Category: Politics, Power, and Governance

  • If trump wants greenland patrolled, but doesn’t want to pay for it if he doesn’t

    If trump wants greenland patrolled, but doesn’t want to pay for it if he doesn’t have to, or at least, wants to preserve his resources, and provide time to build up defenses, and what if nato really is a dead weight, then what strategy would he use to provoke others into achieving his goals for him both at present and over time.

    This is how thinks.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-15 21:10:36 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2011908903739802018

  • (Yes. Though, despite renaming, everyone seems to still call it THULE base, and

    (Yes. Though, despite renaming, everyone seems to still call it THULE base, and I suspect that will continue… 😉 )

    But yes, it’s important because that base is optimum for policing from space.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-15 17:32:16 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2011853957921210836

  • We have a base in greenland, and we’ve abandoned the rest of them. So either tru

    We have a base in greenland, and we’ve abandoned the rest of them. So either trump will continue to force europe to militarily defend the region so we don’t have to, or we will have to reoccupy the bases. Trump’s strategy is working. Denmark and the UK at least are committing to patrol it. However, we know they won’t sustain it. So it’s just buying time to restore our bases.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-15 16:56:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2011845019905544600

  • Yep. A) Northeast is an outlier as source of both puritanism and progressive mov

    Yep. A) Northeast is an outlier as source of both puritanism and progressive movement. University density exacerbates. B) Virtue Signaling (status). C) Still demonstrate NIMBY behavior. (Demonstrated preference falsifies stated preference.)

    Expected behavior. Silly human games.

    FWIW, I’m from central CT, and after living Northwest, Canada, UK, Russia, and Ukraine, I have a hard time spending time in new england. Was just there for a couple of years taking care of my elderly mother (and research and writing). Didn’t realize it was depressing me until I returned ‘home’ to western WA state and recovered.

    Density plus rust belt plus immigration plus race issues, plus CT’s most followed the soviets, meaning the state employees consume so much of the budget that companies leave, people who can leave do, and the state is basically surviving on taxes from Litchfield county, which is surviving on NYC income, by those who escaped taxation in NYC. It’s crazy. No hope.

    I lived in Boston in the 80s and the crime was intolerable until they cleaned it up in the 90s. But last year I spent a couple of months north of Boston and the nihilism is oppressive.

    I don’t know if anyone’s done the research, but IMO the flight of tech from boston to SF in had more than an economic impact – it had a cultural and political impact.

    Bothers me. It’s like ‘I can’t go home’. 🙁

    Hugs and such
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-12 16:24:35 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2010749761029296593

  • PS: France is in deep trouble for this reason. They have been digging a hole for

    PS: France is in deep trouble for this reason. They have been digging a hole for decades.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-12 04:14:33 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2010566042050085194

  • Um. How much ignorance and vanity does one have to possess to judge the mind of

    Um. How much ignorance and vanity does one have to possess to judge the mind of another. Trump is pursuing a rational strategy and doing so with uncommon alacrity in a time of international risk both economic and strategic. Obama was very close to the worst president in history. Trump is on target to join the great reformers of Roosevelt and Lincoln – adapting the Federation for the new circumstances it SHOULD have adapted to upoin the fall of the soviet union. Bush could have done it nicely, in expected fashion. We voted him out. Elected comforting nitwits, and now we’re stuck with needing a reformer before the consequences of our prior failure collapse not only our economy, not only our safety, but continue to drive us toward civil war.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 18:54:08 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009700234390319239

  • THE US MOTIVES FOR ACTIONS IN VENEZUELA I think that the European and American m

    THE US MOTIVES FOR ACTIONS IN VENEZUELA

    I think that the European and American mind, for reasons that are archaic, considers war being limited to military form, whereas any external imposition of costs upon the demonstrated interests of a people is an act of war.

    The west for historical reasons born of our empires and the monarchies before them practices a unique concept of war that is not shared by the rest of the world. A very narrow definition of war.

    You can read (in this order) John Keegan’s A History of Warfare (1993) and Martin Van Creveld’s The Transformation of War, and close with Douglas Peifer’s Warfare and Culture in World History. All delve into the cultural differences in warfare. Yet it was napoleon who canonized the concept of total war.

    Today war is conducted by military means, by political means, by economic means, by ideological means, by religious means, and by informational means … and of course by seditious means. Drugs are a means of warfare for profit, just as piracy was a means of warfare for profit.

    So it’s actually you that doesnt understand the scope of war.

    Nations do not take actions for just one reason. Instead one act satisfies multiple demands. And Venezuela served multiple US national interests.

    With one act:

    1) Interrupt the narco-terrorist state’s organization.
    2) Set other states harboring narco-terrorists on notice (Mexico in particular)
    3) Reduce the number of illegal latino immigration to the USA. (Around a third of V’s population have left.)
    4) Aid the repatriation of Venezuelan refugees and mitigate the humanitarian fallout.
    5) Bolster regional coalitions to isolate residual authoritarian networks (e.g., in Nicaragua and Cuba).
    6) Restore the Monroe doctrine denying competitors access to this hemisphere (China, Russia, Iran). Including setting Cuba ‘on notice’. This expands the previous US means of exiting china from the Panama Canal influence.
    7) Deny Venezuela their attempt to capture their neighbor’s Guyana’s oil fields. (preventing a repetition of iraq vs kuwait)
    8) Prevent the capture of both Venezuela and Guyana’s oil fields by Russia, Iran, China (‘Axis of Evil’). The USA is oil-autarkic (independent – we don’t need any) but the USA can control 45% of the world’s oil, thus preventing russia (and others) from raising world oil pricess – or, continuing to drop the price, thus bankrupting Russia. And China has no oil so it must import all of it. Thus constraining their hostile ambitions.
    9) Facilitate a democratic transition and restore rule of law to unlock Venezuela’s energy sector for U.S.-aligned investment.
    10) Neutralize hybrid threats like disinformation and cyber interference from regime holdouts or proxies.

    Killing Somali Pirates, Venezuelan Drug Dealers, or The Pirates of the past, or immigration warfare, or using military against ideological warfare(the marxist sequence) or religious warfare (islam) or punishing china for economic warfare, or retaliating against europe for it’s free riding and taxing our products[ or the russian threat to Europe. These are all incentives for war. There is no difference. All impose costs upon our people.

    *We no longer are policing the world, so we are no longer limited to police actions – these are now military actions.*

    NOTES:
    Keegan’s A History of Warfare (1993) is arguably the seminal work here, where he explicitly frames war as a cultural artifact rather than a mere extension of politics (contra Clausewitz’s famous dictum). He argues that different societies conceptualize and wage war in fundamentally distinct ways: for example, contrasting the ritualized, honor-bound combat of ancient Greeks or medieval knights with the more pragmatic, state-directed violence of modern Europe, or the terror tactics of steppe nomads like the Mongols. Keegan stresses that culture determines how war is fought—who participates, what rules (if any) apply, and even its aesthetic or spiritual role—making cross-cultural comparisons central to understanding its evolution. It’s less about “differences” per se and more about war as an expression of human diversity, which makes it a foundational text for this angle.

    Van Creveld takes it even further with his dedicated book The Culture of War (2008), which explores war’s enduring cultural allure across history and societies. He examines how cultures glorify (or demonize) violence through myths, games, art, and gender roles—think Viking berserkers versus samurai bushido, or modern drone warfare’s detachment from the “sport” of battle. Van Creveld warns that armies cut off from their society’s “war culture” (e.g., post-Vietnam U.S. forces grappling with anti-war sentiments) are doomed to underperform, and he contrasts Western rationalism with more fluid, adaptive approaches in non-Western contexts. If you’re after explicit cultural differences in war’s meaning and practice, this is the bullseye—it’s more thematic and contemporary than Keegan’s sweeping history.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-06 22:09:53 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2008662330960474141

  • You are making the mistake that an alternative is an option. The pax americana i

    You are making the mistake that an alternative is an option. The pax americana is no longer possible, and the postwar consensus has been overthrown by the rise of a hostile china, russia, and islam – partly because europeans and americans arent having enough children to preserve our previous position. So you’re acting like this is a moral question when its a material impossibility to do other than reorder ourselves and our alliances to accept the reality of our circumstance.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-06 17:03:42 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2008585275447144752

  • Pax Americana like democratic rule of law has not been perfect, but it has been

    Pax Americana like democratic rule of law has not been perfect, but it has been the best of the alternatives. Your world will not be a better place upon its end.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-06 16:47:00 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2008581075887681749

  • It won’t produce decline for the USA. It will simply mean every group on earth h

    It won’t produce decline for the USA. It will simply mean every group on earth has to pay their way. And that the. USA cannot necessarily counter the rise of alternative powers, nor continue to police the world.

    Paying for the world order and all the wars it’s tried to suppress has overextended the US economically


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-06 16:45:18 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2008580647183675674