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Well, hello and welcome, dear listener.

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This is the Iron Fist and the Velvet Glove podcast, a little special episode for you.

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Normally this is a podcast where we have a panel and we talk about news and politics

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and sex and religion, all the things that you're not supposed to talk about.

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On this occasion, we're going to talk about the Ukraine.

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And of course, everybody is talking about the Ukraine.

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So that's, uh, we're allowed to do that.

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I, of course, am Trevor, AKA the Iron Fist.

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Uh, with me as always, Joe, the tech guy.

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And, and also, special guest is Ed.

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Welcome aboard, Ed.

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Hi, Trevor.

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Hi, Joe.

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So it's good to have Ed here because I was on the podcast with Cam

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Riley and after that he was getting feedback from different listeners.

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One of whom was Ed, who was writing some emails.

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And turns out Ed, uh, was born in Russia, lived most of his life, uh, early years

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until 25 in the Ukraine slash Russia.

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He'll explain more about that.

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And has been living in Australia down in Melbourne, so he's got a pretty good

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perspective of the Russian Ukrainian border because he lived there, um, until

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about 25 and so he's got family and friends on both sides of the border and

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he's here in Australia been observing what's been going on over there and

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I thought what a good opportunity to have Ed on and just um, tell us stuff

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that we don't know about the Ukraine, about Russia and all the rest of it.

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So.

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So, Ed, without any further ado, why don't you tell us, sort of, just your personal

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background of where you grew up, how long for, and just so people get a genuine

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impression that you actually know a little bit about the area that you grew up in?

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Uh, look, I was born, uh, I was born in Russia, but, uh, Pretty close to

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the border of Ukraine, as I said, so my mom's from, uh, from the place

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which is pretty close to Kharkiv, uh,

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News now.

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Oh, yeah, okay, yeah, that's, you know, north.

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Yep, East, uh, from the Russian side, and my dad's, uh, my dad's family

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are from Taganrog, which is, uh, sort of, uh, pretty close to, uh, okay,

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what do you have there on the map?

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So it's, it's Southeast, uh, sort of right, sea of Azov there, north

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of Crimea, that's, that's, yeah.

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Yeah, that way.

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Both places, uh.

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Um, I checked within 50k's or thereabouts, you know, 60k's off the border.

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So, obviously, we have family on both sides.

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My immediate family now, my mum and dad are in Russia now, but I have cousins,

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second cousins in Ukraine, Karakiv.

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And my wife, who's also Russian Ukrainian, you know, 50 50, uh,

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she's got some And we're in Kiev now, so we're in touch with them.

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But, look, and I always lived in these two places pretty much,

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uh, you know, spending summer.

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When I was a kid, I guess I was more out there than my mom's.

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Relatives and, uh, you know, my grandma, grandpa, and then, uh, I

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was going to school and, you know, to the uni there in the south of

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Russia, so, again, close to Ukraine.

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So, it was always, it was always, uh, you know, during Soviet times, of

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course, we've been thinking in terms of Russia, Ukraine, that much, especially

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both of these Uh, regions, uh, well, fairly Russian speaking, uh, were

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back then and probably are still now.

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Uh, it's not to say that, you know, they're ethically Russians or ethically

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Ukrainian, because sometimes it's kind of hard to tell, you know, as people

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are mixing, and it's more personal feel.

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So if you cross the border from Russia to Ukraine It was like

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someone in Queensland going to northern New South Wales and back.

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Is it just a matter of fact sort of thing?

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Yeah, absolutely.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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Look, we would, we would do that all the time.

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Because, you know, during Soviet times, that's, that's

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kind of a tricky bit, I guess.

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But when

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different regions were supplied differently, so, you know, in

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Ukraine, I don't know, a bit of dairy.

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So we would use, you know, we'd go and, you know, shop there if, uh,

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if it felt like it, like it could.

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Yep.

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So you get dairy from the Ukraine and vodka from Russia,

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is that what you're saying?

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Oh, yeah, I think, I think this was pretty, uh, pretty much

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available everywhere, I think.

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Until Until, uh, you know, the end of the Soviet Union, or sort of the

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collapse of the Soviet Union, where pretty much everything disappeared.

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Everywhere, actually.

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And that was, that was a big crisis in, in both countries.

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Uh, and again, you know, I could, I could see that, and I know that

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firsthand, because it probably was a bit worse in Ukraine.

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It's a bit earlier than in France.

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So, I'm just curious, like, we'll get on to the present conflict, you know, in, in

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due course, but just growing up as a young person, In that part of the world, you've

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lived in Australia now for a good time.

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I have a mental image of a pretty desperate place with um, nothing in

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the shops other than the bare basics if you're lucky, and a fairly grim lifestyle.

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Was it grim or not?

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Not true.

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No, it wasn't, it wasn't grim.

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And especially if you don't, if you don't have anything to compare to, uh,

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then, you know, it's just your normal.

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You know, for us, but look, I was a kid, uh, you know, Soviet Union

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collapsed when I was about, which is what, 1981, uh, I was, I 74, so,

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you know, I was, I was in my teens, yes, uh, until then, you know, before

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Perestroika, it was, you know, I was a kid, it was, it was so fun, you know, we

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would go to the countryside, you know,

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as good as, you know, as your childhood can be, I suppose, because, you know, I

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was, Uh, it was looked after, you know, my family was, was great and we would,

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again, all relatives, this, this place where, you know, my mom grew up because

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that was a village basically, and we had relatives in, in neighboring villages,

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but also, you know, in Ukraine, uh, everyone would sort of come together.

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And would your family be just sort of middle class, would you consider them?

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Don't know if, if that, you know, model is applied to, uh, you know, Soviet times.

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So my parents were, uh, You know, I graduated from the university in Kharkiv,

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actually, uh, being sort of engineers and being an engineer in the Soviet

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Union is, uh, is not really, uh, is saying that you're not, well, to do, uh,

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but, uh, More comfortable than average?

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Average, I would say.

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You know, this, the Soviet Union was the country of, you know, working.

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That's, that's where a person on a factory probably was.

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Really?

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Right.

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You know, working all the time, you know, so that was, it was really, um.

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I think, you know, the person on the factory floor would, Oh yeah, absolutely.

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Absolutely.

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Absolutely.

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Right.

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Because they would do all the time.

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So they could do, uh, you know, night shifts.

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They put, uh, depending on what you were doing, you know, look,

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unless you, it's hard to generalize, but you know, that would be, that

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would be a generic, uh, assumption, but you know, if you look at it.

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Yeah, you probably would find a good position, so.

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Yeah, and you were telling me, uh, previously that, um, you ended up doing

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electrical engineering and computers and stuff and your Okay, so, so my,

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my, you know, my university years is, is sort of, uh, where Soviet Union is

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collapsing or collapsed or whatever.

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So that this is, is pretty unstable time, but again, being

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a student, why, why would I care?

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Yep.

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Good time.

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Uh, and so, but yeah, I studied at my home CC.

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Uh, so, you know, I stayed with the family and it was, uh, it was

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okay because I was supportive.

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And, uh, so yeah, electrical, computer engineering, and roundabouts.

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I don't know, there was, there was a moment that I remember.

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Uh, that was, that was actually just as I entered the university.

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That all of a sudden, so this is, say, 1991.

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Uh, you know, Soviet Union is collapsing and we, like The worst, because, you

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know, all these blind curtains going and Metallica is going to be too much school.

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And, uh, that's where I, you know, something clicks in me and I thought,

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you know, that's, that's what I, that's where I want to leave.

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So I started, uh, learning English like crazy.

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Yeah, maybe it doesn't show, but, you know, with the accent and stuff.

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But, you know, it's, uh, set my goal, I guess, back then

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to So back then I thought, oh yeah, I'd go and study in the U.

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S.

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or something and see how it goes, but it turned out, uh, differently.

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But, you know, it just ended up in Australia.

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Yeah.

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And never looked back, actually.

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Yeah.

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Which is Yep.

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And you're living in Melbourne now.

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Yeah, and, uh, and you mentioned before to me that you were part of a rally

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that happened in Melbourne, sort of?

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Yeah, yeah, I went there.

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Sort of part of a Ukrainian expat community?

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It's absolutely, uh, it was organized by a Ukrainian community and, um, And,

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uh, we have a lot of friends from, who are members of the community.

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We, you know, we're not, I can't say I'm a member of the community because I

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never, I never had, you know, Ukrainian passport or anything like that.

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But, uh, you know, we feel That we needed to go as well, uh,

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wanted to go, uh, needed to go.

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I have to say that I, uh, didn't make it to the start of it

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because I had other commitments.

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My wife and my daughter, uh, pretty much, you know, went there from the

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first minutes and, uh, marched from Treasury Gardens to the Fed Square

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and I just joined them at Fed Square.

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Um, sold a lot of friends there and, you know, yeah, um, a lot of people.

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So your family, um, and friends back over there in the Ukraine, what, what

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stories are you hearing or reports are you hearing from them about, you know,

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what's happening on the ground there?

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Is it anything you can share with us that?

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Yeah, look, well, that's, that's what I, uh, that's what I'm here for, I guess.

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Uh, Look, first of all, it's, it's a war, uh, no doubt about it, look, I need to

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pick the right words, I guess, uh, just because, and I'll, I'll get there, I

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guess, you know, from Russian side, from, uh, probably say from Russian side and

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the rest of the world, uh, it appears, uh, the words are different, the terms

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are different, and, you know, people are sort of, uh, watching about how

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they call it, but it is a war, you know.

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In Russia, you're not supposed to say war.

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It's a special operation, and if you are told that people say war, they correct

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it, or, or, or And, um, it's pretty full on, like, you just can't, uh, comprehend,

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you know, I can't comprehend it because, you know, so me, uh, yeah, I left that

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part of the world some time ago, you know, went back a couple of times, but,

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um, still the picture that I have, you know, doesn't, doesn't really really.

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Uh, married to what I see now, and what I see now is street fighting,

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basically, you know, like Stalingrad.

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Uh, so, Kiev, I've been to Kiev, I've actually fell in love with the city,

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it's probably one of my favorite cities.

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Uh, absolutely beautiful and, you know, it's a huge hill and,

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uh, it's 4 million plus, I think, and the hierarchy of it is 1.

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5 or something.

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So big cities and shillings going on there and you can see it.

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And it's not like, you know, these are doctored images or because

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they're just coming through.

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They keep coming through.

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So, you know, street fighting.

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My, uh, uh, my relatives who are in Kharkiv have been living, uh, pretty

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much in a cellar for the past few days.

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Uh, I'm not saying that, you know.

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The whole territory of Hardcabe has been, or you know, street fighting is

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on every street because it's, it's hard to know what's going on, but definitely

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on outskirts and pictures I've seen and then people who recognize them, like

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the University and Saltafka is, uh, is the sort of northeast, I suppose.

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Um, I don't know if this is that well anymore.

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That was a kid when I went there.

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I saw images of, you know, shells exploding.

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Are they running out of food?

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Because I just know here in Australia when we had things with the pandemic or

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flooding here in Brisbane, it doesn't take long before the shelves are empty.

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And I just would have thought it's shaping up as a bit of a siege where they're just

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going to run out of food in these cities.

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We are worried.

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We are here, uh, worried about them running out of food, but I haven't,

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uh, I don't really have, uh, a lot of You know, good information about that.

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I know that three or four days ago when, when it just started, but it

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was not in the CC proper, uh, and this is currently what I'm talking about.

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Uh, my, uh, my aunts, you know, my mom's cousin, uh, she, she said that she went

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to, to the shop and bought, you know, some supplies, some pastes and cereals.

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But I don't really know if they have water now.

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I don't, I know that it's being sort of encircled.

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Uh, and Keefe, I think is.

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From what I heard, it's pretty much rounded up now, so it might

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be, you know, the case where your supplies will start running out,

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but, um, I just don't know how.

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Sorry, Ed.

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Yeah, yeah.

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I know that, that they were safe, uh, my relatives were safe yesterday, because

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they, they responded and said that they were still fighting, and they They were

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intended to survive, uh, well, they will.

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Okay, so let's sort of now move into the sort of build up and the, you

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know, recent history and, and, uh, geopolitics or however we want to call it.

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One thing that I'm curious about is the Donbass region, where according

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to what I've read is a predominantly Russian speaking enclave that seems to be

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quite different to the rest of Ukraine.

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Is that, was that your sense back in the day?

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Uh, not really.

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Uh, okay.

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Going back to Soviet times with England, think about those, um,

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you know, those terms or, or, you know, you can ask that question.

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Uh, later, look, Dawn Bass was, uh, was different in a

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way that it's a mining widget.

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Yeah, so that's, uh, you know, there's a lot of, you know, mining going there.

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You, you passing by, it looks different.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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Uh, but you know, is it, so economically was different, I

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guess, because, uh, again, mining is the main, uh, industry there.

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So when the troubles started and, and I am talking about nineties, you

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know, uh, so Just after Soviet Union or end of Soviet Union, probably.

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I'm not a historian or, you know, maybe, maybe enthusiast, maybe sort of, you

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know, failed historian or fake historian.

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So, you know, don't quote me or fact check, I don't know

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exactly, but, you know, 90s.

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Uh, when the problem started, I think Donbass was hit quite, quite badly

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with, you know, with all that because all of a sudden, you know, mining.

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And that's all you had to, uh, to provide.

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So miners were, uh, quite unhappy.

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So going to strikes or trying to, you know, work out something.

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And I guess, I guess unless you have that industry going, uh, no matter

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what you do, uh, you know, there's, there's trouble in the, okay, trouble,

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economic trouble in the region.

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So, you know, this, uh, this.

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Just not enough work and, and, um, you know, that's quite bad.

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So, uh So it was defined as much by its, its work environment and landscape as

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it was by But if you, if you ask about ethically or, or, you know, culturally

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or anything, you don't really know.

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Uh, and, and look, I have a couple of, well, more than a couple of good friends

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here because I don't know when When people started, like, immigration into Australia

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from former Soviet Union was, uh, was going, like, it was a steady stream in

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the 90s and 2000s, I suppose, because, you know, it was Fairly easy to do, I guess,

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if you were educated and wanted, really.

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So we have, we have quite a few friends here who came, uh, or people

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who, say, have Jewish background, so they came a bit earlier, they came a

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bit earlier because they Uh, could do so, you know, using that Jewish, uh,

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background because it was like Soviet Union, yeah, reasons, uh, sort of it.

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Uh, so we had a lot of people from, from that area who came at

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different times and I have a fair, uh, I guess, fair understanding of,

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you know, what's going on there.

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And pretty much every one of them looking at, you know, what's, what happened there.

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Yeah.

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You know, shock and horror and, uh, you know, emotions are pretty high.

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Yep.

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And so when there was the separatist movement for the Donbass region,

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have you got any sense of, um, of what was going on there in terms of

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shelling by the, by the Ukrainian government as they were trying to

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retake this area and this disputed area?

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I think I have a pretty good sense of what was going on there, but,

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uh, I guess probably wouldn't, you know, the first thing that comes to

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mind is not shelling by Ukrainian government, but it's separatists

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themselves were, uh, and I'm, I'm trying not to say anything that I can't.

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But the separatists themselves, the first, uh, you know, people who came

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to power there, or who instigated that, were all, uh, Russians,

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I'm not mistaken, most of them.

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So, it At the time, look, and this is not me sort of, you know, looking back

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with, you know, 2020 historic vision or something, at the time, 2014, uh, when

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Yanukovych was, uh, fighting to stay, and we, together with our Ukrainian

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friends here, were sort of, uh, really waiting for him to go because it was,

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you know, he was quite bad in all accounts, uh, when When it happened,

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we actually, you know, we were all joy.

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We said, Oh, you know, that's, that's great.

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And then when Russia took him, it was a bit of resentment, you know,

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from our side thinking like, this is a signal, uh, that, you know,

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he's going to go and punish them.

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So, so our attitude at the time was like, Ooh, you know, that's.

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That's not good because it's, it's, it's almost like Russian encouragement.

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Okay, so when Yanukovych lost to Poroshenko, he went to

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Russia and sort of exiled?

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No, no, but he didn't lose, he was, uh, he was ousted and, and I mean, this was

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before election or anything, he was, uh, so that was, that was a revolution.

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And look, I know that you probably want to raise that point or you've mentioned that.

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American involvement in that, but I'm not even, I'm not even talking about that.

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I'm just talking about our attitude and vision.

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And, and look, when I say, you know, these, uh, Donbass and, and two

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separatist regions there, uh, the, the movement, separatist movement there, or

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the action started after the Crimea was

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But let's leave it there for now, um, because that was a signal like,

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Oh, you know, if, if Crimea can do this, you know, so maybe that

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can happen in some other regions.

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So the guy, uh, at the time it was, you know, a lot of confusion who's doing what.

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But.

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You know, a few years passed and, and people, uh, well, a few people who were

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leading, uh, forces there died or killed or whatever in fights, but, uh, the guy

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who started it pretty much by his own admission, uh, uh, the guy called, uh,

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Gorkin or, uh, Strelkov is his name.

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And this is a guy who started the separatist movement in the Donbass.

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By his account, his interview to the, uh, to the newspaper later, uh, in Russia, he

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said that, you know what, I, I pulled the trigger because, you know, I, that his,

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his unit crossed the border from Russia to, uh, uh, Donetsk region, I guess.

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And they started, uh, you know, The action.

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So, uh, and I guess I can close, uh, so there is a translation and so, uh,

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So he, he was a Russian national who Russian national, Igor Strelkov.

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He's, he's the guy, I mean, this is, this is sort of in perspective.

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He's the guy who's, uh, he's arrested as a warrant, uh, you know,

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interpol for, for the Floyd MH17.

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That's, that's the guy who's associated with John Travolta.

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Right.

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Because he was, he was controlling the area then.

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Okay, so there's a question mark, are you saying there's sort of a question

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mark as to how much of this was Um, driven by the local population wanting

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to separate from the rest of Ukraine, as opposed to, uh, the Russian influence,

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maybe being an important factor.

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Well, to say the least, there's no question mark, or wasn't a question

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mark for me back then, probably wasn't a question mark for me, uh,

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now it was instigated by Russia.

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Uh, reasons behind that, you know, not talking about it,

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but just facts, you know.

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And look, there's probably a lot of factors playing, like, you know, people

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who weren't necessarily important or who were, you know, sort of looking

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for opportunity, uh, existed there.

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Let me put it this way.

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If you, in any country, especially, or any region, I guess, especially

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where things are not stable, there probably would be a decent percentage

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of the population separated.

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Yep, there's always a mixture.

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It's just hard to know what the percentages are.

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Western Australia, let me put it this way.

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You remember a few years ago, Western Australia said, you

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know, we want to separate.

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Last week they'd do it, yeah.

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Well, he's, he's amazing that guy, I mean, yep.

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Yep, you're right.

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In every population there will be a separatist element.

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Um, and if you, if you organize it, uh, well, I'm not saying it's a, you

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know, it's something that's easy to do or it's something that's, you know,

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clear cut, but if you organize it, you, you have a chance to succeed.

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And, and these guys, uh, again, they were telling us how,

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like, there was no shame in it.

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They were telling, uh, you know, to press that, you know, what

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we were expecting to maybe.

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Uh, to see Russia incorporating these regions, you know, like they did with

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Crimea, but Russia didn't, uh, do this, sort of sending mixed signals

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or something, so maybe there's a bit of misinterpretation, whether,

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you know, support will come or not.

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So, um.

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Okay, well that's a picture of the Donbass, that's, that's,

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you know, what I'm wanting.

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By the way, dear listener, I mean, Ed's giving, of course, Uh, his own personal

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knowledge of, of things and, um, he hasn't been running around conducting

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polls and, you know, in a sense, uh, the plural of anecdote is not data, I think,

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is the story or something like that.

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I mean, so, you know, take all this with, um, as it is and, Um, it's just an

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interesting perspective that we're getting from somebody who's sort of been in the

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area and knows people and there could be other people with different opinions.

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And look, there are people of different opinions and I guarantee

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that, but it's also, like, you really have to, uh, look at it, you

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really need to decide for yourself.

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Because, uh, well, like, you know, we were chatting with Cam and Cam

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said, Oh, you know, I have people who are of different opinions.

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Well, yeah, there are people who really love Trump.

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There are people who love Tony Abbott.

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Yes, yeah, there's all sorts.

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So, so just the other, um, so that's interesting picture of the Donbass.

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Um, the other sort of, um, cultural element is, is the sort of talk of, of

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neo Nazi element in, In the Ukrainian, sort of, military, sort of, as part

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of that, that coup, that maybe, or maybe not, was engineered by the USA,

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um, relying on some sort of Neo Nazi elements, is, is Neo Nazism something

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genuine in the Ukraine that you or your friends or would be aware of or would

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think it's Me or my friends, uh, if I rely on my personal experience, my

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friends, or talking to people and people I trust really, uh, then Absolutely not.

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I mean, I'm sure there are there, like in any, uh, country, uh, but

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do they control the, uh, government?

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Do they control the parliament?

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Right.

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I'd say no, I just, I just don't see any evidence.

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So you would have seen reports about sort of neo Nazi elements, and as

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you were reading it, we, in your mind, are you thinking, That's an

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overblown statement that, that seems exaggeration when you, when you read.

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I, the problem is that most of the, most of the reports that I was reading at

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the time, or, you know, really need to see the source where it's coming from.

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Um, a a lot of that and, you know, I do do read, uh, rational.

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I can't read Ukrainian, but, uh, not that good at it, I guess, uh, but

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everything you read in Russian, or a lot of that, is, uh, you need to take,

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uh, with a grain of salt because, and that's something I probably would want

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to, you know, spend a bit of time on, you know, propaganda and, and the way,

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uh, things are spent is, uh, it's kind of important because, you know, they, um, you

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This is Russia and Ukraine, uh, are like, you know, Soviet Union.

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Pretty much everyone.

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We were growing up, uh, with my, uh, both of my grandparents were, uh, you

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know, fighting the second World War.

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And, uh, so we were, when we were growing up, fascism, uh, or Nazis and

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which was used interchangeably, uh, was.

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It's like the worst thing that you can possibly imagine, yeah, so we've grown

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up with this and and the term is being a little, you know, being abused now a lot,

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uh, you know, and, and so in Russian, um, media quite often this is a convenient

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way to say, oh, you know, they're fascists because they are, uh, you know,

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nationalistic and Which is, which is not always the same event, but yeah, but look.

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Um, as I said, I don't believe, uh, that, you know, right wing

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sort of ultra conservative sort of Nazi element, uh, whatever,

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fascist, is prevalent or noticeable.

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Comparing to Russia, for example, because in Russia you go and I can

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name you, and I probably know better, I can name you politicians who are

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still there, you know, winning parties, and they would make statements that,

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uh, you know, you've probably put you in jail in, in, in, in some places.

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So it's, it's really, it's really, uh, hard to, you know, take it and,

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and just go with it and, uh, and say, oh, you've messed this up, probably.

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I think it's Yeah, there's definitely a lot of hate, uh, in, in general

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now, especially, uh, but look, as I say, I probably would want to

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talk a little bit about propaganda, uh, when, when we get there.

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Or, if we can sign that.

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We're there, we're there now.

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Let's do it.

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It's just, uh, cause, cause this is something like you probably, you probably

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don't, um, know that well, unless you can tap in, unless you, unless you

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know, uh, unless you can read Russian.

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Okay, so, um,

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when, I don't know where to start, but look, the propaganda, the propaganda

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machine that's, that's, that's working probably in both directions and, and

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I guess, you know, it's propaganda, propaganda in, in the US but in

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Russian, if you, if you, there's just, you know, watch Russian tv.

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There's just a lot going on there and, and it's always.

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It's always directed at, you know, at trying to, uh, portray, you know,

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specifically Ukrainians as fascists or, you know, sort of close to that.

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And, and look, what I've done, I've just, um, I sent you a couple of links, but,

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but look, this is for people who, we can't play them now, but just go to YouTube

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and, and, uh, type something like, uh, kids, uh, singing about Putin or something

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like this, because, because it's just.

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It is penetrating the society in such a way that, you know, it's hard to

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imagine we probably would think about, you know, North Korea, uh, but, you

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know, kids would come and dress, you know, in uniforms being, I don't know,

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eight year olds or whatever, uh, sitting like, um, Uncle Vova, if you, uh, you

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know, if you, if you call us to the last battle, you know, we will die for you.

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Right, okay, yes.

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And, and this is not like, you know, some of that may be staged, but I

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also have some, you know, like school.

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Concerts and so many people would say, Oh, you know, continue great.

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And so this is like, uh, this is Soviet level of.

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So Russia has been running a Soviet style, um, propaganda campaign.

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One of the things, for example, I read ages ago, I think was in

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relation to Crimea when they.

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I did polls of the population and it seemed quite conclusive that most of the

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people in the Crimea wanted to be in the Russian sphere and an argument I heard

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was that they had been subjected to a lot of propaganda on their television.

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Oh right, look, this is actually an interesting point because, uh, you know,

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if we talk about Crimea and, and how, what happened there, and again, this is, uh.

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At the time, you know, it wasn't, um, admissive, but then after a couple of

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years or maybe a bit more, or maybe more, uh, you know, Putin admissive, because,

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because they were saying, uh, there were, there were no Russian troops there

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at the time, uh, they were just, you know, polite people and this is a term,

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you know, coin term, which was on, you know, shirts and some, like, you know,

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polite people who were, Um, you know, volunteers who came there to, whatever,

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fight for, um, for their brothers.

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And then they admitted, yeah, yeah, they were Russian troops, but,

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you know, we had to do something.

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So, and, and, you know, then reports that, yeah, it was planned, uh, you

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know, in a way, and works out perfectly.

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Because when they stepped in and sort of took control.

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You know, the region, and they organized referendum, um, you know, you can't

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take the results of this referendum, uh, for face value, even if, it's, it's a

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bit like, you know, doing a scientific experiment, but, but your, you know,

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your, your tools are tamed, or, you know, contaminated, and then the results,

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you can't really trust them, maybe.

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Because of the propaganda?

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Because of the, because of the propaganda, because of the presence.

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Oh, because of the presence and the way, the way, uh, you know, elections are run,

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uh, and, uh, you know, that was, there was no one at the time was, was like, you

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know, with presence of troops or, or sort of, uh, insistive recommendations of vote

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a certain way, plus propaganda as well.

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Okay.

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If so, we have Crimea.

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People probably would want to, uh, you know, leave Ukraine and join Russia.

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I mean, maybe the majority of the population wants to do it, but is there

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any sort of law how to do it properly?

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That's the thing, like, you know, I don't know if there is a precedent

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where part of the country went straight from one country to another.

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Uh, I know of a few cases when part of the country decided to separate and sometimes

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peacefully, sometimes You know, through, through some, you know, force or whatever,

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or a war, but I don't really remember in the modern history, uh, when, you

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know, something like that would happen, and it happened pretty quickly and, uh,

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you know, was declared done deal, you know, we, we have, so, uh, does it mean

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people didn't want to, oh, they probably, a fair amount of them probably would

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want to, uh, but, You know, is it legal?

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Can we take it?

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Not really.

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And look, there's also coming back.

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This is what we thought among ourselves.

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In 1994, if I'm not mistaken, when there was so called Budapest Memorandum,

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Budapest Memorandum, I think it's called, somewhere, where basically after the

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Soviet Union collapsed, Uh, Russia and Ukraine with US and the UK, uh, sat

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together and, uh, coined the, uh, and the agreement that Russia would take all

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the stockpile of nuclear weapons from Ukraine and in exchange guaranteeing, uh,

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borders in that, uh, borders that were present in that particular moment, 1994.

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Ukraine was, you know, Ukraine and everything.

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Technically, you know, Russia said, all right, we don't, we don't want

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to revise the borders or raise it because, you know, that's the agreement.

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Yeah, well, give us your nuclear weapons and we guarantee to keep

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your borders where they are.

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Yeah, I'm sure there were maybe some other clauses, but that was, that was it.

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And of course, uh, the story that I remember, because, you know, it says,

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oh, you know, this is, uh, it's plain and simple, you know, there's agreement,

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but of course, if you really want to, you can find a pretext, and like, like

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always, so I think, if I'm not mistaken, again, don't quote me on But I think

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Russia, you know, official Russia said back then that, uh, you know, because

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Yanukovych was ousted, uh, legally, you know, there's a coup and stuff, uh, it's

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all broken, you know, not valid anymore.

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So we're not, you know, we're not obliged to, to follow, you know, any of that.

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And I don't know, I, I, I look at this and I say, eh, you know.

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The Ukraine story is full of broken promises of one sort or

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another with NATO and other deals.

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Yeah.

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And we are talking about, you know, me, uh, telling you what I think so

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that, you know, that's why I'm here.

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Yeah, yeah.

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So, um, also the coup, um, amongst Ukrainians that you know, would, would

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there be the belief or acceptance that the US played a major part in that?

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Or would, or would they say that was not the case?

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Like, what's the feeling?

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I don't know.

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I haven't heard a lot of people, uh, saying, oh, you know, US, uh, Well,

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definitely, you know, from Russian side, there's people who support sort

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of official Russian sort of, they would say, oh yeah, definitely, yeah.

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It's all America, like, there's been America all this time, but, um, I don't

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really know, uh, for sure, I'm not going to argue, but I'm just going to ask I

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guess the question of, even if it was, well, I, I don't know what I'm saying.

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I'm just, I guess, I guess I want to put it this way, you know, Ukraine,

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uh, was trying to break away from Soviet Union and Russia, but has

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been trying for quite a while.

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And I mean, after 1991, it appeared that, okay, there was understanding,

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but we know that, you know, Russia never really let it go, uh, not only Ukraine, I

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mean, other republics and other peoples.

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And so there was, you know, there was one attempt and then in 2004, Yushenko, which

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was clearly pro Western, was trumped, you know, it was, uh, competing with

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Yanukovych, actually, uh, for, you know, for presidency, and Yushenko was poisoned,

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and then, you know, before the election results were announced, it Because it

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looks like, you know, Russian war battles was a bit too much, which is a fun fact,

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I guess, you know, Putin called and, uh, congratulated Yanukovych a bit too soon.

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So, you know, that sort of thing.

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Just send the signal, I guess, uh, and again, this is my, you know,

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pedestrian level, I guess, um, signal to Ukraine that, you know,

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it's really hard to break away.

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Is it, is it really, um, strange, I guess, or, or should we really,

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uh, you know, wonder if, if Ukraine, if they really wanted to, you know,

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would ask help for someone to, you know, to assist me or to have some,

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or to have some support in that?

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I don't really know, but So you could see, you could see or sense some fairly

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obvious Russian And again, it wasn't denied, uh, but it was, it was, it

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was not a military intervention or anything, but it was, it was like, you

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know, Rushwood sent consultants to, you know, organize, uh, elections and stuff.

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That was a, that was a documentary on BBC, if I'm not mistaken, Doug was,

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uh, was showing in Australia, but that was at the time, I think, at the time.

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Okay.

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Because you're a, you're a fan of the, of Cam Reilly's various podcasts.

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So you'd be quite used to his, his repetitive line of US involvement

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in countries around the world.

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So, so having listened to that, you'd be highly attuned, I would have

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thought, to looking for US involvement.

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What, what Cam's doing?

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And I mean, and this is, it's almost like his mission, but He's trying to

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counterbalance, and I mean, you know, I'm on many feats, so I would argue

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with Cam, uh, you know, personally, or in the email, uh, well, I haven't had a

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chance to do it personally, maybe, um, because now he maybe identifies me, uh,

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would listen to me, or whatever, um, his mission is to counterbalance the

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insane amount of, uh, BS I don't know.

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Do we have kids, uh, watching this?

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You can go ahead and language warning, dear listener.

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There might, might be some Yeah, kids, if you listen, uh, to this,

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then you probably want to tell your parents they're letting you down.

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Um, uh, so yeah, an insane amount of bullshit that's going on in the world.

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I mean, America is an empire and they do a lot of bad stuff.

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And, and of course, you know, Russians would say, well,

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you know, Americans do that.

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So, you know, so, so can we.

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So it's almost like Cam's mission and, you know, Ray is,

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I guess we shouldn't forget Ray.

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So you counterbalance that.

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Yep.

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And, uh, and, yeah, and you're fully aware of that, and you've seen all the

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various examples, yet when you look at the coup, um, and, and knowing how it's

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occurred elsewhere quite often, you don't, you haven't yourself necessarily

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looked at the coup With conviction of U.

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S.

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involvement, is that what you're saying?

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You know, U.

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S.

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involvement versus Russian involvement, I mean, you know, it's Both of them.

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Yeah, but I mean, do we, do we need to choose, or do we, we've had to choose.

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Um No, but just, it's really just whether we think it's occurred, is the question.

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Look, I, I don't really know.

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I mean, I, I don't have enough evidence.

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I, I'm not going to speculate.

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I think that, yeah, it could, could have been.

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Uh, could have been, but also, I didn't have a sense, like, from, again,

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from my friends, from people here, Yanukovych was genuinely, uh, bad.

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And I mean, had it been someone else, you know, a bit less corrupt, a bit

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less, you know, in your face corrupt.

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And, and, you know, arrogant and, and really, you know, sort of

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coming across as, uh, uneducated, really rough, you know, not fit.

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Uh, it would have been a different argument, but I know a lot of people

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were genuinely trying to get rid of him.

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Okay, so maybe because people hated him so much, they didn't

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really care how it was done.

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Exactly.

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So, uh, you know, that's, that's.

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That's a point that we can't ignore.

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I mean, this is, this is really, uh, you know, important point.

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It's a bit like with Trump, where people would, you know, would have

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wanted some awful endings for him no matter what, just because of who he was.

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So, yeah, um, yeah, okay, I get that.

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So, um, and then, uh, Zelensky is, uh, the current president, who Um, former

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comedian and television star, and now, um, hugely popular, it seems, both within

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Ukraine and around the world, because, uh, he's not running and hiding, he's, or

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if he is, he's got a really good, um, PR team that's painting a different picture.

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So he, he, he, he seems to be genuinely doing.

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The right thing at this critical time and, uh, This is, this might be his,

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uh, you know, his mission and he might turn out to be the, the, uh, true,

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you know, hero, uh, of the story.

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Because leading up to this, you thought he was a bit of a dud?

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Is that, what do you, uh, Yeah, I'd say so.

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And it's only because, you know, he's not a, uh, he's not a politician.

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He's, uh, basically a comedian, I guess.

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Not saying he's a bad person or something, but, you know, uh, But I

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think the impression was certain for me that he's, uh, he would be an easy

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opponent for, uh, you know, Russia, for Putin to go and, you know, just

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go over and do whatever they want.

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And, uh, but then, look, he is genuinely, uh, leading the resistance

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now by all accounts and, and people.

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I'm surprised, uh, people love him.

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I like him.

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I mean, he is, uh, he's risky, also, I suppose.

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Yep.

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Yes, I mean if he's captured or whatever, who knows what could happen to him.

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So, it's precarious for him.

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But he is, he is what you expect from president.

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He's, uh, You know, he's a bit like what, you know, Belgium, when Germans attack.

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Yep.

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He's certainly got an incredible life story.

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Actually, for those who haven't seen it, um, I think I've got it here.

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Have you seen the The other thing, dear listener, is he won the Ukrainian

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version of Dancing with the Stars?

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Have you seen that at all, Ed?

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Uh, no, I haven't, no.

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I heard about it, but no, I haven't.

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With a bit of luck, I'll just play a little bit of clip here if I can.

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Hopefully this will show up.

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Hang on.

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It's an incredible life.

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That guy's running from He's a lawyer as well!

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So, um, lawyer and comedian and I just didn't know enough.

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I didn't know enough about him and I, uh, saw like Look, to be

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honest, uh, and yeah, we will return to war because it's important.

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I feel like, you know, we probably don't give enough, uh, you know,

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focus or, you know, it doesn't come across, you know, in all seriousness

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of, you know, what's going on.

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I'm, I am distressed and it's just like, sort of, uh, now I've

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got a bit distracted and, you know, got a bit cheerful, I guess.

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But, but it's not to say that, you know, it's, it's, it's pretty bad.

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But, uh, I'm I say until recent times, we'd probably be more watching the,

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um, what was happening in Russia itself, you know, side with, uh, you

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know, opposition being basically, you know, repressed and all of this.

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And even now, you know, the, uh, opposition leaders isn't yet, well,

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opposition leader, a person who's, uh, the closest to opposition leader,

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I guess, uh, would be, you know, he's in jail and there's another process.

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So I wasn't, I wasn't even thinking that much about Zelensky

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because we were all, uh, you know, seeing how things are internally.

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And, uh, but then of course, no one expected, you know,

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things to change so quickly.

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And now we're talking about escalation and possibly nuclear war and, uh.

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You know, Facebook being suspended in Russia with a mixed success,

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uh, you know, they don't report on casualties, they don't call it a war,

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uh, they allegedly, uh, are going to introduce, uh, capital punishment.

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Or at least, you know, that's what we've said in, you know, maybe not

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officially, but, you know, we've said that we should bring it back.

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Uh, they Capital punishment for what?

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For treason, for, you know, for stuff, just because Russia,

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you know, doesn't have it now.

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So, but, but even still, like, you know, uh, treason now is

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20 years, um, in jail, I think.

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Mm, yep.

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I,

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Ed, I just want to move on to NATO.

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And the discussion about, um, about NATO which seems for a lot of people to be

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a key component to this whole story.

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And I'm going to read a bit, dear listener, from an article

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by a guy called Chris Hedges.

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And Chris Hedges, um, American journalist, um, Presbyterian minister,

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author, television host, former reporter for the New York Times.

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Um, in his career he worked as a freelance war correspondent in Central America.

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And he began working for the New York Times in 1990, and during his

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15 year tenure, Hedges reported from more than 50 countries.

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And served as the Times Middle East Bureau Chief and Balkan Bureau Chief, um,

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during the wars in the former Yugoslavia.

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He's currently running a TV show on, on Russia Today, or RT, so

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put all, put all that together.

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Cause I mentioned to Joe I was going to read, um, about this guy and he said,

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well he'll No conflict there, I mean, poking a bit the fact that he has a

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show on Russia Today, but when you add in his career with the New York Times,

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it's an interesting mix for a guy.

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So, I think he's got some experience and I've read other stuff that

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he's done and I, I do think he's got something to add here.

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So, bear with me, uh, dear listener, while I read this article, or a fair

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chunk of it, it's probably going to take me about four or five minutes, and then

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Ed and I can talk about, about that, because it seems to get to the crux of.

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Of one reason why the conflict has started, and maybe if

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there is to be an exit out of this, um, one possible way out.

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So, alright, so here's an article entitled, Chronicle of

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a War Foretold, by Chris Hedges.

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After the fall of the Soviet Union, there was near universal

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understanding among political leaders that NATO expansion would be a

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foolish provocation against Russia.

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I was in Eastern Europe in 1989 reporting on the revolutions that overthrew the

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ossified communist dictatorships that led to the collapse of the Soviet Union.

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It was a time of hope.

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nato, with the breakup of the savior empire, became obsolete.

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President Mikhail Gorbachev reached out to Washington and Europe to build a new

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security pact that would include Russia.

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Secretary of State Jim Baker, in the Reagan administration, along with the West

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German Foreign Minister, Hans Dietrich Genscher, assured the Soviet leader

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that if Germany was unified, NATO would not be extended beyond the new borders.

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The commitment was not to expand NATO.

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Sorry, the commitment not to expand NATO, also made by Great Britain and France,

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appeared to herald a new global order.

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There was a near universal understanding among diplomats and political leaders

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at the time that any attempt to expand NATO was foolish, an unwarranted

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provocation against Russia that would obliterate the ties and bonds that happily

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emerged at the end of the Cold War.

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How naive we were.

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The war industry did not intend to shrink.

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It's power, or it's profits, it set out almost immediately to recruit

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the former communist bloc countries in the European Union and NATO.

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Countries that joined NATO, which now include Poland, Hungary, the

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Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia,

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Slovenia, Albania, Croatia, Montenegro, and North Macedonia, were forced

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to reconfigure their militaries, often through hefty loans, to become

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compatible with NATO military hardware.

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The expansion of NATO swiftly became a multi billion dollar

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bonanza for the corporations that had profited from the Cold War.

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Poland, for example, just agreed to spend six billion dollars on M1 Abrams

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tanks and other US military equipment.

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If Russia would not acquiesce to again being the enemy, then Russia would

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be pressured into becoming the enemy.

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And here we are.

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The consequences of pushing NATO up to the borders with Russia.

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There is now a NATO missile base in Poland, 100 miles from the Russian border.

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We're well known to policy makers, yet they did it anyway.

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It made no geopolitical sense, but it made commercial sense.

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War after all is a business.

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In a classified diplomatic cable, obtained and released by WikiLeaks, dated 1st

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of February 2008, written from Moscow, I think this is the Moscow Embassy, U.

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S.

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Embassy, addressed to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, NATO European Union Cooperative,

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National Security Council, Russia, Moscow, Political Collective, Secretary

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of Defence and Secretary of State.

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There was an unequivocal understanding that expanding NATO

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risked an eventual conflict with Russia, especially over Ukraine.

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The beauty of these things, dear listeners, is you can

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Google it and you can find it.

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I'll send you the link in the show notes.

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But, um, you can actually find the WikiLeaks document, the actual cable

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that this refers to, and Chris Hedges summarizes what that cable said.

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Not only does Russia perceive encirclement by NATO and efforts to

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undermine Russia's influence in the region, but it also fears unpredictable

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and uncontrolled consequences, which would seriously affect Russian

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security interests, the cable reads.

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Quote, Experts tell us that Russia is particularly worried that the

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strong divisions in Ukraine over NATO membership, with much of the ethnic

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Russian community against membership, could lead to a major split, involving

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violence, or at worst, civil war.

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In that eventually Russia would have to decide whether to intervene, a decision

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Russia does not want to have to face.

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Dmitry Trenin, Deputy Director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, expressed

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concern that Ukraine was, in the long term, the most potentially destabilizing

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factor in US Russian relations.

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Given the level of emotion, um, and neuralgia triggered by

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its quest for NATO membership.

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Because membership remained divisive in Ukrainian domestic politics, it created

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an opening for Russian intervention.

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Trenin expressed concern that elements within the Russian establishment would

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be encouraged to meddle, stimulating US overt encouragement of opposing political

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forces, and leaving the US and Russia in a classic confrontational posture.

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Proved to be, um, very close to the mark, really.

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Um, The Obama administration, not wanting to further inflame tensions with

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Russia, blocked arms sales to Kiev, but this act of prudence was abandoned by

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the Trump and Biden administrations.

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Weapons from the US and Great Britain are pouring into Ukraine, part of the 1.

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5 billion in promised military aid.

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Um, uh, let me see what else he says here.

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All of us who reported from Eastern Europe in 1989 knew the consequences

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of provoking Russia, and yet few have raised their voices to halt the madness.

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Um, one little bit here.

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Once NATO expanded into Eastern Europe, the Clinton administration promised

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Moscow that NATO combat troops would not be stationed in Eastern Europe.

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The defining issue of the 1997 agreement.

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That promise again turned out to be a lie.

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Um, he says, uh, Chris Hedges, that in 2014 the US backed a coup against the

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Ukrainian president, uh, Yanukovych, who sought to build an economic alliance with

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Russia rather than the European Union.

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Um, of course, once integrated into the European Union, as seen

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in the rest of Eastern Europe, the next step is integration into NATO.

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Russia, spooked by the coup, alarmed at the overtures by the EU

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and NATO, then annexed Crimea and the death spiral that leads us to

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the conflict currently underway in the Ukraine became unstoppable.

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So, Ed, what do you think of that in terms of NATO encircling, coming

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right up to the border of Russia?

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How does that sit with you and your friends?

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Probably, yeah, analysing all this, uh, and really development

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is, is, uh, it's not an easy task.

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I mean, you know,

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majoring in geopolitics and stuff, look, uh, from my perspective

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and from what I remember.

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I don't know always what's happening on the background, but, uh, if history

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doesn't start in 2008, obviously, and, and yeah, um, so it just says, you know,

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1988 already was obvious, but it was obvious to me, um, you know, NATO and

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Russia were cooperating, and I think when, you know, war on terror started,

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it was a genuine impression that, you know, it was It was a cooperation.

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So it didn't feel like it was, uh, you know, escalating and, and, uh,

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unavoidable and that, you know, Russia would all, it didn't feel, put it in

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plain words, that Russia and the U.

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S.

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NATO are, you know, historic friends, traditional, sorry, historic enemies,

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you know, traditional enemies, and it will continue and will continue forever.

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Uh.

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I didn't feel that.

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Maybe I was foolish.

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I don't know.

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But again, I'm looking at the countries who, you know, joined

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NATO, uh, different stages, three waves or whatever, um, coming out

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of Soviet Union and, uh, you know, being in the relationship with Russia.

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Uh, I guess Baltic States would probably, uh, do it first then for good reason,

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because they probably didn't feel secure, um, and, you know, that was,

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if you are a relatively small country.

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Uh, next to the neighbor who is best of times unpredictable, you know,

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NATO is probably the assurance.

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And that's, you know, I can understand why it might happen.

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So I guess the question is whether these small countries did want to,

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okay, no disrespect to it, sorry.

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Um, but if former republics or former countries of, uh, you know, Soviet

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bloc wants it to get away from Russia as soon as possible and join NATO.

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And, uh Look, if you remember 2008 and, uh, Russia stepping in to

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Georgia, you know, what followed because that was another war.

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So, we'll send a message like, you know, what if you, if you're not in NATO now,

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uh, or you're thinking about it, you know, maybe that's time to join us.

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Macedonia probably would say, you know, what?

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Yep.

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So, from the point of view of, of self interest of those countries.

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It makes sense that they would say, we want to be part of NATO,

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ASAP, and then from the point of, sort of, world stability.

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It also makes sense to say, you know what, we really should have a buffer

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zone between NATO and, and . There should be analysts, you know, on both

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sides, uh, and, you know, negotiation and everything should, uh, that's,

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that's what, that's what they're for.

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Yes.

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And, and really there has to be, um, there's a bit of hypocrisy here.

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Where, um, you know, the US, if, if it was encircled, uh, up to its borders,

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um, the way that Russia has been.

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There's no way it would accept it.

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Like, it's not sort of fanciful to say, Oh, Russia's being,

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Russia's being, um, precious here.

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In, in having a problem with NATO right on its border.

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I mean, what's their problem?

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They're sort of Yeah, but having a problem with NATO and, and

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going here's another country.

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Yeah, yeah, of course.

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In, inexcusable.

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Not, so, um, so that doesn't mean the solution is to go to war.

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But I'm just sort of, um, I'm just wanting to point out that, um, what they're doing,

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NATO, in, in, in growing right up to the border of the Russian, the Russian border,

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they know that they, for example, the US would never accept that happening if there

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was, it was flipped around the other way.

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So, um, so they of course would say, well, we're entitled to, um, do this.

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There has to be a recognition that.

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If it happened the other way around, they wouldn't accept it.

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I mean, we've got the Cuban Missile Crisis we had.

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Granada.

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I mean, it's, it's, it's fine.

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It's fine to, uh, look, uh, there is a point in this and it's fine to sit and

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argue about it, but also in the light of what happened right now, I feel

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like it's, you know, maybe it's almost like a moot point, you know, Russia.

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Reacted the way it reacted.

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And, and look, maybe, you know, taking into another direction, I guess, slowly,

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but, uh, I've been thinking and I think I read somewhere or, you know, sort

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of everyone's analyst now, and we have all these, uh, you know, accounts that,

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oh, you know, trying to understand, trying to guess, you know, what

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Putin's thinking, what's his objective.

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And I guess, you know, in the past few years, we're pretty safe to say that He

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doesn't, he doesn't want to lose, um, he obviously wants to stay in power, I

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think that's probably one of the main objectives, and, and there was some

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massive trouble, like, if, if he didn't have troubles in, you know, internally,

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and wasn't threatened, who knows, uh, Donald's reaction, I think a lot of

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that is Is happening because, you know, because of what's happening internally.

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'cause he's, uh, you think in, you think internally he's been under pressure.

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Oh, I'm sure.

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Right.

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Look, uh, I mean I'm of discontent and there's a lot of people, a

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lot of people who li like him, but the corruption and everything

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that's going on and economy is bad.

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I mean, you know, it's.

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Uh, but, but he also has, and again, I'm not taking it lightly, or it's, or trying

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to pick my words here carefully, but he's almost, uh, you know, has this sort of

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messianic vision for himself, you know, saving Russia and restoring, I don't

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know, Russian Empire, Soviet Union, or just, you know, the great Russian world.

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And, uh, and let's look at the end result.

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I mean, right now, what's the way out for him?

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Or is it, is it likely that his objectives are going to be achieved?

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And I mean, frankly, no one did more for expansion of NATO in

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the recent years than, uh, Russia themselves, you know, and Putin.

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Because Sending the message and sort of escalating it probably accelerates

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that process and, and now look.

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Can you imagine now Ukraine ever, uh, turning around and saying,

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Oh, you know, we'll reconsider and maybe, you know, be good friends

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with Russia or partners or whatever.

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I can't, I can't see it.

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Can you, can you see a way out for, you know, for Putin to be accepted

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as, uh, you know, as equal in, uh, in any G20, G9 or G8 or whatever, G7?

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I can't, I just can't see it.

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Like, like, he, reputation for himself, for the country, as

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a, as a player, is, is damaged.

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So, whatever, whatever happened in the past that was leading to this

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point, decisions were made and I'd say, you know, I'm looking at this

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and I'm not liking what I see.

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And uh, so that's why, you know, sometimes things are, you know, it's

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very, it's very seldom when things are black and white, yeah, it's, it's

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usually a degree of gray, but you know.

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Today, for the past, you know, three or four days, it's probably

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as close to black and white as it gets, uh, in some respect, you know.

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It's just, we don't need to question, uh, you know, who's We don't need to question

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whether it's a war and whether It's, it's, um, morally reprehensible or not to do it.

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Of course it is.

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Um, but it's, it's also, it's also though worth, it's also worth knowing the

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buildup of these things and questioning whether, whether there might have been

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a different outcome if different things had happened differently in the past.

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To me personally now, it's You know, the subject is a bit raw to, you know,

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to talk about it calmly, if you like.

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It's a bit like, uh, you know, I read, uh, yeah, because in a, in a sense

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it feels like it's sort of being an apologist for Putin to suggest that

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this NATO thing is almost like that.

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It's, yes, it's a bit, you know, put it in this way.

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It's just, uh, stuff that I read.

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I say, uh, you go to the cemetery, which is a fresh cemetery, and,

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and this is sadness and you know, because this is just.

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You can, you can feel grief and, uh, sorrow, but you go to a cemetery

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which is 400 years old, and this is history, and you can reflect on things

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and maybe, you know, look at it from a completely different perspective.

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So, uh, I'm sure we are talking about, uh, well, even Napoleon now, and we balance

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You know, uh, so goods and bads, of goods, and look, me being Russian, you know, we

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were growing up with Napoleon being bad, but, you know, it's not true as people

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speak, there's a lot of propaganda there.

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Uh, and of course, you know, we're talking about Julius Caesar, and,

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you know, it's completely different.

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But, you know, but we can't really, uh, reflect on, you know, Putin

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now and try to find silver lining.

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I feel, you know, to me personally, that's really, really hard to do.

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Yes.

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And so all I can say now, and this is, you know, he's a criminal now, he's, he is a

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genuine criminal, you know, war criminal, and I, I don't see any way out for him.

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Yes.

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It might be the thing that brings about a peace at some point though,

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is if there is some statement that Ukraine won't join NATO or something

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as a face saving thing, as a reason.

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Well, I guess, I guess the first, first have to, you know, stop shelling and

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maybe cease and talk because, again, the, uh, the peace talks that were

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announced and, uh, wasn't yesterday or today, I don't understand anymore.

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It's like, you know, it's been, it's been kind of hard to keep track of time.

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Uh, they sent from Russian side, the guy who went there looked like

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wasn't authorized to do anything.

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Uh, you know, even before.

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Started, it was a signal that's not, they're not serious about

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peace talks when they're shelling right now, when they're accelerating

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with their bombings and stuff.

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Yeah, I think, yeah, think, uh, the, and, and look, this are talks about

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whether he's mad or, you know, deranged or whatever, different degrees.

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Different degrees of, you know, madness.

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Yeah, let's, let's talk about this, uh, madness and derangement sort of allegation

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and crazy because he gave a speech, which was, which was quite lengthy,

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I think went for over an hour or so.

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And on the podcast with, um, with Ray and Cam, we were talking about it and we

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were reading the trans, well, I, I was, we were reading the translation and, um,

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and really we, From reading it, I thought, what is this allegation that he's crazy

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and unhinged because it actually comes across as a relatively sane and rational

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rundown of modern Russian history and it actually was sort of quite impressive in

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the sense that we couldn't imagine Boris Johnson or Joe Biden or Scott Morrison

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speaking, uh, in that way for 60 minutes.

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Yeah, it's not their style and maybe Yeah.

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But yeah, different take on that.

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So look, I said straight away and that was, you know, that's what started it all.

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I sent an email saying, uh, yeah, it does look a bit deranged, but, but look, it's.

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Uh, then I, then I said that, you know, what, uh, if, if you just look at, uh,

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this, um, well, the speech was, was really an exercise in a sort of justification

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of, uh, the next move it looks like.

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Um, so it's, you know, you look at it and say, nah, he didn't,

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you know, he didn't jump and, uh, you know, on the table and yelled.

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He though, conveys,

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uh, it sounded disgust.

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It's not a disgust, but it's, it's really superiority and, and sort

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of with a smirk, you know, talking about, you know, all things Ukrainian.

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Uh, so there is clear message that, you know, of, of him, um.

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What you're trying to say, I think, is there was a, something

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was lost in translation.

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Oh yeah, definitely, definitely there's something lost in translation.

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For a native Russian speaker, you could detect.

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Um, a different tone that we couldn't.

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I also have a background of his other speeches and that is

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pretty much his style, you know, with a smile or with a smirk.

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So there are different, different degrees of madness, I guess, and, you

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know, I almost could feel like, uh, you know, he was, he was one of the, he was

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a person who, you know, with a smile tells you that, you know, he's going

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to kill you or something like that.

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Right.

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And the thing is that I don't, I don't really know if it's his.

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People say, oh, you know, he's, he's mentally deranged or, or, you know,

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he lost, or, um, I don't know, you know, it can, and it can be, uh, or

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it can be that he is surrounded by people who, you know, yes, man, and,

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and whatever, uh, don't tell him.

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Or tell him what he wants to hear and so that, you know, he's sure of

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his messianic, uh, you know, nature.

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I don't really know, or maybe something else, but it's, uh, we remember Colonel

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Gaddafi being sure that everyone loves him and he is the greatest guy in the world.

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And that Romanian dictator was on the porch and surprised

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when the crowd was booing him.

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Um, yeah, Ceaușescu or Ceaușescu, yeah.

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That's it, yeah, thank you.

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So, look, when I was reading it, I got a little bit of a sense of, um, that I

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think he sees himself, you know, he's getting on now, I think he's 69 or

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something, and He was very resentful of the break up of the Soviet Union, and

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Resentful is the right word, actually.

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Yeah, and really, it was, um, his job in history was to at

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least, um, get some of it back.

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It was really the sort of what I read.

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And I think, I think he definitely has a sort of a sense of his place in

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history in terms of, of And It's, while it might seem a crazy, and it might be

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doomed to failure for him personally, I think he's just prepared to roll the

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dice, cause he's reached that point.

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So yeah, there would be an element of, of almost a crazy level of

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Nationalistic pride and desire there.

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Yeah, which is important.

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And, and, and look, this is, uh, you know, ideology as well.

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And I like to hear that because it just gives them a sense of, uh, pride.

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But it doesn't have to be that way.

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I mean, really, you don't have to be, uh, a well respected, powerful

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and great nation, uh, just for fear and, you know, measure of it.

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It's not how many, uh, you know, other nations fear you,

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but it can be something else.

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Japan now is not pressing a lot of countries or in the past, you

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know, decades, but it was, it was doing very well economically and,

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you know, it's hard to argue.

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They set the goal to be, I don't know, best in, uh, in the world

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in some sense and achieved it.

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I'm just an example.

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I mean It is really sad that it's understood, greatness is

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understood in that way, and I guess a lot of people will believe.

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Yeah.

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Is he particularly well educated, or does his voice come across as

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a working class accent, or um, does it come across as Bergen?

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Is that what you described his accent as?

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Uh, well, I don't think accent is, uh, you know, in Russian, no, I wouldn't say, uh,

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would have accent as such, but you know, the, uh, the vocabulary and sometimes

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he's, he's just, uh, using the language.

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So everyone's of, you know, everyone from that generation is, you know, university

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educated probably, but it doesn't tell, uh, it doesn't say that he's not.

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He's not a sophisticated, uh, you know, person.

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For example, when you listen to Donald Trump, you recognize that

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he's not a sophisticated person.

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So, yeah, same with Putin.

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Yeah, okay.

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And, and, and the funny thing is that a lot of people around him, even, uh,

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you know, he wasn't, sort of, very well educated and, uh, maybe Having some

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degree of sophistication have to go to the level because that's expected.

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Ed, we'll wrap it up a little bit.

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So, uh, anything that you wanted to say that you think people need to

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know that we haven't covered already?

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That you used the average Aussie new?

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I think, I think already, I already said pretty much, you know, all,

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uh, that I wanted, you know, points.

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I probably wanted to stop on the term fascism and just Maybe, uh, a

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bit of footballs, because, you know, it's being thrown around a lot.

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And, um And there was, I think in recent times, uh, everyone goes back to, uh,

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an article by Umberto Eco, uh, and an Italian guy, you know, uh, name of the

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rose fame, if you remember the movie, but it's you, he was an Italian, uh,

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writer who, uh, was growing up, you know, during the Soviet times, so he,

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he wrote an article, he wrote, uh, um, uh, Uh, an article, an essay called

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Earth Fascism in 1995, where he really distilled it in 14 points, uh, you know,

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fascism is, and, and some points, and if you, if you're just, you know, talking

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about, you know, Ukraine or Russia Uh, and if you look at these points, and I

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invite everyone, Echo is ECO, uh, Umberto probably is an Italian name, probably

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just as you, uh, I, I can send them on to that if you, if you haven't heard.

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Um, there is, you know, these are 14 points, and some of them just Read them

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and think about them and, and try to apply and, you know, things like disagreeing,

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disagreement is treason, you know, that's characterized as the fashion.

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Or, uh, you know, rejection of modernism or cult of tradition or,

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you know, obsession with the plot.

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Like everyone's plotting against you or contempt for the weak.

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Uh, you know, everyone's educated to be a hero.

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Think about these kids who, you know, growing up to be Okay, yeah, there's a,

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uh, there's a link there, isn't there?

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Uh, so, that's food for thought, just read it.

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Uh, you know, read this principle, think about them, and try to apply it and

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see if it, uh, what comes out of it.

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And what you're saying is you think that Putin is a fascist.

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I'm not saying, look, Putin is, you know, is Putin, okay?

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But when, when the word's been thrown around, and I'm not

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even talking about individuals.

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Just, you know, the general, you know, sort of idea in the society of what's good

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or what we want or, uh, you know, things, as I say, the term has been thrown around.

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So if we go by this definition, uh, because, because Russians are very

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offended by, you know, some, some things that other people do in their corner,

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you know, they're fascists and, um, like, uh, like, uh, you know, insult

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that probably is, you know, mother of all insults and, uh, because this is, you

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know, Going back to Hitler times and this genuine, you know, feel that, you know,

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Russia defeated fascism, Nazism, uh, you know, at the time, kind of forgetting

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that, well, you know, Russia was won.

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Party or the coalition and Soviet Union definitely was, you know, one theme there.

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So Ukraine was taking part in it and took a lot of casualties and, uh,

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yeah, so you can't say that, you know, Russia defeated Fashion and Ukraine.

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So because the term is used a lot, just, yeah.

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Just think about it.

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Overused, maybe.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Okay, and just, um, so, you must hop on your computer hourly and you're getting

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messages from friends and family and it's just an all encompassing sort of thing

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where you're just inundated with news and keeping up with things and probably

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just thinking about it 24 7, I guess.

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It'd be hard not to.

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Yeah, I'll probably go and have some rum to, you know, to help me sleep now.

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Yeah.

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Right.

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So, so, well, Ed, I really appreciate, um, you taking the time out to do this.

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It's been, uh, it's an interesting insight.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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I hope it helps.

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And, uh, look, I've done.

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enough to, you know, for giving me time and, you know, um, opportunity

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to say what I wanted to say.

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Yeah.

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So, um, so good on you, Ed.

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And, um, and well, fingers crossed, uh, that at some point it stops sooner

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rather than later and some solution is found, but it's hard to imagine

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what that will be at this stage.

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I was convinced, not convinced, but I just assumed he would Donbass region.

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And he was just going to shell these other areas to keep them occupied while he

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shored up that, but it doesn't seem to be that he's going to be satisfied with that.

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And it just doesn't seem After some point, it all became, uh,

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irrational, you know, to me, and, and, and impossible to comprehend.

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So, you know, we're in shock really, you know, really from shock, uh, and

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I have, I have a friend, uh, who, you know, she has two kids, uh, and, Elson

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is 19 or 20 and he went to Ukraine, uh, cause he wanted to go to Europe and,

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you know, sort of And he's there in Kiev now, so she's, she's texting him all the

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time, but I mean, I can't imagine, like, so, so my heart goes to Ukraine, um,

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it is unimaginable, but also because I know people personally who suffer

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and, you know, and my family are there.

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Uh, even family on the Russian side are panicking too, uh, and it's not like

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they, uh, and it pains me to say, like, when I say, you know, Russia is

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an aggressor here, uh, or, you know,

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I don't have, you know, I'm not saying, I don't, I don't like what

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I'm saying, I'm not enjoying it.

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I, I,

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I don't feel Russian, uh, anymore, I guess.

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Not because of this, like, a long time ago.

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It's just, you know, I left for other reasons, I guess.

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I, you know, I wanted just to, you know, change country.

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So it's not, it's not because of that.

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It's just You know, people I know, I speak the language, right, so I have

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a side, and I still, I know I can't, I can't talk about it really, uh, as, as

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an impatient, um, you know, observer.

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Sorry.

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It's sort of a despair that your home country, if you like, is, is doing this,

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um, and has a leader who has dragged them into this, you know, for sure.

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Yeah.

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Ed, that's, there's too much tragedy in the world.

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I just know.

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Um, yeah.

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Um, up here in Queensland, we've got our floods and that I've got four customers

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who have had their shops flooded, you know, most of them without insurance.

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And yeah, it's tough times out there for a lot of people.

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Um, and they're probably luckier than people hold up in a basement, in, um,

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in, uh, in the Ukraine, well, it's shells are falling around them, so, yeah.

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Yeah.

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Oh yeah.

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If you, if you think times are tough, there's always

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somebody worse off than you.

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And a lot of them are in the Ukraine at the moment, so.

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Yeah.

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And, and you know, I read somewhere like, oh, imagine a few months ago we were only

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worried about, uh, you know, COVID Pan.

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Yeah.

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Mm-Hmm.

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Pandemic, you know, it is just pandemic.

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Yes.

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Yeah.

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When you, when you, I guess, you know.

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Look at the newspapers and what we have there.

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Oh, you know, plague and war and it's like Middle Ages, isn't it?

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Yes, it is.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Interesting times.

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All right.

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In Chinese definition of interesting, yes.

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Yeah.

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Much appreciated, Ed.

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Thanks for your time.

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Thank you, dear listeners in the chat room.

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Hope you enjoyed that one.

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A bit different.

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We'll be back with something else next week.

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Not sure what, but, um, bye for now.

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Thanks, Ed.

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Cheers.