Jan 9, 2020, 9:14 AM
Scapegoating vs Accountability – vs – Plausible Deniability vs Warranty.
by James Lyons Sr.
Jan 9, 2020, 9:14 AM
Scapegoating vs Accountability – vs – Plausible Deniability vs Warranty.
by James Lyons Sr.
Why Arabs Fail: Trust (Familism, Honor in Deception) https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/30/why-arabs-fail-trust-familism-honor-in-deception-2/
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-30 16:31:01 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1266769091567792128
Why Arabs Fail: Trust (Familism, Honor in Deception) https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/30/why-arabs-fail-trust-familism-honor-in-deception/
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-30 16:30:56 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1266769071388758017
Jan 9, 2020, 5:45 PM Why Arabs Lose Wars meforum.org Source: Excerpt from meforum.org/441/why-arabs-lose-wars (Conversely: Staying on message: Islamism like Judaism (or christianity) is exceptional at undermining.)
The same lack of trust operates at the interstate level, where Arab armies exhibit very little trust of each other, and with good reason. The blatant lie Gamal Abdel Nasser told King Husayn in June 1967 to get him into the war against Israel—that the Egyptian air force was over Tel Aviv (when most of its planes had been destroyed)—was a classic example of deceit.27 Sadat’s disingenuous approach to the Syrians to entice them to enter the war in October 1973 was another (he told them that the Egyptians were planning total war, a deception which included using a second set of operational plans intended only for Syrian eyes).28 With this sort of history, it is no wonder that there is very little cross or joint training among Arab armies and very few command exercises. During the 1967 war, for example, not a single Jordanian liaison officer was stationed in Egypt, nor were the Jordanians forthcoming with the Egyptian command.29
Joint commands are paper constructs that have little actual function. Leaders look at joint commands, joint exercises, combined arms, and integrated staffs very cautiously for all Arab armies are a double-edged sword. One edge points toward the external enemy and the other toward the capital. The land forces are at once a regime-maintenance force and threat at the same time. No Arab ruler will allow combined operations or training to become routine; the usual excuse is financial expense, but that is unconvincing given their frequent purchase of hardware whose maintenance costs they cannot afford. In fact, combined arms exercises and joint staffs create familiarity, soften rivalries, erase suspicions, and eliminate the fragmented, competing organizations that enable rulers to play off rivals against one another. This situation is most clearly seen in Saudi Arabia, where the land forces and aviation are under the minister of defense, Prince Sultan, while the National Guard is under Prince Abdullah, the deputy prime minister and crown prince. In Egypt, the Central Security Forces balance the army. In Iraq and Syria, the Republican Guard does the balancing. Politicians actually create obstacles to maintain fragmentation. For example, obtaining aircraft from the air force for army airborne training, whether it is a joint exercise or a simple administrative request for support of training, must generally be coordinated by the heads of services at the ministry of defense; if a large number of aircraft are involved, this probably requires presidential approval. Military coups may be out of style, but the fear of them remains strong. Any large-scale exercise of land forces is a matter of concern to the government and is closely observed, particularly if live ammunition is being used. In Saudi Arabia a complex system of clearances required from area military commanders and provincial governors, all of whom have differing command channels to secure road convoy permission, obtaining ammunition, and conducting exercises, means that in order for a coup to work, it would require a massive amount of loyal conspirators. Arab regimes have learned how to be coup-proof.
Jan 9, 2020, 5:45 PM Why Arabs Lose Wars meforum.org Source: Excerpt from meforum.org/441/why-arabs-lose-wars (Conversely: Staying on message: Islamism like Judaism (or christianity) is exceptional at undermining.)
The same lack of trust operates at the interstate level, where Arab armies exhibit very little trust of each other, and with good reason. The blatant lie Gamal Abdel Nasser told King Husayn in June 1967 to get him into the war against Israel—that the Egyptian air force was over Tel Aviv (when most of its planes had been destroyed)—was a classic example of deceit.27 Sadat’s disingenuous approach to the Syrians to entice them to enter the war in October 1973 was another (he told them that the Egyptians were planning total war, a deception which included using a second set of operational plans intended only for Syrian eyes).28 With this sort of history, it is no wonder that there is very little cross or joint training among Arab armies and very few command exercises. During the 1967 war, for example, not a single Jordanian liaison officer was stationed in Egypt, nor were the Jordanians forthcoming with the Egyptian command.29
Joint commands are paper constructs that have little actual function. Leaders look at joint commands, joint exercises, combined arms, and integrated staffs very cautiously for all Arab armies are a double-edged sword. One edge points toward the external enemy and the other toward the capital. The land forces are at once a regime-maintenance force and threat at the same time. No Arab ruler will allow combined operations or training to become routine; the usual excuse is financial expense, but that is unconvincing given their frequent purchase of hardware whose maintenance costs they cannot afford. In fact, combined arms exercises and joint staffs create familiarity, soften rivalries, erase suspicions, and eliminate the fragmented, competing organizations that enable rulers to play off rivals against one another. This situation is most clearly seen in Saudi Arabia, where the land forces and aviation are under the minister of defense, Prince Sultan, while the National Guard is under Prince Abdullah, the deputy prime minister and crown prince. In Egypt, the Central Security Forces balance the army. In Iraq and Syria, the Republican Guard does the balancing. Politicians actually create obstacles to maintain fragmentation. For example, obtaining aircraft from the air force for army airborne training, whether it is a joint exercise or a simple administrative request for support of training, must generally be coordinated by the heads of services at the ministry of defense; if a large number of aircraft are involved, this probably requires presidential approval. Military coups may be out of style, but the fear of them remains strong. Any large-scale exercise of land forces is a matter of concern to the government and is closely observed, particularly if live ammunition is being used. In Saudi Arabia a complex system of clearances required from area military commanders and provincial governors, all of whom have differing command channels to secure road convoy permission, obtaining ammunition, and conducting exercises, means that in order for a coup to work, it would require a massive amount of loyal conspirators. Arab regimes have learned how to be coup-proof.
Jan 9, 2020, 5:45 PM Why Arabs Lose Wars meforum.org Source: Excerpt from meforum.org/441/why-arabs-lose-wars (Conversely: Staying on message: Islamism like Judaism (or christianity) is exceptional at undermining.)
Second, the complex mosaic system of peoples creates additional problems for training, as rulers in the Middle East make use of the sectarian and tribal loyalties to maintain power. The ‘Alawi minority controls Syria, East Bankers control Jordan, Sunnis control Iraq, and Nejdis control Saudi Arabia. This has direct implications for the military, where sectarian considerations affect assignments and promotions. Some minorities (such the Circassians in Jordan or the Druze in Syria) tie their well-being to the ruling elite and perform critical protection roles; others (such as the Shi’a of Iraq) are excluded from the officer corps. In any case, the assignment of officers based on sectarian considerations works against assignments based on merit.
The same lack of trust operates at the interstate level, where Arab armies exhibit very little trust of each other, and with good reason. The blatant lie Gamal Abdel Nasser told King Husayn in June 1967 to get him into the war against Israel—that the Egyptian air force was over Tel Aviv (when most of its planes had been destroyed)—was a classic example of deceit.27 Sadat’s disingenuous approach to the Syrians to entice them to enter the war in October 1973 was another (he told them that the Egyptians were planning total war, a deception which included using a second set of operational plans intended only for Syrian eyes).28 With this sort of history, it is no wonder that there is very little cross or joint training among Arab armies and very few command exercises. During the 1967 war, for example, not a single Jordanian liaison officer was stationed in Egypt, nor were the Jordanians forthcoming with the Egyptian command.29
Joint commands are paper constructs that have little actual function. Leaders look at joint commands, joint exercises, combined arms, and integrated staffs very cautiously for all Arab armies are a double-edged sword. One edge points toward the external enemy and the other toward the capital. The land forces are at once a regime-maintenance force and threat at the same time. No Arab ruler will allow combined operations or training to become routine; the usual excuse is financial expense, but that is unconvincing given their frequent purchase of hardware whose maintenance costs they cannot afford. In fact, combined arms exercises and joint staffs create familiarity, soften rivalries, erase suspicions, and eliminate the fragmented, competing organizations that enable rulers to play off rivals against one another. This situation is most clearly seen in Saudi Arabia, where the land forces and aviation are under the minister of defense, Prince Sultan, while the National Guard is under Prince Abdullah, the deputy prime minister and crown prince. In Egypt, the Central Security Forces balance the army. In Iraq and Syria, the Republican Guard does the balancing. Politicians actually create obstacles to maintain fragmentation. For example, obtaining aircraft from the air force for army airborne training, whether it is a joint exercise or a simple administrative request for support of training, must generally be coordinated by the heads of services at the ministry of defense; if a large number of aircraft are involved, this probably requires presidential approval. Military coups may be out of style, but the fear of them remains strong. Any large-scale exercise of land forces is a matter of concern to the government and is closely observed, particularly if live ammunition is being used. In Saudi Arabia a complex system of clearances required from area military commanders and provincial governors, all of whom have differing command channels to secure road convoy permission, obtaining ammunition, and conducting exercises, means that in order for a coup to work, it would require a massive amount of loyal conspirators. Arab regimes have learned how to be coup-proof.
Jan 9, 2020, 5:45 PM Why Arabs Lose Wars meforum.org Source: Excerpt from meforum.org/441/why-arabs-lose-wars (Conversely: Staying on message: Islamism like Judaism (or christianity) is exceptional at undermining.)
Second, the complex mosaic system of peoples creates additional problems for training, as rulers in the Middle East make use of the sectarian and tribal loyalties to maintain power. The ‘Alawi minority controls Syria, East Bankers control Jordan, Sunnis control Iraq, and Nejdis control Saudi Arabia. This has direct implications for the military, where sectarian considerations affect assignments and promotions. Some minorities (such the Circassians in Jordan or the Druze in Syria) tie their well-being to the ruling elite and perform critical protection roles; others (such as the Shi’a of Iraq) are excluded from the officer corps. In any case, the assignment of officers based on sectarian considerations works against assignments based on merit.
The same lack of trust operates at the interstate level, where Arab armies exhibit very little trust of each other, and with good reason. The blatant lie Gamal Abdel Nasser told King Husayn in June 1967 to get him into the war against Israel—that the Egyptian air force was over Tel Aviv (when most of its planes had been destroyed)—was a classic example of deceit.27 Sadat’s disingenuous approach to the Syrians to entice them to enter the war in October 1973 was another (he told them that the Egyptians were planning total war, a deception which included using a second set of operational plans intended only for Syrian eyes).28 With this sort of history, it is no wonder that there is very little cross or joint training among Arab armies and very few command exercises. During the 1967 war, for example, not a single Jordanian liaison officer was stationed in Egypt, nor were the Jordanians forthcoming with the Egyptian command.29
Joint commands are paper constructs that have little actual function. Leaders look at joint commands, joint exercises, combined arms, and integrated staffs very cautiously for all Arab armies are a double-edged sword. One edge points toward the external enemy and the other toward the capital. The land forces are at once a regime-maintenance force and threat at the same time. No Arab ruler will allow combined operations or training to become routine; the usual excuse is financial expense, but that is unconvincing given their frequent purchase of hardware whose maintenance costs they cannot afford. In fact, combined arms exercises and joint staffs create familiarity, soften rivalries, erase suspicions, and eliminate the fragmented, competing organizations that enable rulers to play off rivals against one another. This situation is most clearly seen in Saudi Arabia, where the land forces and aviation are under the minister of defense, Prince Sultan, while the National Guard is under Prince Abdullah, the deputy prime minister and crown prince. In Egypt, the Central Security Forces balance the army. In Iraq and Syria, the Republican Guard does the balancing. Politicians actually create obstacles to maintain fragmentation. For example, obtaining aircraft from the air force for army airborne training, whether it is a joint exercise or a simple administrative request for support of training, must generally be coordinated by the heads of services at the ministry of defense; if a large number of aircraft are involved, this probably requires presidential approval. Military coups may be out of style, but the fear of them remains strong. Any large-scale exercise of land forces is a matter of concern to the government and is closely observed, particularly if live ammunition is being used. In Saudi Arabia a complex system of clearances required from area military commanders and provincial governors, all of whom have differing command channels to secure road convoy permission, obtaining ammunition, and conducting exercises, means that in order for a coup to work, it would require a massive amount of loyal conspirators. Arab regimes have learned how to be coup-proof.
Jan 18, 2020, 9:20 AM It’s not an advantage for the underclasses. That’s why they invent or fall prey to Abrahamic deceits. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in the Ancient World. Marxism, Postmodernism, Feminism, and Islamism in the modern world. There is no means of defeating the Red Queen, no means of defeating physical law, no means of defeating the Red Queen, and No means of defeating Natural Law, without consuming genetic institutional, and cultural capital.
Jan 18, 2020, 9:20 AM It’s not an advantage for the underclasses. That’s why they invent or fall prey to Abrahamic deceits. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in the Ancient World. Marxism, Postmodernism, Feminism, and Islamism in the modern world. There is no means of defeating the Red Queen, no means of defeating physical law, no means of defeating the Red Queen, and No means of defeating Natural Law, without consuming genetic institutional, and cultural capital.
Jan 19, 2020, 2:54 PM Please don’t waste my time. Find the data. Human behavior is 80% inherited and 20% idiosyncratic development of behavior. Races differ in degree of neoteny, and rate of maturity. Genders differ in the distribution of traits and biases because of structural differences in the brain and distributions in the endocrine system, with the stereotypes being true in all walks of life. Neoteny and symmetry are most reproductively desirable always and everywhere. Intelligence is a personality trait. Between trait intelligence and trait conscientiousness and trait agreeableness( female)-disagreeableness(male) we measure and predict all lifetime outcomes, and adding family tradition class outcomes are determined. We can even tell your behavior by the type of crop farmed by your ancestors. The difference between races and class is in genetic load, not increase in ability. I other words lower classes carry more defects and mutations. Upper classes maintain position only through selective mating but are otherwise genetically middle class. Nature nurture was solved pre-2000, gender differences by 2012, genetic and racial differences last year (2019), and we are just about to cross the line into the cognitive differences between races, subraces, classes, and genders. There is almost no rotation between genetic and social classes. There is only rotation between economic classes, because markets make it possible for underclasses, lower classes, working classes, and middle classes to achieve “lottery wins”, specifically in business, arts, sports, and entertainment. The problem facing each of the races is statistical and genetic: the size of their underclasses was not eliminated through eugenic reproduction like it was in Europe and east Asia. Instead, neoteny was prevented, and underclass populations expanded because the only defense against warm-weather disease gradients is early maturity and large numbers of offspring. While european winter farming and east Asian cold weather rice farming are brutal for those that carry genetic load. By the late middle ages, most of Europe was genetically middle class. Brit intelligence is largely captured in the middle class (or what we call in the states the upper middle class) and this has not traditionally been a problem in either agrarian or industrial ages – but has become and remains a problem in the post-industrial era. Which is why white brits underperform immigrants. So whereas the average IQ of anglos (myself included) was around 115 in the 1860s, we have lost 15 points, or one standard deviation, in just a hundred and sixty years. Every single one of these underclasses you let in and we let in is crushing both our economies, our cultures, and our future generations. Let me put it another way: try to estimate the value of one national point of intelligence. It’s pretty easy. Look what happens under 100, then under 97, then under 93, then under 90. It’s a cliff. The average intelligence of your people is more important than yur intelligence in determining your quality of life and that of your offspring and the generations that follow. Period. End of story. I know this because I know in painful detail the structure of the brain, how it operates down to the molecular level, how genetic information is transferred between generations, how we grow brains in utero and postpartum, and the changes brought about by structural differences in transmission of information. I know the research. And I know you don’t. You were sold a lot of lies. Your principal challenge in life is unlearning all the lies you were told, to make you an ignorant, useful, domesticated animal for the political classes.