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Comment by komali2

9 hours ago

Sorry, I don't quite understand what this means, can you help?

Russia seems poised to invade Europe in the near future. If they do, and succeed, Rome could become part of the new Soviet Union(which Putin has explicitly said he wants to bring back)

Once that happens, it's likely to lead to poverty. At least that's what happened in the last USSR

  • Let's entertain that idea. Suppose they did invade most of Europe.

    How would they keep everyone under control? You won't find that many people eager to participate in satellite regimes or new social experiments, like you had in post-WWII.

    I don't think Russia will even consider invading western Ukraine. They'll keep the Russian speaking part which they can easily govern.

  • Invade with what? Refugees running away from a poor and failing country? Man...

    • Russia is neither poor nor failing, and saying that is underestimating the real actual danger they present.

      Russia has vast natural resources and enough buyers for those resources even if the EU manages to completely stop (at significant cost). Their industry turned to wartime mode, resulting in the fact that they now have more armored vehicles than in February 2022.

      Will they actually physically reach Italy? Probably not. Will they try to buy it out and bring a (even more) fascist autocratic regime there? Probably yes.

  • >Russia seems poised to invade Europe in the near future

    only if the near future includes the year 2150 because as of right now the Russian defense ministry is celebrating the liberation of individual bakery plants on their state media

    https://tass.com/politics/2041223

  • > Russia seems poised to invade Europe in the near future. If they do, and succeed

    Is this a joke? There is literally no chance this ever happens.

    • Russia’s kleptocracy has impoverished the country so much that it now needs attrition in its male population to keep people from rising up against the current leadership. War is how you keep poor citizens from rebelling against you. When the war is over, historically the returning soldiers (especially in Russia) overturn the leadership. So there is never an incentive to stop a war. Especially a losing one.

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