Theme: Civilization

  • RT @MungoManic: The first humans to reach South Sulawesi (194-118 Kya) made tool

    RT @MungoManic: The first humans to reach South Sulawesi (194-118 Kya) made tools similar to those of Homo floresiensis on nearby Java

    The…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-25 00:28:08 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860842872360280310

  • “Curt might have been exposed to too much Cold War television 😄”– 😉 Wasn’t jus

    –“Curt might have been exposed to too much Cold War television 😄”–

    😉 Wasn’t just television. It wasn’t just science fiction and horror. It’ wasn’t just magazines. It was a daily environment where we were exposed to the threat everywhere. I mean, I remember vividly nuclear drills where we hid under desks, were taught about iodine, the utility of books and boxes of paper in resisting radiation, and how to build a fallout shelter, or how to section off a bit of the basement instead. Heck, the people across the street in my little farm town of 10k people had a bomb shelter built under their basement. I had nightmares about nuclear war – where I had to rescue my wife so we would at least die together – until my 30s.

    Reply addressees: @SirSmokesAaLot @AutistocratMS


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-24 19:28:25 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860767448720715776

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860761532813963394

  • Q: “Curt, how dangerous is Russia (low-trust ex-mongol authoritarian forced-into

    Q: “Curt, how dangerous is Russia (low-trust ex-mongol authoritarian forced-into-land-expansion-because-geography) compared to the Middle East?”

    Excellent question.

    Analysis:

    The question requires evaluating the potential dangers posed by Russia and the Middle East, factoring… https://t.co/Tej5ROGSf4


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-24 18:47:11 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860757069030428686

    Reply addressees: @DwightExMachina

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860716786875818022

  • Q: “Curt, how dangerous is Russia (low-trust ex-mongol authoritarian forced-into

    Q: “Curt, how dangerous is Russia (low-trust ex-mongol authoritarian forced-into-land-expansion-because-geography) compared to the Middle East?”

    Excellent question.

    Analysis:

    The question requires evaluating the potential dangers posed by Russia and the Middle East, factoring in the geopolitical, economic, demographic, and cultural strategies and weaknesses of each. Both regions present distinct challenges to global stability, but their dangers manifest differently based on their structural conditions and ambitions.

    Part 1: Russia: A Declining but Aggressive Power
    Russia’s danger stems from its structural weaknesses, historical path dependencies, and current geopolitical strategies.

    Key Characteristics

    1. Resource Economy:
    – Dependency on Natural Resources: ~40% of government revenue comes from oil and gas exports. A resource-dependent economy limits diversification and long-term growth.
    – Vulnerable to sanctions and global shifts away from fossil fuels.

    2. Population Collapse:
    – Demographic Crisis: Population shrinking due to low birth rates, emigration, and high mortality rates. Projected to decline by ~15 million by 2050.
    – A smaller, aging population limits economic and military capacity.

    3. Corruption and Low Trust:
    – Ranked among the most corrupt nations (Transparency International).
    – Low trust in institutions hampers innovation, economic diversification, and societal cohesion.

    4. Geopolitical Compulsion for Expansion:
    – Historical Pattern: Russian strategy has always been to expand territorial control to create buffer zones against perceived external threats.
    – Geography offers no natural barriers, making defense difficult without territorial control.
    – Current actions (e.g., Ukraine invasion) reflect a desire to secure strategic depth and access to resources.

    5. Authoritarianism and Legacy of Mongol Rule:
    – The legacy of centralized, authoritarian rule creates a system resistant to reform and perpetuates a reliance on coercive power rather than trust-based governance.

    Danger Level:
    – Military Threat: Significant conventional military capability, nuclear arsenal, and willingness to use force make Russia a short-term threat to its neighbors and NATO.
    – Long-Term Decline: Economic and demographic challenges undermine its sustainability as a global power.
    – Global Destabilization: Cyberwarfare, disinformation campaigns, and energy manipulation are asymmetric tools that Russia uses effectively despite structural weaknesses.

    PART 2: Middle East: The Danger of Ideological and Sectarian Conflict

    The Middle East, particularly through the actions of Iran and Islamist movements, presents dangers rooted in ideological, demographic, and geopolitical strategies.

    Key Characteristics

    1. Islamist Strategy: Migrate, Reproduce, Undermine:
    – Migration: Large-scale migration to the West has demographic, cultural, and political implications. Islamist groups aim to expand influence by leveraging diaspora communities.
    – Reproduction: High birth rates in some regions create young, rapidly growing populations that may strain resources and governance.
    – Undermining from Within: Radical Islamist groups work to exploit liberal democracies’ institutions (e.g., free speech, religious protections) to propagate their ideology.

    2. Iran’s Imperial Ambitions:
    – Regional Hegemony: Iran seeks to establish dominance over the Middle East, often through proxies (e.g., Hezbollah, Houthis) in Lebanon, Yemen, and Syria.
    – Oil Strategy: Plans to create a bourse that requires oil purchases in Iranian currency challenge the petrodollar system, threatening U.S. economic dominance.
    – Expansion Through Conflict: Uses sectarian divides (Sunni vs. Shia) to destabilize rivals, like Saudi Arabia, and expand influence.

    3. Weak States and Proxy Wars:
    – Chronic instability in states like Syria, Iraq, and Yemen creates vacuums filled by extremist groups and proxies.
    – Regional conflicts spill over into global terrorism and migration crises.

    4. Cultural and Ideological Persistence:
    – Unlike Russia, Middle Eastern movements (e.g., radical Islam) often rely on ideological rather than state power, making them harder to contain through traditional deterrence.

    Danger Level:
    – Iran’s Strategic Threat: Developing nuclear capabilities and attempting to destabilize the petrodollar system present major risks to global energy markets and regional stability.
    – Islamist Undermining:
    Radical ideologies exploit democratic vulnerabilities, potentially leading to long-term cultural and political shifts in target countries.
    – Demographic Expansion:
    Rapid population growth and migration, if unmanaged, exacerbate existing tensions in host nations.

    Comparative Danger
    (See attached table)

    Part 3 – Conclusion

    Russia is a dangerous declining power, prone to aggressive military actions and destabilizing asymmetric tactics as its long-term prospects weaken. Its immediate threat lies in military confrontation and geopolitical destabilization.

    The Middle East, particularly through Iran’s state ambitions and Islamist strategies, poses a persistent ideological, demographic, and geopolitical challenge. It operates on a longer timeline, leveraging cultural and economic undermining to reshape global dynamics.

    In essence:
    Russia is a reactive threat: dangerous in the short term due to its military capabilities and willingness to destabilize to preserve its relevance.

    The Middle East is a proactive threat: dangerous in the long term due to ideological persistence, demographic pressures, and ambitions to reorder economic and geopolitical systems.

    Cheers
    CD


    PROMPT: “How dangerous is Russia ( resource economy, population collapsing, heavy corruption, low-trust ex-mongol authoritarian forced-into-land-expansion-because-geography) compared to the Middle East, and islam’s use of migrate, reproduce, and undermine from within, as well as Iran’s desire to create an empire, capture oil, create a bourse, and require oil bought in iranian currency, to finance further aggressive imperial expansion?”


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-24 18:47:10 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860757068539695104

  • RT @dr_duchesne: One of the biggest questions historians should ask is why the B

    RT @dr_duchesne: One of the biggest questions historians should ask is why the British, who founded such amazing nations, in size and well…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-23 04:02:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860172062368890892

  • RT @trust_gabe: @curtdoolittle @whatifalthist Traditions are solutions to proble

    RT @trust_gabe: @curtdoolittle @whatifalthist Traditions are solutions to problems we forgot.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-23 03:52:23 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860169500378956134

  • IMO: TV will be seen as the sequence telegraph, radio, television, cable, intern

    IMO: TV will be seen as the sequence telegraph, radio, television, cable, internet just as we see the series of effects that resulted from the printing press and the mass production of knowledge:

    Distribution systems favor falsehoods from which limited truths must be filtered. Porn financed the internet. Gamers financed the graphics cards that led to AI. Scammers will finance too much of the growth of applied AI.

    Reply addressees: @whatifalthist


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-23 00:45:52 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860122559188242432

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860044681104752941

  • (I’m from Canandaigua) Western NY is closer to western PA. (Great Lakes Cultures

    (I’m from Canandaigua)
    Western NY is closer to western PA. (Great Lakes Cultures)
    Eastern and Northern NY are closer to rural NE. NY and NJ and Philadelphia are their own sub-civilization.
    I remember when we wanted NYC to secede from the state. Our (the institute’s) position is that all large scale blue cities must be separated from their territories so that the difference in responsibility between rural-suburban and urban can be expressed by each as suits their needs. Urbanites can’t act responsibly so they don’t. Rurals must act responsibly so they do.

    Reply addressees: @monkey74086 @whatifalthist


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-23 00:41:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860121364562345984

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1860009375483748853

  • RT @curtdoolittle: @_GallusGallus_ @DanielB02277937 @GeneralVeritass @VDHanson I

    RT @curtdoolittle: @_GallusGallus_ @DanielB02277937 @GeneralVeritass @VDHanson Islam is successful in the 80 IQ range. Islamic civ averages…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-21 22:17:55 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1859722941598179522

  • Islam is successful in the 80 IQ range. Islamic civ averages 84. We presume that

    Islam is successful in the 80 IQ range. Islamic civ averages 84. We presume that both christianity (90s) and aristotelianism (modern western thought, 100s) is sufficient for populations of (a) lower neotenic evolution (b) lower impulse regulation, and (c) lower IQ that can compensate for lower impulse regulation. But it’s not.
    Islam’s excessive use of ritual and repetition in a public forum substitutes for self regulation, and obedience substitutes for learning. It’s also a religion of irresponsibility, which is quite the opposite of christianity, and utterly opposed to the western tradition both pre-and-post-christian. The western tradition is reducible to the institutionalization of the maximization of individual responsibility.
    That’s why other people’s can’t do it (other than the japanese and koreans). It requires neoteny, iq, and continous institutional reinforcement.

    Reply addressees: @_GallusGallus_ @DanielB02277937 @GeneralVeritass @VDHanson


    Source date (UTC): 2024-11-21 22:17:08 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1859722740909080576

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1859676033538269240