• @s38b35M5@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Can you share an example of the lack of journalism in this piece? I agree that the media bias of this formerly-unknown-to-me source is bad, but this piece has many, many reliable sources (USA Spending website, Reuters, NYT, BBC, etc.).

    And isn’t it generally known that profiteering and graft occurs during armed conflict? Why not expose it?

    Edit: for example, spending $US5.5M on six boats, trailers, spare parts and “training” seems high right? How much does a 38’ aluminum boat usually cost? Less than $100k, right? So, was the extra $4.9M for “delivery?” why wouldn’t this information be in the public interest?

    • @MangoMakesMeSmile
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      1 year ago

      It’s a series of figures given without context along with various unfounded opinions mixed in. I can’t take any article seriously when it endorses the stance that Russia is being backed into a corner and faces an existential threat to its survival due to its invasion of Ukraine. It also repeatedly calls this a proxy war, which is simply not true based on, ya know, definitions of words. I also find it disingenuous to say Washington drew Moscow into this “proxy war” when Moscow voluntarily started this invasion against the backdrop of expected world condemnation. If Putin himself didn’t bankroll this piece then he should be retroactively paying the editor and author for the blatant misinformation.

      Edit: Nice edit. You think a militarily equipped 38’ full or center console boat costs less than 100k??? You’re off by a factor of 5-10x.

        • @MangoMakesMeSmile
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          1 year ago

          Obviously doesn’t know definitions but I’m done engaging with such an obvious propagandist, or maybe you are just a fool.

          Proxy war: a war instigated by a major power which does not itself become involved.

          Instigate: bring about or initiate (an action or event).

          Edit:typo

      • @s38b35M5@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Edit: Nice edit. You think a militarily equipped 38’ full or center console boat costs less than 100k??? You’re off by a factor of 5-10x.

        Where does it say the boats are militarily-equipped? The boat manufacturer sells “normal” aluminum boats. ++

        I’m glad I read the piece. Will I read more of the article from this source? Probably not, but as “aid” money going anywhere these days seems to include a huge overspend and some questionable use of funds, I’d rather know about it than dismiss it because of some opinions I can easily ignore.

        Edit: ++ doing some digging on “GRAVOIS ALUMINUM BOATS” (who seems to be dba for Metal Shark boats) and they do sell boats with various levels of fitment beyond civilian use. Will update if I find pricing…

        Edit2: it looks like a “military” spec 38’ boat can be in the $400k-$600k range. So it would follow that that could easily expand on a government contract. Still am glad to see this reporting, despite some shared misgivings. Thank you for encouraging me to do my own research and not be a lazy consumer of news.

      • @s38b35M5@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Had to Google that one. Thanks, but asking why a seemingly good article from a bad source means it’s a bad article isn’t a waste of time. I want to know what’s wrong with this article. This is a place for discussion.

    • @sin_free_for_00_days
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      21 year ago

      Money spent in Ukraine is pennies on the dollars vs Russia. There should be oversight and investigations. But the US can’t even seem to handle looking into the $800B in fraud by business owners under the PPP. Talk about little to no oversight. This article in particular is strangely tankie in focus and verbiage. When the source of an article is questionable, find another source. Also, fuck Russia.