this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2025
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Russia might just bail out or nationalise their military industry.
The Russian military industry is already mostly owned by the government. The war related industry took on $200-250billion in new debt. That is about the Russian pre war federal budget for a year.
Bail out? With what money? Money they print? Well, have fun with the hyperinflation from that.
No amount of accounting boondoggles will change the fact Russia just fundamentally doesn't have much good stuff.
I'm Lithuanian. I WILL have fun with that even if that's the last thing I do.
Nice.
"just" π
I don't think you appreciate the size of the problem here.
https://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/may-just-might-just "Just" here is part of an idiom that conveys possibility and does not mean "simply" or have any meaning that suggests the problem is small. "Might just" and "might simply" do not mean the same thing in English.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/just
In the context:
Simply is absolutely implied by adding "just" in this context. Possibility is already implied by might without adding "just". So that would be a double of the same meaning. Like Dog Kennel. Ergo "just" must mean "simply" or "only" as in "they only have to" in this context as far as I can tell.
To just show possibility you would leave the just out like this:
Russia might bail out or nationalise their military industry.
This idiom works differently than you think. This thread https://old.reddit.com/r/EnglishLearning/comments/161uisc/what_does_it_mean_you_just_might/ Captures the basic meaning of the idiom "Just" in isolation can mean something different than when it's added to a phrase. Don't take my word for it though, Google "might just idiom" for more discussion. This is the thing about idioms, phrasal verbs and the like: they take words that have different meaning in isolation and by joining them alter the meanings of the individual words.