Turning to the latest from Ukraine, first I want to share a tweet I sent out today, related to my blog post from a few days ago:I remember when “free speech” was a progressive, forward-thinking movement that overcame puritan restrictions on things like profanity and nudity.
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) April 15, 2022
Now it’s been co-opted by the right to mean “the right to say any horrible shit we want, anywhere, without consequences.”
The nuclear question is the riderless horse in this metaphor -- we just don't know what will happen. Today, I read more news of possible nuclear threats, and more discussions about whether to take this seriously or not:History is "galloping riderless across the landscape" & we can't predict how this might end. pic.twitter.com/xAY5BCH9UF
— Cathie from Canada π¨π¦ π·π³️π (@CathieCanada) April 15, 2022
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told CNN Friday that "all of the countries of the world" should be prepared for the possibility that Russian President Vladimir Putin could use tactical nuclear weapons in his war on Ukraine https://t.co/e1YrR7HDHH
— CNN (@CNN) April 15, 2022
Few things are more tiresome than Westerners getting scared of Russian nukes. As @GeneralClark repeatedly states. Rather than getting scared of Russian nukes, presume that Putin will use nukes & ask what the US will do. The answer is Putin will not use nukes then.
— Anders Γ slund (@anders_aslund) April 15, 2022
As speculation about the Russian nuclear threat grows, note reporting below: The US has been monitoring Russian military forces for any unusual movement of nuclear weapons and has not detected such movements to date. https://t.co/ZGYaLyQRGw
— Jim Sciutto (@jimsciutto) April 15, 2022