We hope to have a meetup in Pearce Estate Park, on picnic tables at 51.0411, -114.017. Parking is free and it appears to be a 10-minute walk from the nearest transit stop.
However! I'll check the WeatherCAN app the morning of (or day before) the meetup and, if a chance of rain or snow is listed, switch the location to First Street Market (1327 1st Street SW).
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Hi Jasper! Don't worry, I definitely am not looking for rapid responses. I'm always busy anyway. And I wouldn't say there are in general 'easy or strong answers in how to persuade others'. I expect not to be able to persuade the majority of people on any given subject. But I always hope (and to some extent, expect) people in the ACX/LW/EA cluster to be persuadable based on evidence (more persuadable than my best friend whom I brought to the last meetup, who is more of an average person).
By the way, after writing my message I found out that I had a limited picture of Putin's demands for a peace deal―because I got that info from two mainstream media articles. When the excellent Anders Puck Neilson got around to talking about Putin's speech, he noticed other very large demands such as "denazification" (apparently meaning the Zelensky administration must be replaced with a more Kremlin-friendly government) and demilitarization (🤦♂️).
Yeah, Oliver Stone and Steven Seagal somehow went pro-Putin, just as Dennis Rodman befriended Kim Jong Un. There's always some people who love authoritarians, totalitarians, "strong leaders" or whatever. I don't understand it, but at least the Kremlin's allies are few enough that they decided to be friends with North Korea and Iran, and to rely on a western spokesman who is a convicted underage sex offender. So they seem a bit desperate―on the other hand, China has acted like a friend to North Korea since forever.
I'm not suggesting all the mainstream media got it wrong―only that enough sources repeated the Kremlin's story enough times to leave me, as someone who wasn't following the first war closely, the impression that the fight was mainly a civil war involving Kremlin-supplied weapons. (Thinking In hindsight, I'm like "wait a minute, how could a ragtag group of rebels already know how to use tanks, heavy artillery systems and Buk missile launchers in the same year the war started?") So my complaint is about what seems like the most typical way that the war was described.
A video reminded me tonight that after the war in Ukraine started, Russia pulled lots of its troops from all other borders, including the borders with NATO, in order to send them to Ukraine, and after Finland joined NATO, Russia pulled troops (again?) from its border with Finland―indicating that Putin has no actual fear of a NATO invasion.