queridiculo wrote:nate33 wrote:queridiculo wrote:Also conveniently ignores Republicans overwhelmingly supporting NATO membership for Ukraine in 2014.
The GOP and its lackeys are just shameful.
There has been a massive shift in Republican opinions on NATO expansion in the past 8 years. Most of it thanks to Trump. Republicans of 2022 do not have the same opinions as Republicans of 2014. They have mostly purged the neoCons (Bill Krystal, David Frum, Jennifer Rubin, etc.) from the party. Trump mistakenly courted warmonger John Bolton but that didn't end well, which further pushed the Trump wing of the Republican party away from their previous warmonger tendencies. This doesn't mean that all Republicans are peaceniks or anything, but I'd venture to say that pro-war saber-rattling is now coming from Democrats even more than Republicans.
I mean this is basically nonsense.
Trump never had a position on NATO that wasn't informed by off the cuff talking points and a superficial understanding of its function.
Republicans of 2022 are just Trump bootlickers that follow the GOPs mantra of using the news cycle to take ludicrous and contrarian positions to the Democrats.
I'll pay attention to what the Republicans have to say the second they take an official position or produce original thought on just about anything.
If you don't see that Republicans shifted their stance away from Global Empire and more toward an America First, protectionist stance, I don't know what to tell you. Obviously, it's not all Republicans. The old guard of guys like Lindsey Graham and Mitch McConnell still see things through Cold War glasses, but newer Republicans (and their voters, more specifically) are much more reticent to meddle in nation building in far away lands.
Here's another article:
Two-thirds (66%) of voters are concerned about the Russia-Ukraine situation, and three-quarters think what happens in Ukraine matters a great deal (35%) or some (42%) to life in the United States. The poll shows a rare bit of partisan agreement, as at least 7 in 10 voters in every demographic group think the conflict makes a difference at home. Moreover, about one-third of every group thinks it matters a great deal. More Democrats (77%) are worried about the Russia-Ukraine situation than Republicans (61%) or independents (53%).

















