- 16 Feb 2024 23:31
#15304625
The thing about the second image is that basically the American Right that supports Putin believes a few things about Puitn.
- He is a godly/christian (he's not, religion is just a tool for him)
- Hates woke culture (I'm sure he does)
- Putin was sincere when he said this was all about NATO expansion (which wasn't on the table for Ukraine anyway... or sweden... or findland..)
Tucker was hoping that Putin would feed into this line of thinking since it would reinforce the American Right's perception of Putin. Instead, he went down his usual bad read of history as a justification.
I wonder why Tucker didn't make it into the CIA.
Anyway, there is this guy, Niel Anders Puck (Geopolitical analyst, wrote a book, but it's not translated to English, so I just watch occasional youtube videos from him). He was going over the idea of "what would be difficult questions for Putin?". He made a great point, which was, a better way to interview Putin (which no one will do of course), is to ask Putin questions that matter to the Russian public. Not to the European public, not to the American public, and not even to the Ukrainian public. At least not directly/specifically.
Questions like "How was it possible for Wagner to march on Moscow?" or "Why aren't mobilized troops getting leave?" or "It's been 2+years since you've started your SMO, do you feel it is a success?" Those are questions that would be more challenging to answer, and he probably couldn't rely on by falling back on his usual (bad) historical based points.
litwin wrote:Muscovite tsar pOOtin : “Sincerely speaking, I didn’t fully enjoy this (Carslon) interview,” I Post here your fav carslon-putin MEME, JOKE
POOtin actually said he expected more challenging questions
The thing about the second image is that basically the American Right that supports Putin believes a few things about Puitn.
- He is a godly/christian (he's not, religion is just a tool for him)
- Hates woke culture (I'm sure he does)
- Putin was sincere when he said this was all about NATO expansion (which wasn't on the table for Ukraine anyway... or sweden... or findland..)
Tucker was hoping that Putin would feed into this line of thinking since it would reinforce the American Right's perception of Putin. Instead, he went down his usual bad read of history as a justification.
I wonder why Tucker didn't make it into the CIA.
Anyway, there is this guy, Niel Anders Puck (Geopolitical analyst, wrote a book, but it's not translated to English, so I just watch occasional youtube videos from him). He was going over the idea of "what would be difficult questions for Putin?". He made a great point, which was, a better way to interview Putin (which no one will do of course), is to ask Putin questions that matter to the Russian public. Not to the European public, not to the American public, and not even to the Ukrainian public. At least not directly/specifically.
Questions like "How was it possible for Wagner to march on Moscow?" or "Why aren't mobilized troops getting leave?" or "It's been 2+years since you've started your SMO, do you feel it is a success?" Those are questions that would be more challenging to answer, and he probably couldn't rely on by falling back on his usual (bad) historical based points.