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Comment by paganel

14 days ago

Russia will not stop taking its land in Kursk back because the Americans tell them to do so, this is just Western delusion, and, as I've said before on this forum, a complete misunderstanding coming from the Westerners on how Russia operates.

> devastating sanctions

Devastating for Europe, you mean.

I'm very curious, can any European here, or perhaps a German for specificity, tell me whether they believe these sanctions have harmed Russia more than Europe?

Also it would be better if any Russians here could answer a similar question

  • German here. Yes, it seems pretty obvious these sanctions have harmed Russia more than Europe.

    Russia: inflation around 8-9%.

    EU: inflation around 2%.

    • Thank you for the information. I believe that only those who are there can truly describe the situation there, beyond what I read in the media

      Recently, a professor I know wrote an article about his impressions of Russia and Germany when he attended meetings in both countries.

      Can you help to check what he said?

      > Macroeconomic data indicates that the European economy is not doing well, but the economic conditions I experienced during my days in Berlin could be described as depression. What surprised me the most was that there were not many people or cars on the streets of Berlin during the daytime on weekdays. Berlin in early October is not yet cold, but the desolate feeling on the streets does not match the image of the capital of Europe's largest economy. Europe's inflation, which started later than in the United States, has also clearly hurt the lives of the people, which was my perception from conversations with taxi drivers during my rides.

      7 replies →

  • As a European, I can say that the sanctions did harm European economies, which is reflected in various political Eu government crises.

    It is hard to know how much Russia has been harmed, because both sides probably exaggerate the figures.

    I wonder whether "more harm" is the right question. The question should be whether the sanctions have any impact on Russia's war economy, which they do not. If anything, they make Russia more independent and strengthen Russian ties with China and India.

    This is all to the detriment of the EU, the only one here who profits is the U.S. by making the EU more dependent.

    • > It is hard to know how much Russia has been harmed, because both sides probably exaggerate the figures.

      > The question should be whether the sanctions have any impact on Russia's war economy, which they do not

      Ruble is below a single penny.

      Interest rates are at 21%, highest since 2003.

      Inflation is out of control.

      > they make Russia more independent and strengthen Russian ties with China and India.

      ah, so that's why Putin went to North Korea to beg for troops and ammunition?

      3 replies →

  • These consumer side sanctions are idiotic. When a Russian buys a European beer, he spends money which goes from Russia to Europe, and in addition he damages his health.

    On the other side, Europe buys billions of dollars of oil and gas from Russia. That money goes in the opposite direction, from Europe to Russia, and is used toward soldier salaries, Iran drones and North Korean mercenaries.

Neither will Ukraine try to take their territory back as much as sycophants and dictator-appeasers think Ukraine have no agency