Compare Incendiary Bombast to Reasoned Diplomacy

‘STRATCOM chief claims nuclear war with Russia or China a ‘REAL POSSIBILITY,’ says US can’t assume ‘strategic deterrence will hold’’, 6 Feb, 2021


“The head of US Strategic Command is warning that nuclear war with Russia or China is “a real possibility,” pointing to “destabilizing” behaviors of America’s rivals. He also claims the Pentagon is not “stuck in the Cold War.”

“There is a real possibility that a regional crisis with Russia or China could escalate quickly to a conflict involving nuclear weapons, if they perceived a conventional loss would threaten the regime or state,” STRATCOM chief and Vice Admiral Charles Richard wrote in the February issue of the US Naval Institute’s monthly magazine.

STRATCOM, which oversees the US nuclear arsenal, views the probability of nuclear war as low. But with Russia and China advancing their capabilities and continuing to “exert themselves globally,” Richard said STRATCOM must understand what it’s facing.”

The author quotes this Dick Cheney-esque ‘reasoning’ by the Vice Admiral:

In the absence of change, we are on the path, once again, to prepare for the conflict we prefer instead of one we are likely to face.”

More quotes from Richard’s ‘Forging 21st-Century Strategic Deterrence’, By Admiral Charles A. Richard, U.S. Navy, February 2021, published in the US Navy’s Proceedings magazine:

“It is through this lens that we must take a hard look at how we intend to compete against and deter our adversaries, assure our allies, and appropriately shape the future joint force.”

Our recent experiences against non-nuclear-armed adversaries have allowed us to believe nuclear use is impossible and not worthy of attention. At the U.S. Strategic Command, we assess the probability of nuclear use is low, but not “impossible,” particularly in a crisis and as our nuclear-armed adversaries continue to build capability and exert themselves globally.”

“While DoD’s focus has been on counterterrorism, Russia and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) have begun to aggressively challenge international norms and global peace using instruments of power and threats of force in ways not seen since the height of the Cold War—and in some cases, in ways not seen during the Cold War, such as cyberattacks and threats in space. Not surprisingly, they are even taking advantage of the global pandemic to advance their national agendas. These behaviors are destabilizing, and if left unchecked, increase the risk of great power crisis or conflict.

We must actively compete to hold their aggression in check; ceding to their initiatives risks reinforcing their perceptions that the United States is unwilling or unable to respond, which could further embolden them. Additionally, our allies may interpret inaction as an unwillingness or inability to lead. Remaining passive may deny us opportunities to position in ways that underpin one of our greatest strengths: strategic power projection. The moment an adversary’s initiative becomes a fait accompli, the United States would be forced to decide whether to accept their “new normal,” employ military force to reestablish the status quo, or set our own “new normal.”

The strategic capabilities of our competitors continue to grow, and they are sobering.”

And he uses about 2000 more words (and a few photos as evidence) to describe their increasing muscularity.  No mention of why the Great Competitors feel the need to arm themselves and their allies against the collapsing, loose cannon of the Amerikan Empire’s demand for Full Spectrum Dominance.

Next, from b at Moon of Alabama:

This Is Why They Attack Him – Putin Explains Why We Need New Economic Policies, Feb. 2, 2021

Bernhard’s chosen some passages from the transcript of Putin’s speech at virtual Davos 2021, and helpfully provides organizing context for readers.  his remarks will be in green, as are all  bolds.


“Putin sees a new danger of large international conflicts. Economic imbalances have caused socio-political problems in many countries which, when externalized, can lead to international conflicts."

To solve this one has to reject the laissez faire doctrines that caused the economic imbalances. The nation states must intervene more in their economies. The people must be seen as the ends, not the means of such economic policy. There must be more international cooperation through global organizations to enable this everywhere.

There is more in the speech than that. But the above is the core idea. U.S. neo-liberalism will of course reject such a program.

Following are excerpts that reflect on the above points.

The big picture view points to great danger":

‘The pandemic has exacerbated the problems and imbalances that built up in the world before. There is every reason to believe that differences are likely to grow stronger. These trends may appear practically in all areas.

Needless to say, there are no direct parallels in history. However, some experts – and I respect their opinion – compare the current situation to the 1930s. One can agree or disagree, but certain analogies are still suggested by many parameters, including the comprehensive, systemic nature of the challenges and potential threats.

We are seeing a crisis of the previous models and instruments of economic development. Social stratification is growing stronger both globally and in individual countries. We have spoken about this before as well. But this, in turn, is causing today a sharp polarisation of public views, provoking the growth of populism, right- and left-wing radicalism and other extremes, and the exacerbation of domestic political processes including in the leading countries.

All this is inevitably affecting the nature of international relations and is not making them more stable or predictable. International institutions are becoming weaker, regional conflicts are emerging one after another, and the system of global security is deteriorating.

Klaus [Schwab] has mentioned the conversation I had yesterday with the US President on extending the New START. This is, without a doubt, a step in the right direction. Nevertheless, the differences are leading to a downward spiral. As you are aware, the inability and unwillingness to find substantive solutions to problems like this in the 20th century led to the WWII catastrophe.’

“Putin then goes into the details of the above theses.  What caused the current economic imbalances?”

‘These imbalances in global socioeconomic development are a direct result of the policy pursued in the 1980s, which was often vulgar or dogmatic. This policy rested on the so-called Washington Consensus with its unwritten rules, when the priority was given to the economic growth based on a private debt in conditions of deregulation and low taxes on the wealthy and the corporations.

As I have already mentioned, the coronavirus pandemic has only exacerbated these problems. In the last year, the global economy sustained its biggest decline since WWII. By July, the labour market had lost almost 500 million jobs. Yes, half of them were restored by the end of the year but still almost 250 million jobs were lost. This is a big and very alarming figure. In the first nine months of the past year alone, the losses of earnings amounted to $3.5 trillion. This figure is going up and, hence, social tension is on the rise.

At the same time, post-crisis recovery is not simple at all. If some 20 or 30 years ago, we would have solved the problem through stimulating macroeconomic policies (incidentally, this is still being done), today such mechanisms have reached their limits and are no longer effective. This resource has outlived its usefulness. This is not an unsubstantiated personal conclusion.

According to the IMF, the aggregate sovereign and private debt level has approached 200 percent of global GDP, and has even exceeded 300 percent of national GDP in some countries. At the same time, interest rates in developed market economies are kept at almost zero and are at a historic low in emerging market economies.

Taken together, this makes economic stimulation with traditional methods, through an increase in private loans virtually impossible. The so-called quantitative easing is only increasing the bubble of the value of financial assets and deepening the social divide. The widening gap between the real and virtual economies (incidentally, representatives of the real economy sector from many countries have told me about this on numerous occasions, and I believe that the business representatives attending this meeting will agree with me) presents a very real threat and is fraught with serious and unpredictable shocks.

“The economic imbalances create deep socio-political problems”

In this context, I would like to mention the second fundamental challenge of the forthcoming decade – the socio-political one. The rise of economic problems and inequality is splitting society, triggering social, racial and ethnic intolerance. Indicatively, these tensions are bursting out even in the countries with seemingly civil and democratic institutions that are designed to alleviate and stop such phenomena and excesses.

The systemic socioeconomic problems are evoking such social discontent that they require special attention and real solutions. The dangerous illusion that they may be ignored or pushed into the corner is fraught with serious consequences.

In this case, society will still be divided politically and socially. This is bound to happen because people are dissatisfied not by some abstract issues but by real problems that concern everyone regardless of the political views that people have or think they have. Meanwhile, real problems evoke discontent.

“The danger rises when the socio-political problems get externalized”:

And finally, the third challenge, or rather, a clear threat that we may well run into in the coming decade is the further exacerbation of many international problems. After all, unresolved and mounting internal socioeconomic problems may push people to look for someone to blame for all their troubles and to redirect their irritation and discontent. We can already see this. We feel that the degree of foreign policy propaganda rhetoric is growing.

We can expect the nature of practical actions to also become more aggressive, including pressure on the countries that do not agree with a role of obedient controlled satellites, use of trade barriers, illegitimate sanctions and restrictions in the financial, technological and cyber spheres.

Such a game with no rules critically increases the risk of unilateral use of military force. The use of force under a far-fetched pretext is what this danger is all about. This multiplies the likelihood of new hot spots flaring up on our planet. This concerns us.’

“What can be done to prevent the danger which arises from socio-political problems caused by imbalanced economies?”

Clearly, with the above restrictions and macroeconomic policy in mind, economic growth will largely rely on fiscal incentives with state budgets and central banks playing the key role.

Actually, we can see these kinds of trends in the developed countries and also in some developing economies as well. An increasing role of the state in the socioeconomic sphere at the national level obviously implies greater responsibility and close interstate interaction when it comes to issues on the global agenda.

It is clear that the world cannot continue creating an economy that will only benefit a million people, or even the golden billion. This is a destructive precept. This model is unbalanced by default. The recent developments, including migration crises, have reaffirmed this once again.

We must now proceed from stating facts to action, investing our efforts and resources into reducing social inequality in individual countries and into gradually balancing the economic development standards of different countries and regions in the world. This would put an end to migration crises.

The essence and focus of this policy aimed at ensuring sustainable and harmonious development are clear. They imply the creation of new opportunities for everyone, conditions under which everyone will be able to develop and realise their potential regardless of where they were born and are living.’

“Here Putin sets the goals for national strategies”:

I would like to point out four key priorities, as I see them. This might be old news, but since Klaus has allowed me to present Russia’s position, my position, I will certainly do so.

First, everyone must have comfortable living conditions, including housing and affordable transport, energy and public utility infrastructure. Plus environmental welfare, something that must not be overlooked.

Second, everyone must be sure that they will have a job that can ensure sustainable growth of income and, hence, decent standards of living. Everyone must have access to an effective system of lifelong education, which is absolutely indispensable now and which will allow people to develop, make a career and receive a decent pension and social benefits upon retirement.

Third, people must be confident that they will receive high-quality and effective medical care whenever necessary, and that the national healthcare system will guarantee access to modern medical services.

Fourth, regardless of the family income, children must be able to receive a decent education and realise their potential. Every child has potential.

This is the only way to guarantee the cost-effective development of the modern economy, in which people are perceived as the end, rather than the means. Only those countries capable of attaining progress in at least these four areas will facilitate their own sustainable and all-inclusive development. These areas are not exhaustive, and I have just mentioned the main aspects.

A strategy, also being implemented by my country, hinges on precisely these approaches.’

“What should be done globally”:

‘We are open to the broadest international cooperation, while achieving our national goals, and we are confident that cooperation on matters of the global socioeconomic agenda would have a positive influence on the overall atmosphere in global affairs, and that interdependence in addressing acute current problems would also increase mutual trust which is particularly important and particularly topical today.

Obviously, the era linked with attempts to build a centralised and unipolar world order has ended. To be honest, this era did not even begin. A mere attempt was made in this direction, but this, too, is now history. The essence of this monopoly ran counter to our civilisation’s cultural and historical diversity.

The reality is such that really different development centres with their distinctive models, political systems and public institutions have taken shape in the world. Today, it is very important to create mechanisms for harmonising their interests to prevent the diversity and natural competition of the development poles from triggering anarchy and a series of protracted conflicts.

To achieve this we must, in part, consolidate and develop universal institutions that bear special responsibility for ensuring stability and security in the world and for formulating and defining the rules of conduct both in the global economy and trade.’

“It is no wonder that the neo-liberal ‘west’ constantly attacks Putin and at the same time takes care that his speech gets as little attention as possible. It is dangerous because it could give the deplorables some ideas.

It is also sad that no ‘western’ politician I am aware of would ever give such a speech.”

More Biden bellicosity via sputnik news, Feb. 7, 2021: ‘Biden Says US Will Not Lift Sanctions Against Iran Until Tehran Stops Enriching Uranium’

“Despite post-election hopes that Biden would take immediate steps to rejoin the JCPOA to ease tensions with Tehran, the new administration has failed to reach agreement with its Iranian counterparts on which side should be the first to make concessions. Tehran insists that it is up to the US side to lift its sanctions, given that it was Washington with abrogated its obligations and pulled out of the accord in 2018. The US side maintains that Iran must first signal its commitment to the JCPOA by scaling back its uranium enrichment and stockpiling activities.” […]

and:
Chinese Leader ‘Doesn’t Have a Democratic Bone in His Body’

“In the interview, Biden was also asked about his administration’s approach to China, and said that while he expects to see “extreme competition” with Beijing, the US is not going to push it into open “conflict.”  […]

“This week, the US Navy destroyer USS John S. McCain passed through the Taiwan Strait on a ‘freedom of navigation’ mission, becoming the first US warship to make the journey through the contested waterway since Biden took office. Beijing blasted the maneuver as an “old trick” aimed at ‘manipulating’ the cross-Strait situation, and stressed that the US warship had been “tracked and monitored” throughout its journey. The People’s Republic considers Taiwan to be a wayward province, and maintains a course to reunifying the island with mainland China at some point in the future.”

(I'll add a few Tweets as soon as I'm able in a comment.)

(cross-posted from Café Babylon)

Share
up
11 users have voted.

Comments

all of what you've posted here yet, but I treasure the fact that you've shown the comparison between the batshit crazy statememt of STRATCOM Adm. Richard and the common sense statement of Putin.

Putin's talking about economic inequality exacerbating every problem on earth, and Richard's talking about Russia and China causing us to use nuclear war as the remedy to their aggression.

Is our leadership on dope? Do they think we're on dope? Are we on dope?

up
11 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

@Linda Wood

most USians who depend on Main Stream news ARE on dope, hypnotized by repetitive agitprop to believe that Russia, china, shi'a muslim nations, and socialist nations ARE evil and corrupt.

so my guess is that most would laud the Rear Admiral's essay highly, and agree with his hyperbolic word-salad war-mongering.

and most are little about Empire and War; they're likely more focused with now on the New D Stim Package that the senate swears is on the way!

i sure wonder about bibi's Outraged! tweets, though; i'll have to dig into it a bit when i have time. at mondoweiss.com perhaps.

hope you have time to finish; it's still under 3000 words even with all my links and tweets on this word document. ; )

up
7 users have voted.

@wendy davis

of this kind breathtaking, not because he seems so brilliant, but because our political leadership and especially our mainstream media seem so stupid by comparison.

I mean, we arm Nazi military forces in Ukraine. When the Russians defend Crimea against those Nazi forces, we call Putin "Hitler." Do the troglodytes at the State Dept. know who Hitler was? Do they know what the people of Ukraine and Crimea went through during WWII? Do they think the American people believe the Nazis were the good guys?

I guess we're expected to think Nazis are fashionable now because they kill labor and promote IMF loans, and because loans are our biggest industry, Nazism is pro-growth, also known as pro-debt, also known as pro-austerity, also known as income inequality, and therefore opposed to Putin.

up
4 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

@Linda Wood

the US gives arms to 'neo-nazis'in ukraine (svoboda, right sektor, et.al. and oy, do they love torchlight parades!

yes, putin stole crimea, never mind the citizens voted to re-join russia, and the Donbass separatists 'little green men' are armed and trained by putin. wee eva bartlett committed some brave and worthy journalists when she went there to discover what was going on.

and who did joe tap for a key state dept. position? via anti-war.com, jan. 5:

"Biden Taps Architect of 2014 Ukraine Coup for State Department
Victoria Nuland, wife of neoconservative Robert Kagan, is expected be nominated for under secretary of state for political affairs.

According to a report from Politico, Joe Biden’s transition team is expected to nominate Victoria Nuland to be the under secretary of state for political affairs for the incoming administration’s State Department."

Nuland, who is married to neoconservative Robert Kagan, is known for her role in orchestrating the 2014 coup in Ukraine while she was the assistant secretary of state for Europe and Eurasian affairs in the Obama administration."

can't imagine she hasn't been confirmed yet, given the epic Need for Her services....

up
4 users have voted.

@wendy davis

up
5 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

wendy davis's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness

at the implements of war he's in charge of! including all the nukes! a brilliant-lookimg bloke, though/s.

on edit: the link didn't come through. oddly, it won't boot up thru word press and open in internet explorer, which would have helped me to embed a far smaller version of the Vice Rear Admiral's image

(images on IE right clip to Properties, with the urls as well as the sizes).

up
5 users have voted.

@wendy davis

https://great-characters.fandom.com/wiki/Brigadier_General_Jack_D._Ripper

up
7 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Pluto's Republic's picture

@Linda Wood

Is our leadership on dope?

They just need to be taken to the animal hospital to get neutered.

up
5 users have voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
lotlizard's picture

may be nearer than most non-Trump-supporters think.

up
11 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

@lotlizard

with dubya's face asking that same Q, but i hadn't known about a DT one.

do you think most amerikans give a fig about war? i wish i did, to say the truth. i'm also mindful of the fact that the D team gave the former Boss Tweet a whopping increase over what he'd requested for his War budget.

but big woop: biden took the houthis off the terrorist list (will they get aid to rebuild their torn-asunder nation?), and is allowing trans folks to serve openly in the military! he's an israel-firster, and a guaido-ista, but at least he'll not renew any contracts for private prisons. baby steps! but he'd always said nothing would essentially change under his administration...

biden, trump, 'i will never allow iran to get a nuclear bomb!' not that they want one, it's against their religious principles, but why the fuck shouldn't they be allowed one? which is the only nation who's used them?

but then if 'insiders' told the tale truthfuly, the latter had considered bombing iran and his generals stopped him. it may even have been true, but wht comes through the WaPo and NY(cia)Times is always suspect, isn't it?

up
6 users have voted.
Pluto's Republic's picture

@wendy davis

...and reject the narrative myths of day-to-day gaslighting in the US:

I would hope that no one here believes, for one second, that Donald Trump (or any modern President) ever had ultimate control over the US Military, or that the military would obey foolish and suicidal orders because a civilian President says so. If the military objects, it is not going to happen. Trump could not bomb Damascus or Tehran, and he could not stop even one of "America's ridiculous wars," as he promised on the campaign trail. All of his attempts to do so resulted in a staged false flag operation that made Trump look foolish. Trump could not launch a nuclear strike, even if he was convinced it would "Make America Great Again." Stop and think about it. The Generals have had many meetings about this over the years. They have dozens of ways to distract trigger-happy presidents, but no President will ever be allowed to press some missile-launch "button" because he has a secret "code." Seriously. Be glad for that.

Trump could not bomb Iran; the Generals would not permit that. Although, the military did let Pompeo assassinate an Iranian General, but Pompeo is a West Pointer and leads a powerful DC cabal that occupies the Pentagon and the State Department. Furthermore, US military strategists understand that US acts of war against Iran will not trigger Iran to start a war. Iran's military posture is defensive; It is designed to deter invasions and regional attacks. Fact: the Persians haven't started a war since the 8th century; it is not in their nature and is not a theme that runs through their civilization. Iranians will be the first to point out that Nuclear weapons are designed to target civilians. Period. It’s a shameful weapon only psychopaths would want to own. Iran's culture and religious traditions directly forbids the development or deployment of nuclear weapons — which they have explained hundreds of times over the years, and which the UN has repeatedly verified and confirmed.

Americans don't care about foreign wars because there is no draft and there is nothing they can do about it, anyway. Everybody is soooo excited about censorship and free speech. But anyone who boldly speaks against the wars and the military culture and the carnage and the costs has experienced a lifetime of censorship, social exclusion, and marginalization. I don't think the world and the war victims should give the American people a pass when it comes to US wars. The silence of the majority is consent and approval.

up
8 users have voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
wendy davis's picture

@Pluto's Republic

yes to that! the oft-asked Q:

'who will stop the US Empire, the largest purveyor of death, immiseration (sanctions as 'war by other means' and destruction?'

A: those who can and Must to survive!'

yes, the all-volunteer military was brilliant, and acts as a jobs program on its own. but another reason most USians aren't flipped out over the Empire's wars are that they are so neat and clean now, techno-wars by bombing from the air, missiles from the sea, and drone run like x-box games.

land wars seem to be relegated to history, save perhaps in syria and others i can't think of at the moment. yes to competing Deep States being able to save irrational* Presidents from starting new wars that are doomed to cause WWIII. are we there yet? stay tuned.

the Empire is still predicting and perhaps false-flagging incidents seen as 'Iran's reaction to the assassination of Gen Qassem Soleimani', but he as evil, too, as far as the MSM.

yes on free speech, and i do care about the deplatforming on social media, but s far as speaking against war? 'first they came for Julian Assange,then they came for Wilkileaks:

@WikiLeaksShop Feb 2

@Facebook has banned the @WikiLeaksShop page without warning for posting graphics of our #FreeAssange t-shirts. You can still follow us on Twitter.

thank you, pluto; i have something to add soon that you may like. one bloke on b's comment thread had said that pepe escobar had written up (commentary?) putin's speech. i did find the tome republished in several venues, but as it turns out he'd covered both putin's and Xi's at virtual davos.

i found a version that may also short-hand the meaning of WEF's Great Reset as well. i'll go read it after a few RL chores, maybe bring some of it at the bottom.

up
3 users have voted.

@Pluto's Republic
For all genders. exclusions only for failing pre-induction physical/mental tests.
A strange position from one who always opposed the draft on Constitutional grounds. But the public would finally care about war again if it once again affected their families. It wouldn't stop all wars. I've often heard of the lines at recruiting stations in the aftermath of pearl harbor. But no one stood in line for Korea or Vietnam or anything that came after. However I do believe that some came running for the Civil war. On both sides.
If the people think it's neccesary they will sacrifice. but if it's someone else or someone else's kid they won't. That's truly deplorable, but true.

But we had a draft AND war in Korea and Vietnam. Eisenhower was elected on "I will go to Korea" and we oldsters remember the mass opposition to Vietnam. Why no mass opposition to Syria? Answer: "'taint no business of mine!"

up
4 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@Pluto's Republic

Everybody is soooo excited about censorship and free speech. But anyone who boldly speaks against the wars and the military culture and the carnage and the costs has experienced a lifetime of censorship, social exclusion, and marginalization.

and thus, those two issues are inextricably intertwined in American politics. Advocating for one may not be advocating for the other, precisely, but as someone who has protested against many of "our" wars, I'm keenly aware of the danger of what's happening on YouTube and Twitter. Among other things, I believe that the military and the rest of the security state are involved in both the censorship and the wars.

I don't think the world and the war victims should give the American people a pass when it comes to US wars. The silence of the majority is consent and approval.

Well, a question then. What if you've been loud, not silent, for 30 or 40 years with no effect and then you stop yelling, because it's been painfully obvious that your tactic is completely ineffective?

See, to me the blood of millions is on my hands, to the extent it is, because I pay taxes, and some of that money is used for killing innocent (and often unarmed) people. It's also true that attempting NOT to pay taxes would not ultimately keep my money from the IRS (I looked into all this back when I was contemplating pulling a Thoreau on the establishment). Basically, if you refuse to pay taxes, they start taking your property, up to and including garnishing your wages, if you have any. So they get their hands on your money anyway, and use it to kill people. Nonetheless, I don't think that entirely exculpates me. But ceasing to attend anti-war rallies isn't something I feel guilty about.

Rallying doesn't have an impact except on those who were there. Doesn't mean they're useless, but they're not useful in stopping war or changing U.S. foreign policy.

Another question: How does the world and how do the war victims know what the American people think, or whether they've been loud or silent? If I want to be completely honest, the truth is that *I* don't know. Imagine that there was a 3,000-person rally against the wars in, say Poughkeepsie, last weekend. Does anybody really think that the national media would cover that story? The last rally I attended (a climate rally) was in NYC and totaled around 600,000 people. There were about 25 satellite rallies simultaneously. There was local coverage in NYC. Nationally, the rally warranted half a sentence on one Sunday morning talk show. There's no way anybody overseas would have known anything about it unless they were somehow involved.

It's hard to gather data on what the American people think. A corrupt media stands between me and the data. Anecdotally, it seems to me that more people than not would prefer the wars to end. There's support for that on the left and the right. The Democrats are pretty scary with their apocalyptic Russia talk, and some of the ordinary Democratic voters follow their leaders on this issue, which is bad. That's where things have gotten really ugly lately. But I wouldn't assume that's the response of all the American people.

up
4 users have voted.

"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Pluto's Republic's picture

@Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal

I must study your points further.

In the meantime, I've analyzed this this question through every possible lens, and finally settled on the only lens that means anything, evolution and fitness for survival:

I don't think the world and the war victims should give the American people a pass when it comes to US wars. The silence of the majority is consent and approval.

Well, a question then. What if you've been loud, not silent, for 30 or 40 years with no effect and then you stop yelling, because it's been painfully obvious that your tactic is completely ineffective?

.

What you do is the same thing that your direct ancestors did for the past 100,000 years, when they perceived the evil descending on them. They got the hell out of Dodge. They migrated toward a better and safer life before they were permanently damaged by the marauding psychopaths. Provoked migration has always been a gut wrenching experience, as the fit and young and brave left likely behind their parents and their young children — never again to see them — and launched themselves into the unknown. Sometimes they made a bad decision setting out, like the poor refugees that are imprisoned on our borders right now, who migrated north (big mistake) instead of south. But if they made a wise decision, then they are part of the line of direct ancestors who managed to carry your particular genetic consciousness all the way to the 20th century.

The painful truth of it is that we, ourselves, produce these evil-seed psychopaths without realizing it. And they have chased us across the millennia — attached to us like our shadows are. And, of course, they are still on our tails right now, poisoning our environment and fomenting wars. Converselyj, those of us who are alive right now carry the refined threads of DNA that managed to escape looming disasters, again and again, in order to survive for another day. Deep down, we know how to save ourselves. If we take a step toward continued evolution, our wisdom will kick in.

up
3 users have voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
TheOtherMaven's picture

@Pluto's Republic

No more frontiers, no more wilderness, no more escape from what's coming. It'll get us all, same as if it were a major asteroid collision.

up
3 users have voted.

There is no justice. There can be no peace.

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@Pluto's Republic

If it weren't for my mom, and a couple of other family obligations, I'd say I was really stupid not to listen to you on this issue a couple years ago, when you first started saying that people like me should leave this country.

But I probably would have stayed anyway (you're right about family obligations holding one back from voluntary exile).

up
0 users have voted.

"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@Pluto's Republic

The painful truth of it is that we, ourselves, produce these evil-seed psychopaths without realizing it. And they have chased us across the millennia — attached to us like our shadows are. And, of course, they are still on our tails right now, poisoning our environment and fomenting wars. Conversely, those of us who are alive right now carry the refined threads of DNA that managed to escape looming disasters, again and again, in order to survive for another day. Deep down, we know how to save ourselves. If we take a step toward continued evolution, our wisdom will kick in.

I've never thought about it through the lens of evolution.

up
0 users have voted.

"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

wendy davis's picture

US Strategic Command @US_Stratcom

Official Twitter account of U.S. Strategic Command. 'Peace is our Profession...' Following, RTs and Links ≠ Endorsement.

@IsraeliPM Feb 6

First, the ICC outrageously claims that when Jews live in our homeland, this is a war crime.
Second, it claims that when democratic Israel defends itself against terrorists who murder our children and rocket our cities - we are committing another war crime.

@IsraeliPM

Yet the ICC refuses to investigate brutal dictatorships like Iran and Syria, who commit horrific atrocities almost daily.

As Prime Minister of Israel, I can assure you this:
We will fight this perversion of justice with all our might!

@IsraeliPM 4m

The Cabinet determines that the court has no authority to make such a decision. Israel is not a member of the international court and the Palestinian Authority does not have the status of a state.

up
6 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

Some reflections on the International Criminal Court decision on its territorial jurisdiction in Palestine; The ICC decision to investigate war crimes in Palestine has huge symbolic significance and will likely consider the crime of apartheid, given recent reports’ By François Dubuisson, February 6, 2021

“It is an understatement to say that the decision of the Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court on the opening of an investigation in the situation of Palestine was awaited, given that the process of bringing before the ICC the examination of international crimes committed on Palestinian territory, in the context of the Israeli occupation, has been long and tumultuous since the first attempt was made in 2009. In its decision of 5 February, the Pre-Trial Chamber confirmed the position of the Office of the Prosecutor, set out in the document transmitted to it in December 2019, that the Court has jurisdiction to investigate all crimes committed in all of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem.

“The Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) will now be able to formally open an investigation to establish individual criminal responsibility for crimes under the Statute (in particular, war crimes, crimes against humanity). [snip]

“The continuation of the OTP’s investigation process is likely to take many more years, so concrete results will take some time to emerge. But the practical and symbolic significance of the decision is already a reality.”

.............................................................

In first test of Biden’s stance on Israel– president rolls over’, By Philip Weiss February 7, 2021, (no surprise)

“The State Department began Friday by issuing a neutral legal statement opposing the ICC’s jurisdiction (responding to AP reporter Matt Lee’s opening question). “We have serious concerns about the ICC’s attempts to exercise its jurisdiction over Israeli personnel…. [T]he court’s jurisdiction should be reserved for countries that consent to it or that are referred by the UN Security Council.”

State spokesperson Ned Price went further on twitter, embracing Israel: “We will continue to uphold President Biden’s strong commitment to Israel and its security, including opposing actions that seek to target Israel unfairly.”
Aaron David Miller said the prompt response was telling.

The Biden Adm left no doubt about its reaction to ICC decision to probe Israeli and Palestinian war crimes. With Iran a top priority and Palestinian issue not; and facing greatest domestic challenge since FDR, Biden wisely just said no to this one.

and many other reactions, many of them...epically disgusting, if unsurprising.

i need to go make some dinner; mr. wd's gonna be hungry as an old bear when he gets in...

on next day edit: i'm removing some of the text for...length.

up
6 users have voted.
mimi's picture

what would the world and we without it?

I can't read this stuff (that is not meant as an offence to you, wendy) It's too much and all it does, it gives you headaches, skin rashes, mentally insane reactions to it and fear. All of it I don't need. If one just ignores such war bullshitting commanders and political overlords, they are losing.

la la la la la
[video:https://youtu.be/gjVcM838K7A]

up
4 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

@mimi

ma soeur. it's jut that i was born in the #shitholenation, will die here, and find that my need to bear witness to the most warlike/capitalistic atrocities it commits globally...have moved me to blog.

i have more for tomorrow, but let the gorgeous song with aurora borealis graphics act as tonight's closing song. it's brilliant!

good night all, and good luck to us all. we'll be needing more if it soon.

up
6 users have voted.
mimi's picture

@wendy davis
every link and word at a time. I did not mean it badly, I am just sometimes
too frustrated when I can't keep up with the pace of writing here. Shame on me to let it show.
Please go on. All of it is very worthwhile to have it 'on the record'. I am old and tired and overwhelmed, so I make darn stupid comments. Forgive me please.

up
2 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

@mimi

apologize, and it wasn't a stupid comment. i'm old, tired, and ready to cross to the other side. and as my mind degrades further, about all i can do now is use other people's work. sometimes it's sheer anger at this perfidious inhumane sociopathic Empire that keeps me going.

and the antiwar song you brought simply overwhelmed me with its beauty; i'd never even hear of gerry cinnamon, bless his soul. i've meant to look him up, but haven't managed to...yet.
; )

be at peace when you're able, mimi,
wd

up
5 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

at strategiculture.org Feb. 1, 2021:

Xi and Putin Stand Up for Humanity at Davos: Closed vs Open System Ideologies Clash Again’, matthew ehret, feb. 1, 2021

"Between January 25-29, 2021, world leaders were corralled into a digital conference titled “The Davos Agenda” in order to discuss the foundations of the emerging new world economic architecture which has come to be called “The Great Reset”.

For those who have not yet made this disturbing discovery, the Great Reset agenda was first unveiled by the World Economic Forum as a cover for imposing a new world economic order upon nation states. This reset hides behind a veneer of morality but is actually reveals a to feudalism with a technotronic twist. [...]

As I outlined in my recent study “Maurice Strong and the Roots of the Great Reset Agenda”, and which Brzezinski’s life’s devotion indicates, while this plan was officially unveiled in June 2020, its origins can be traced back many decades earlier.

The formula driving this “global cure-all” is simple and starts with the following presumptions:

COVID-19 has caused world economic systems to grind to a halt. 2) Now the leaders of the world have a golden opportunity to correct the abuses of unbounded free market monetarism which became hegemonic since 1971 and establish a new global economic order. 3) This new order will be premised on a mass behavioral modification of humanity in order to end climate change (by decarbonizing the world to pre-industrial levels) while also creating top-down regimes that can end COVID-19, all in one unified thrust. Whether or not these crises are in fact the existential threats we have been sold or whether they are chimerical non-issues created by computer modellers is a topic to be tackled another day.

Giddy Technocrats Celebrate the Crisis

"Speaking at the World Economic Forum (WEF) last year, Prince Charles stated buoyantly “We have a golden opportunity to seize something good from this crisis- its unprecedented shockwaves may well make people more receptive to big visions of change. It is an opportunity we have never had before and may never have again.” (1)

WEF founder and Chairman Klaus Schwab echoed these words saying: “The pandemic represents a rare but narrow window of opportunity to reflect, reimagine, and reset our world”.

Even the Vatican itself under Pope Francis has jumped on board endorsing the Great Reset while creating a green “Council for Inclusive Capitalism With the Vatican”.

U.S. Special Envoy for Climate John Kerry stated on January 23: “The notion of a Reset is more important than ever before. I personally believe we’re at the dawn of an extremely exciting time.”

Of course, words like “social justice”, “equality” and “development” are freely bandied about by Davos creatures but when one digs into the means promoted to achieve the mass decarbonization of world civilization, a different picture emerges.

Not only would these “decarbonizing Green New Dealers” tie civilization to low quality, incredibly expensive and woefully unreliable forms of energy rooted in windmills and solar panels, but forcing the swift elimination of fossil fuels (and the conspicuous absence of nuclear power development) [Note: he's speaking of nuclear fission, not fusion} would constrict civilization’s ability to sustain its population and agro-industrial needs in stark terms. The greatest hit under this green paradigm would be the poor who, at least for a short period, desperately require vastly increased uses of the fossil fuels located under their soil in order to industrialize.

Additionally, Davos Creatures promoting this de-carbonized world have laid out in depth, a new system of Green hegemonic digital currency controlled by the City of London and the Central Bankers’ Climate Councils. These financiers love the idea of expert panels of managing humanity outside of the “messy institutions of democracies” which have historically blocked the enlightened elite from making the “tough draconian” decisions for the common good since the days of the League of Nations.

What is it about Putin and Xi which inspires such fear in the hearts of the Great Reset Architects? In the simplest terms, the answer is “open system economics”.

"While the Great Reset Architects are thoroughly committed to closed operating systems which demand computer models be imposed onto the world guiding a zero-growth policy towards total equilibrium and “entropy”, the multipolar alliance led by Xi and Putin are committed to “open system” thinking.

Where the closed system/unipolar model demands the submission of governments to a totalitarian system of controls of “experts” who are uniquely qualified to control the diminishing rates of return of fixed resources, the open system/multipolar model demands a respect for sovereign nations and a focus upon the creation of new resources via scientific and technological progress. Where one is premised on a zero-sum game of win-lose behavior (aka: the survival of the fittest), the other is premised upon a non-zero-sum game of win-win cooperation.

When confronted with resource scarcity and population growth, closed system thinkers adopt a Malthusian view that population growth must be culled to adhere to mathematical models of “carrying capacity” in some imagined stated of “natural equilibrium” which said models demand must exist.

On the other hand, open system thinkers promote scientific and technological progress and industrial growth in order to overcome said states of “carrying capacity”. This approach reflects an understanding that value is not located in money, or any material phenomenon per se, but rather in the immaterial powers of cognition and metaphysical laws of intention, creativity, morality, hope and justice. Malthusian materialists tend to get very uncomfortable at such “abstract” and “unscientific” ideas.

Where one system promotes the trojan horse seeds of its own annihilation, the other promotes the seeds of fruitful new epochs of continual growth and discoveries both on the surface of the earth and also beyond."

I'll stop here to say that my impression of the Great Reset had more to do with
'Stakeholder Capitalism', a fusion of private and pubic money (fascism?) used to commodify nature and profit from the Greenwashing of false capitalist solutions, while dubbing it Green socialism. or close to that. but onward to Xi:


Xi Jinping’s Speech

"Speaking on January 25, President Xi called for “four major tasks facing people of our times”: 1) macro economic needs, 2) a foreign policy of peaceful co-existence and win-win cooperation, 3) close the north south inequality gap and 4) coordinate to deal with global challenges.

On the first task, Xi stated: “We need to shift the driving forces and the growth models of the global economy and improve its structure, so as to set the course for long term, sound, and steady development of the world economy.”

Pushing back against the Hobbesian unipolarists presiding over the summit, Xi defended his 2nd Task saying: “Difference in itself is no cause for alarm. What does bring alarm is arrogance, prejudice, and hatred. It is the attempt to impose hierarchy on human civilization, or to force one’s own history, culture, and social system upon others. The right choice is for countries to pursue peaceful coexistence based on mutual respect, and only finding common ground, while shelving differences, and to promote exchanges and mutual learning. This is the way to add impetus to the progress of human civilization.”

Defending poor nations’ rights to control their own developmental pathways, Xi announced the 3rd task saying: “The international community should keep its eyes on the long run, honor its commitment to provide necessary support to developing countries and safeguard their legitimate development interests.”

And finally on the 4th task, Xi stated: “No global problem can be solved by any one country alone. There must be global action, a global response, and global cooperation.”

While Xi supported the WHO, globalization and Paris Climate Accords, his approach to net carbon neutrality by 2060 is hinged not on degrowth, but rather advanced scientific and technological progress, equal access for development, the defense of sovereign nation states as outlined in the UN Charter. On these points Xi stated:

“China will invest more in science and technology, developing and enabling systems for innovation as a priority, turn breakthroughs in science and technology into actual productivity at a faster pace, and enhance intellectual property protection, all for the purpose of fostering innovation-driven, higher-quality growth. Scientific and technological advances should benefit all humanity, rather than be used to curb and contain other countries’ development.”

Most of rest concerns:

The Nature of 21st Century Energy Needs

including nuclear in china, russia, and india, (including re-purposing spent rods, meh) plus a video: 'why the fear of radiation is deadly (over an hour).

now bill gates i bullish on small nuclear reactors he's been building (apparently NOT fusion), as is biden's arrgh-worthy 80,000 word, $9.3 trillion climate plan full of meaningless buzzwords, imo. i.e.: 2 much work 2 even satirize.

up
3 users have voted.
Bisbonian's picture

de-stabilizing.

up
2 users have voted.

"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

wendy davis's picture

@Bisbonian

ways? i'd hate to front-load a guess. : )

up
1 user has voted.
Bisbonian's picture

@wendy davis I really should have expanded my post! I see that there is a male making a speech in the comment right above mine...and there are several other speeches interspersed between here, and the one I responded to. So...to clarify:"“There is a real possibility that a regional crisis with Russia or China could escalate quickly to a conflict involving nuclear weapons, if they perceived a conventional loss would threaten the regime or state,” STRATCOM chief and Vice Admiral Charles Richard wrote in the February issue of the US Naval Institute’s monthly magazine." I was in SAC (predecessor to STRATCOM) for several years, and learned the Dr. Strangelove game along the way. So...

“There is a real possibility that a regional crisis with Russia or China could escalate quickly to a conflict involving nuclear weapons” really means "cross us and we will nuke you." He takes it further: "At the U.S. Strategic Command, we assess the probability of nuclear use is low, but not “impossible,” particularly in a crisis and as our nuclear-armed adversaries continue to build capability and exert themselves globally.”

One side arguing for a First Strike policy is destabilizing because it is a move from an agreement that neither side will strike first. If we say we will strike first, their trigger fingers get itchier. And that is an excuse for ours to get still itchier.

up
2 users have voted.

"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

wendy davis's picture

@Bisbonian

your explanation, and agree. as it turns out stratcom man Richard has requested more nukes.

obomba's $3 trilion over 3 yrs budget trebling them wasn't enough, apparently. oh, ys, some were 'aging', whatever.

up
2 users have voted.

@Bisbonian

so well. Not only does our abandoning NO FIRST USE signal that we're nuts and untrustworthy, but our arming Nazi forces in Ukraine and installing tactical nukes in Eastern Europe, in countries unidentified to the American people, signals that we're doing everything we can to threaten the survival of of their regime. Thus we can say,

“There is a real possibility that a regional crisis with Russia or China could escalate quickly to a conflict involving nuclear weapons, if they perceived a conventional loss would threaten the regime or state,” STRATCOM chief and Vice Admiral Charles Richard wrote...

So we're doing everything we can to bring about the scenario we supposedly fear. So I think they know exactly what they're doing. They want to provoke a nuclear war. They're nuts, but not in their minds. They're tough, and strategic, and pro-active. They're showing how ruthless they are. They don't care about the damage. They want to show they're unstopable.

up
3 users have voted.
snoopydawg's picture

@Linda Wood

we are also baiting China and in both cases we’ve sailed our boats right next to their waters. China thankfully escorted the John McCain out of their waters and you pretty much know that we would never be that nice to anyone inside ours.

Sure looks like Blinken’s is taking up where pompous Pompeo left off. He’s actually more dangerous than Mike IMO. Damn them to hell! They have no right to put the world at risk like this.

up
3 users have voted.

Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

for Russia and his suggestion for international cooperation, from his Davos speech:

http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/64938


Session of Davos Agenda 2021 online forum

Vladimir Putin spoke at the session of the Davos Agenda 2021 online forum organised by the World Economic Forum (WEF).

January 27, 2021
The Kremlin, Moscow

... I would like to point out four key priorities, as I see them. This might be old news, but since Klaus has allowed me to present Russia’s position, my position, I will certainly do so.

First, everyone must have comfortable living conditions, including housing and affordable transport, energy and public utility infrastructure. Plus environmental welfare, something that must not be overlooked.

Second, everyone must be sure that they will have a job that can ensure sustainable growth of income and, hence, decent standards of living. Everyone must have access to an effective system of lifelong education, which is absolutely indispensable now and which will allow people to develop, make a career and receive a decent pension and social benefits upon retirement.

Third, people must be confident that they will receive high-quality and effective medical care whenever necessary, and that the national healthcare system will guarantee access to modern medical services.

Fourth, regardless of the family income, children must be able to receive a decent education and realise their potential. Every child has potential.

This is the only way to guarantee the cost-effective development of the modern economy, in which people are perceived as the end, rather than the means. Only those countries capable of attaining progress in at least these four areas will facilitate their own sustainable and all-inclusive development. These areas are not exhaustive, and I have just mentioned the main aspects.

A strategy, also being implemented by my country, hinges on precisely these approaches...

up
3 users have voted.
wendy davis's picture

@Linda Wood

more that 40 minutes, and he spoke quite brilliantly, didn't he?

on b's thread at MoA, he surely had some detractors....

up
4 users have voted.
Pluto's Republic's picture

@Linda Wood

...and your summary of Putin's talk was definitely envisioning the same future. Xi emphasized the development of deep friendships between nations, so that no nation ever feels overwhelmed. He as much as said that China has the US' back if the US ever stumbles into adversity. The US must never feel that it is alone and it doesn't have a wingman, he said.

He also said, when a small nation improves, it affect the entire world for the better. It behooves all nations to help each other achieve the best possible lives for their People. Nothing else could matter more.

Xi's words sounds] really sappy, the way Putin's do. But you know what? I can feel the US changing slightly as a result of these speeches. I thought I heard a change of tone coming from the US on an unrelated matter, and it surprised me. From the point-of-view of our ruling Psychopaths, China and Russia are trying to brainwash Americans with their utopian leftist vision.

It struck me that those two countries may actually prod the US into emulating their People-first morality.

The US publishes the most depraved and obviously preposterous lies about China, every single day. I was puzzled about this endless flood of obvious lies and other horrible economic actions that the US takes against China and Chinese businesses. At the moment, what I think is really provoking the US are the historically unprecedented achievements that China made in 2020: which includes lifting every single Chinese citizen out of poverty. All 1.4 billion of them have a home — and healthcare, pensions, enough to eat, and all the education they can handle. Plus Internet and a 5G network, but who's counting? The story of how they did that (it actually took a very long time and a lot of hard work and sacrifice) is an amazing one. Some of the careers and skills they developed for people, even in their 90s, is so satisfying to behold. And lifting the Uighurs out of poverty and subsidizing the development of their ethnic vision was a much documented example, but keep in mind that Xinjiang province has 31 specific ethnic groups besides Uighurs. They were all brought forward along with their arts, culinary works, architecture, and cultural festivals, and that turned Xinjiang into China's Number One tourist destination in 2020. It's a modern natural wonder that's been open to visitors during all this time. Americans are urged to visit and join the festivities. There are a series of eight documentaries that cover the Uighur experience, in intricate detail, during the final stages of this transformation over the past eight years.

I am sort of enjoying all the hysterical hate coming from the American people toward China, based on the lies the US government has told them. Mostly because I know that there is a splendid living reality they will face — and they will see their government for what it is and judge themselves for their own level of careless gullibility. Throughout, has China has hardly said a word about these abuses, and I could never understand why. In recent months China has pushed back and I will write more on this later.... because it ties in with the constant blame the US heaps on China for Covid-19. I can't help but wonder why the US dares to do this. They must know that there is overwhelming physical evidence that the virus was active in at least two specific areas outside of China long before it arrived in Wuhan. And there is documented evidence that US intelligence was aware of this, as well, and warned France and Israel about this fact.

______________

As an aside, something I want to share: China is in love with Max Blumenthal, of all people! Again, one of those really strange things that happen in China after we've gone to bed in the US. I mean, why? What did Max Blumenthal ever do to gain such fawning attention from China? As far as I can tell, Blumenthal made one press related trip to attend a seminar with a bunch of international journalists. And when he returned, he wrote an article describing what he heard and what he witnessed, and he confirmed what he wrote with references and data he assembled from standard sources from around the world. He must have called China to verify something, and he developed contacts with one or more press liaisons in China, and with Chinese officials (who haven't been banned yet) on Twitter. In other words, he did what professional journalists do.

After his article was published (by Aaron Mate), he responded to reader's comments contradicting his observations. Implacable Max would have replied in his deadpan but tireless way, presenting factual references that refute opinions that spring from US propaganda.

I honestly think that the Chinese government watched this unfold at Aaron's tiny website — and they had never seen anything like this take place the United States — an observation that truthfully described what took place and a reporter who fought back against public propaganda about China until he prevailed. Furthermore, Blumenthal survived this event (although I think he was arrested recently at his home).

But he never backed down from the truth. And now he is a hero in China. I know this because I read the daily press briefings that come out of the CCP, and Max Blumenthal is frequently mentioned, as if he was a respected global authority on China. And, as far as the US goes, he probably is.

[Edit = Typos. Text added to clarify italicized paragraph.]

up
2 users have voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

@Pluto's Republic

had a wonderful experience of hearing him speak in person a year or so ago. He is on my short list of Greatest Living Americans, a truly courageous person.

And I can only think the issue of his father being right smack in the middle of the Russiagate Brookings Pee tape FISA crimes as being very hard on him personally, which makes his courage all the more remarkable. If justice ever comes to the DC Deep State, Max's father is going to be right in the middle of the accused.

up
2 users have voted.
Pluto's Republic's picture

@Linda Wood

This is too much! It never occurred to me.

up
1 user has voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

@Pluto's Republic

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Blumenthal

up
1 user has voted.
wendy davis's picture

@Pluto's Republic

and wide-ranging comment. the addition i'd mentioned above was indeed the highlights of Xi's speech, knowing that you're quite a Sinophile.

and my, how Max has matured over time! must have been hard growing up under Sidney's tutelage; oy. if the spirit evr moves you, i'd love it if you could write about what you know about the Uighurs in a separate essay. bernhard at MoA has been covering the many inconsistencies in reportage by western media, 'held in concentration camps!', etc.

up
2 users have voted.
Pluto's Republic's picture

@wendy davis

...that examine the monumental size and toxicity of the US propaganda on China, enhanced by the feces flinging monkeys of the Five-Eyes mutants.

I have been motivated enough to write about these propaganda abominations of the Federal Government and their media cohort, but the utter futility of the essay's purpose — which will be clear if I publish them — has prevented me from doing so. Better to leave them inside the box with Shrodinger's Cat than to publish them and expose myself to their lack of potency and the complete waste of my mind and my singular efforts in writing them. I would rather hold them as talisman of unknown potency against the security state authorities — who can and will suicide the planet in order to defeat "an idea whose time has come." It's the Commie menace, after all. Better dead than Red.

The catastrophic insanity of the Neocon psychopaths at the State Department and the Pentagon, who now control the business end of the US Government, have demonstrated their permanence and power over every administration from Bush-the-Elder to Biden. These psychopaths see the American people as civilian targets that will successfully diffuse any incoming nuclear responses to their first strike. There was never any point to building an infrastructure. Those monies went to the military, instead, and are unaccounted for.

The Dr. Strangelove screenplay was a fairly easy one to write because it relied on a rigid system that was already in place, and it used scenarios that had already been contemplated.

I do believe that people have power, but only when they are standing on their own ancestral lands.

Since the US propaganda blaming the Chinese for the pandemic began in May 2020, over 1,800 Chinese Americans have been attacked and assaulted for their racial characteristics. Mostly elders. Some have died. I've never really believed in Americans as a 'people.' And their patriotism seems deviant and obscene to me, in the same way that child pornography does.

up
1 user has voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
wendy davis's picture

@Pluto's Republic

This Is Why They Attack Him - Putin Explains Why We Need New Economic Policies, Feb. 2, 2021

Bernhard’s chosen some passages from the transcript of Putin’s speech at virtual Davos 2021, and helpfully provides organizing context for readers. his remarks will be in green, as are all bolds., etc. more statements, IOW.

up
1 user has voted.
Pluto's Republic's picture

@wendy davis

As for Putin:

To solve this one has to reject the laissez faire doctrines that caused the economic imbalances. The nation states must intervene more in their economies. The people must be seen as the ends, not the means of such economic policy.

.
Putin's words are dripping with communism. LOL.

How ironic that progressives ended up in the Democratic Party.

What better place to crush the Left?

up
1 user has voted.

____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
usefewersyllables's picture

generation (watched it in school every year up until 4th grade), and as a result have woken up with recurring cold-sweat white-flash nightmares for well over 50 years now. For a while, they happened fewer times a month as the cold war temporarily cooled, but now they are back in full force.

I'm not as worried about somebody pushing the button as I am about a failure in some automated system somewhere that goes uncaught until the damned missiles are in the air. There have been too many seriously close calls, some of which were only stopped by the willingness of a single person to say "No, the world will not end on my watch". Look up Stanislav Yevgrafovich Petrov and Vasili Alexandrovich Arkhipov for a couple of examples of such.

There are undoubtedly examples of this on our side as well, although we'll probably never hear about them since we've been told forever that our side's weapons are perfect and failsafe. However, having said that, with the infestation of our armed forces by right-wing "Christian" dominionists who might well decide to seize the opportunity to immanentize the eschaton, there's ample fuel for the return of the nightmares.

And now that so many other nations have the bomb, if one of them decides to play with their toys in whatever brushfire conflict might arise, then the chances of everyone else being swept along are far too high. Vela Sierra may have been retired, but I'm sure that we have lots and lots of bhangmeters attached to other current satellites (like the GPS cluster) staring at the surface just waiting for an unexpected double-flash event to start the fun.

I'm glad that I'm old and childfree. I've said it before, but I'm also glad that I live in the south Denver metro area, where there are such a concentration of what are probably priority 1 targets. I know that Norad is mothballed, but you can still see Cheyenne Mountain from my back deck. Should such a thing come to pass, I only wish for enough notice to change into my tux, make a Manhattan, and walk out on the deck just in time to become one with the early plasma. No smiley.

up
4 users have voted.

Twice bitten, permanently shy.

wendy davis's picture

@usefewersyllables

too many links to access for tired eyes for now. but i will say that in my grade school in catawba cliffs, ohio...we actually experienced drills in which we DID duck and cover under our desks. we hadn't though until later: 'WTF use would that be???'

more later after some rest. but of course 'incoming errors undetected'.
#NuclearMadness.

up
2 users have voted.
usefewersyllables's picture

@wendy davis

After 4th grade they started calling them "tornado drills" instead, and stopped showing the movie, but it took several years after that for them to finally knock off the whole "get under the desk" thing, and start getting us to line up along the walls in the interior hallways instead (away from the glass windows, by the way) to kiss our asses goodbye... Anyway, this particular sword has been hanging over our heads for our entire lives, and it has left a mark- at least on this reporter.

I grew up very close to the great midwest missile fields- my hometown was just a couple of counties over from Damascus, AR, where we blew up a Titan II and its silo back in the '80s. I was long gone by then, but I still get a wierdly tight smile from that- I remember reading about it as details leaked out in the news at the time. At least the old hometown was upwind that day...

up
1 user has voted.

Twice bitten, permanently shy.

wendy davis's picture

@usefewersyllables

direct strike myownself. and i did take a minute to bingle that the cuban missile crisis and jfk's brinksmanhip with khrushchev was in oct. of 1962, o the timing tallies with my memories. yes, adults were glued to their teeevees in horror.

reading your links (can't manage the vela sierra one, though) there is indeed proof that 'the russians love their children, too'.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHylQRVN2Qs]

oh, fiddle; my mouse lost half my comment. shorter: popular reistance sent this today, and as ever, elijah magnier's written a tome i've started twice, never finished. but he's offering some pretty wild speculation about israel preparing to attack Evil Shi'a Iran. or i think that's what he's saying. and yes, we've known from rouhani and FM zarif about the HOPE project in the straits of hormuz. it would be nice to have a lot of eyes on it:

'Defensive Moves Or Preparation For War With Iran?', By Elijah J. Magnier, February 8, 2021 a few excerpts:

"The US has decided to deploy the Israeli Iron Dome Missile Interceptor Systems, purchased in 2019, in Eastern European countries and also in the Gulf countries where the US Central Command (CENTCOM) operates and has established operational military bases. This step coincides with the US decision that Israeljoin CENTCOM (with Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Bahrein, Jordan, Iraq, Egypt, Sudan, Afghanistan, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Pakistan and more) following the normalisation of trade and diplomatic relations between several Arab and Islamic countries and Tel Aviv.

Iran considers the transfer of Israeli operational activities from EUCOM to CENTCOM an aggressive move allowing Israel to use all US military bases deployed around the “Islamic Republic”. Iran believes the decision to deploy the Israeli Iron Dome could be a step towards a possible preemptive military strike on Iran. An Israeli attack on selective targets in Iran is possible if the US returns to the nuclear deal unconditionally. [does he really mean "impossible" rather?] Israel could also attack Iran if President Joe Biden slows down a possible return to the nuclear deal and fails to lift all sanctions imposed on Iran. Iran would then respond, first by increasing its uranium enrichment, withdrawing from treaties, preventing inspectors’ access to its nuclear sites and increasing the number and quality of its centrifuges. This expected Iranian move will cross Israel’s red lines. Is the Middle East headed towards war or are these moves ultimately and solely defensive?

now israel is an undeclared nuclear power, experts guess own 200 warheads, and is batshit crazy enough to bomb iraan's (underground?) reactors at nattanz (are there others?) with bunker busters (nuclear tipped) bombs... but more from elijah:

"An Iranian decision maker said “Iran doesn’t have the intention to attack any US or Israeli targets as long as they don’t start a war or hit selective objectives in Iran. The Iraqi parliament has decided on the withdrawal of all foreign forces, therefore there is no need for further revenge for the US assassination of Brigadier General Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad on January 2020. The (Iranian) bombing of the US base in Ayn al-Assad in Iraq was our response. Nevertheless, we learned how Israel joined CENTCOM military bases surrounding Iran where Israeli interception missiles will be deployed in many Middle Eastern countries. Why would the US deploy these missiles if not for fear of an Iranian bombing? And why would Iran bomb the US bases and Israel unless these show the intention to bomb Iran first? Are the US and the Israelis planning to hit nuclear facilities, thinking they can destroy our capabilities? They can’t”, said the source." [...]

"Iran may have its apprehensions but that is not the only (pessimistic) scenario the Middle East may have to face in the future. And if the Iranian concern is correct, the risk of heading towards serious escalation is real. However, it is doubtful that the new Biden administration is preparing for a new war in the Middle East. [...]

"However, there are many indications which justify Iranian alarm, starting from the Israeli Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi’s warning (for the attention of the new administration, not to return to the nuclear deal signed by Barack Obama in 2015 without modifications. Indeed, Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and Foreign Secretary Antony Blinken have both expressed clearly that Iran’s behaviour in the Middle East is dangerous and that Biden will not be in any hurry to rush towards a nuclear deal. The US administration seems to believe the nuclear deal needs re-negotiation involving Middle Eastern partners and addressing the Iranian missile programme and Iran’s allies. These are the exact points that Iran rejects categorically...."

oh, fie; there's another 3 yards of text.

up
1 user has voted.