Ireland, levels of support for immediate union is actually very, very patchy. (Gerry Adams calling for a "border poll" is great politics... up to the point he gets one.) So your caveats about similar inference from ethnicity and language in Crimea are well-taken.

    Mind you, the same might be said for extrapolations from past voting for Ukraine-wide political parties...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    Do you have a source for that?
    My Cyrillic and East Slavic is pretty ropy, but happily "1992" is on the ballot paper in good old-fashioned arabic numerals.
    I don't understand how it would be possible to restore the June '92 arrangement...[...]

    Did Ukraine also agree to restore their previous constitution to facilitate Crimea?
    I think you're conflating "possible" and "to Ukraine's liking". Had the vote been in favour of that option, it would have essentially been a "unilateral declaration of autonomy". Presumably there would have then been some sort of negotiation about what sort of change of status was acceptable to Kyiv -- with what level of good faith on either side is a matter for hypothetical debate and counterfactual speculation.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,224 ✭✭✭alaimacerc


    djpbarry wrote: »
    Who has objected to Crimean self-determination in principle?
    Well, many people -- including the very person I was responding to, rather to the point. And the EU, the US... If someone is using Ukrainian law and the Ukrainian constitution to argue that referendum is "illegal", and that's the be-all-and-end-all of the "legitimacy" thereof, then they're explicitly arguing that territorial integrity trumps self-determination. (Whether with any degree of consistency or merely in this instance doubtless varying between the various people saying this.)

    Of course, which principle should be paramount in which case is a pretty thorny question.
    And you’re accusing others of constructing straw men?
    You're darn' tootin'.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,142 ✭✭✭Eggy Baby!


    How many seats did the pro-Russian unification party achieve in the last election there? 3/100.

    Who did the Crimeans tend to vote for? Well, they were so disaffected, they voted for the largest party in the Ukrainian parliament (the one most Ukrainians voted for).

    Aka "tactical voting"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    Eggy Baby! wrote: »
    Aka "tactical voting"

    How many Crimeans voted to leave Russia and join Ukraine in 1954?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    Eggy Baby! wrote: »
    Aka "tactical voting"

    Ukraine uses PR voting. Their system is like Germany's in that 50% of seats are allocated based on votes cast for a party list, 50% of seats are based on votes cast for individual candidates ominated by the parties. That mixed PR system is regarded by political scientist as being fairer (more proportional to the voters' wishes) than our PR-STV.

    Certainly, with the party list vote, there is no reason whatsoever for a voter not to vote for the party they prefer most.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    First Up wrote: »
    How many Crimeans voted to leave Russia and join Ukraine in 1954?

    A very stupid argument since Crimeans were never given a vote joining Russia in the first place, were they?

    Nobody has ever voted to join Russia in a free and fair vote and nobody, who was "joined" to Russia, has ever voted their way out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    View wrote: »
    A very stupid argument since Crimeans were never given a vote joining Russia in the first place, were they?

    Nobody has ever voted to join Russia in a free and fair vote and nobody, who was "joined" to Russia, has ever voted their way out.

    It was a question. To answer yours, I'm not familiar with the details of the 1783 incorporation of Crimea into the Russian empire, other than that it happened at the expense of the Ottoman empire which in turn had grabbed it from the Genoese (or was it the Venetians?) a few hundred years before that.
    Seems to me that the recent referendum was the first time anyone asked the Crimeans their opinion. Has to be worth something.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,142 ✭✭✭Eggy Baby!


    View wrote: »
    Ukraine uses PR voting. Their system is like Germany's in that 50% of seats are allocated based on votes cast for a party list, 50% of seats are based on votes cast for individual candidates ominated by the parties. That mixed PR system is regarded by political scientist as being fairer (more proportional to the voters' wishes) than our PR-STV.

    Certainly, with the party list vote, there is no reason whatsoever for a voter not to vote for the party they prefer most.
    Two pieces of evidence are typically wheeled out in support for this (i.e the statement that most Crimeans don't support independence): The fact that the Crimean PM Aksynov’s Russian Unity Party only achieved 4% in the 2010 elections in Crimea, and a February 8-18 poll showing that only 41% of Crimeans supported union with Russia.

    The rejoinder to the former is easy – tactical voting. An outfit such as the Russian Unity Party would have no chance at the all-Ukraine level, so pro-Russian Crimeans understandably voted for the Party of Regions. And overwhelmingly so.

    Regarding the poll numbers:
    First, 41% is a very substantial share of the population, and clearly enough to justify a referendum. Most polls show lower support for Scottish independence, and yet they are going through with it. The referendum that split Montenegro from Serbia succeeded by the lowest of margins.

    Second, the political situation has changed cardinally since mid-February. The President that Crimeans overwhelmingly voted for has since been overthrown in an unconstitutional coup, and power has been parceled out between Batkivschina and the fascist Svoboda party. Instead of maintaining the status quo until the elections – a not unreasonable expectation of an unelected transition government – they have instead pushed to roll back the Russian language, “lustrate” Party of Regions officials, appoint oligarchs to rule the restive eastern provinces, and formalize the status of Right Sector – the armed wing of Svoboda – as a paramilitary force. At the same time, Russian intervention has transformed the prospect of joining Russia from a pipedream held by Soviet nostalgics to a real choice on a paper ballot. In these circumstances, it is almost certain that support for Crimean secession has gone up.

    http://darussophile.com/2014/03/five-myths-about-the-crimean-referendum/#more-11213 (See number 4).

    (Note that support for Scottish independence is currently at 39% and, as the commentator states above, they are still going through with it. Even though the Scottish referendum is, admittedly, being done in a much more orderly manner because the situation does not demand expediency).

    http://sevastopolnews.info/2014/03/lenta/sobytiya/069216409/

    In cyrillic, but I believe that the picture attached to the article speaks for itself. The date is the 12th of March and poll numbers read 80% or thereabouts as pro-Russian. Limited translation would be appreciated.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    alaimacerc wrote: »
    My Cyrillic and East Slavic is pretty ropy, but happily "1992" is on the ballot paper in good old-fashioned arabic numerals.

    Is 'June' 1992 on the ballot paper? In any language?

    Recedite has been unable to provide a source to back up that claim.
    Can you?

    No. So the point stands.

    May 1992, independence, was on offer.
    Therefore, there was no Status Quo option, and therefore, no option to vote 'No'.

    Unless you can provide evidence that June 1992 was on offer, then the debate is closed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,797 ✭✭✭✭hatrickpatrick


    SamHarris wrote: »
    I have a feeling people think that the US has a specially nefarious history because they know more about it.

    This is just my own opinion, but the reason I have more of a problem with the US' nefarious episodes is because of US leaders being insufferable hypocrites publicly. Most countries had nefarious episodes in their past (and many in their present), most of these countries do not trumpet their righteousness and demand that the entire world bend to their desires of how it should be run. Most other countries don't go around saying "This sovereign independent country isn't being run the way we want it to be run, let's have its government killed or locked up and force a regime which we like to be installed instead".

    Just my two cents. The reason people hold the US to a higher standard is because the US claims to hold the moral high ground on literally every issue internationally. When you put yourself in that position, you invite far greater scrutiny and criticism of your actions than others.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,142 ✭✭✭Eggy Baby!


    This is just my own opinion, but the reason I have more of a problem with the US' nefarious episodes is because of US leaders being insufferable hypocrites publicly. Most countries had nefarious episodes in their past (and many in their present), most of these countries do not trumpet their righteousness and demand that the entire world bend to their desires of how it should be run. Most other countries don't go around saying "This sovereign independent country isn't being run the way we want it to be run, let's have its government killed or locked up and force a regime which we like to be installed instead".

    Just my two cents. The reason people hold the US to a higher standard is because the US claims to hold the moral high ground on literally every issue internationally. When you put yourself in that position, you invite far greater scrutiny and criticism of your actions than others.

    Agree with the above, except that the US behaves arrogantly in an objective sense. I don't personally hold the USA in any higher regard than I do, say the UK. The USA is just in a special historical position because it is immensely powerful and business guides foreign policy so much. Plus, because of historical events, the US government sees its role as shaping the world in its image (not necessarily a democratic image).


  • Registered Users Posts: 544 ✭✭✭czx


    Just my two cents. The reason people hold the US to a higher standard is because the US claims to hold the moral high ground on literally every issue internationally. When you put yourself in that position, you invite far greater scrutiny and criticism of your actions than others.

    That really is a terrible way to view international affairs. It is particularly damaging when it allows the actions of other countries to fly under the radar.

    Just because a country claims the moral high ground doesn't mean they should face any more or less criticism. You should be discerning enough to recognise what's wrong is wrong and hold every country to the same standard.

    Also, pretty much every country on earth believes they hold the moral high ground, so nothing new there


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    Do you have a source for that?
    Did Ukraine also agree to restore their previous constitution to facilitate Crimea?
    I've never heard of any of this before.
    Can you provide a source for these claims please?
    What's written on the ballot paper is the source. We are only talking about restoring the 1992 Crimean constitution, written in Crimea for Crimea.
    Yes you are right, if the Crimeans had voted for that particular restore point ( the 1992 autonomous republic under Ukraine) then Ukraine would have had to revisit the general Ukraine constitution (which of course would still consider the Crimean referendum to be illegal). They (Ukraine) would have to put in an amendment to say that the 1992 Crimean constitution is legally binding on the autonomous Crimea region of Ukraine. But as the Crimeans voted for the "join Russia" option instead, that is a moot point. It is the Russians who are modifying their laws now to incorporate the new reality of Crimea.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    recedite wrote: »
    What's written on the ballot paper is the source. We are only talking about restoring the 1992 Crimean constitution, written in Crimea for Crimea.
    Yes you are right, if the Crimeans had voted for that particular restore point ( the 1992 autonomous republic under Ukraine) then Ukraine would have had to revisit the general Ukraine constitution (which of course would still consider the Crimean referendum to be illegal). They (Ukraine) would have to put in an amendment to say that the 1992 Crimean constitution is legally binding on the autonomous Crimea region of Ukraine. But as the Crimeans voted for the "join Russia" option instead, that is a moot point. It is the Russians who are modifying their laws now to incorporate the new reality of Crimea.

    It is a moot point, you're quite right.

    But you said
    recedite wrote:
    I really can't see how anyone can say that is a "Yes and Yes" choice.

    Now it's clear how it could be perceived as a Yes and Yes choice.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    .

    This is just my own opinion, but the reason I have more of a problem with the US' nefarious episodes is because of US leaders being insufferable hypocrites publicly. Most countries had nefarious episodes in their past (and many in their present), most of these countries do not trumpet their righteousness and demand that the entire world bend to their desires of how it should be run. Most other countries don't go around saying "This sovereign independent country isn't being run the way we want it to be run, let's have its government killed or locked up and force a regime which we like to be installed instead".

    Just my two cents. The reason people hold the US to a higher standard is because the US claims to hold the moral high ground on literally every issue internationally. When you put yourself in that position, you invite far greater scrutiny and criticism of your actions than others.


    Very strange. Let us say that on a scale of 1 to 10 of high standards, the pedestal the US puts itself on is 10 and that it falls short in reality and is only an 8.

    A country that aspires to be a low standard 5 and stays a 5 is subject to less criticism from you because they are not hypocrites. As I say very strange.

    The US is governed and run to a higher standard and with more respect for human rights than any of China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia or Syria. Yet some of you can't even see that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    Godge wrote: »
    Very strange. Let us say that on a scale of 1 to 10 of high standards, the pedestal the US puts itself on is 10 and that it falls short in reality and is only an 8.

    A country that aspires to be a low standard 5 and stays a 5 is subject to less criticism from you because they are not hypocrites. As I say very strange.

    The US is governed and run to a higher standard and with more respect for human rights than any of China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia or Syria. Yet some of you can't even see that.

    What country "aspires to be a low standard"? How countries run themselves, under whatever political, cultural, religious or governance system they chose is essentially their own business. You can have whatever opinion you like of how they do things but interfering in it is a different matter. That applies just as much to the US as it does to Russia or anyone else.

    The US's track record in liberating (i.e interfering in) others is not exactly stellar and it's list is as long as anyone's.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    First Up wrote: »
    Seems to me that the recent referendum was the first time anyone asked the Crimeans their opinion. Has to be worth something.

    They have ample elections in which to give a pro-Russian unification party (or parties) a majority if they were interested in doing so, they have not done so.

    A referendum has to be free and fair to be worth something. The one in Crimea wasn't.

    How many members of the Council of Europe accept the referendum was either held according to best practice OR was free and fair?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,872 ✭✭✭View


    Eggy Baby! wrote: »
    The rejoinder to the former is easy – tactical voting. An outfit such as the Russian Unity Party would have no chance at the all-Ukraine level, so pro-Russian Crimeans understandably voted for the Party of Regions. And overwhelmingly so.

    The Russian Unity party got 3 seats out of 100 in the CRIMEAN parliament.

    Russian Crimeans did NOT vote for them in the CRIMEA only elections (except in derisory numbers).

    It would appear that "tactical voting" by Russian Crimeans is a euphemism for "rather embarassingly for Russia, they did not vote unification with Russia".


  • Advertisement
Advertisement