• In Support of Western Supremacy, Nationalism, and Imperialism.
    it’s much more nuanced than that.Bob Ross

    Oh, of course. Your portrayal of countries like China and India as 'degenerate, inferior societies' sure puts you in pole position as an expert on nuance. :lol:
  • What should the EU do when Trump wins the next election?
    Know who loves Trump? The Vietnamese and Vietnamese Americans. Know why? They hate China, just like he does. That is, a nation that was devastated by the US has aligned itself with the US instead of China because it needs protection from China. Think that one through.Hanover

    Europe is not Vietnam, but on the topic of Vietnam - it became a 'partner country' to BRICS a few days ago.
  • What should the EU do when Trump wins the next election?
    4. This is exactly what Trump is trying to motivate. He's trying to save on defense costs by pushing it back on Europe.Hanover

    This is in Europe's interest, though. Relying on other countries for defense is nothing other than giving up one's sovereignty. This is exactly why I view Europe as little more than Uncle Sam's vassals.

    The solution is for the EU and its many nations is to figure out how to work closely with the US in order to function together harmoniously.Hanover

    The EU should decouple from the US, and instead seek engagement with continental powers like China. The US is fundamentally a meddling power that relies on dividing the Eurasian continent as the source of its influence.

    Conversely, it doesn't share in the cost of war on the Eurasian continent.

    Let me repeat that: the US thrives when the Eurasian continent is divided, but does not share in the cost of war.

    If you're in any way geopolitically conscious, you will keep the US very far from your door.
  • Withdrawal is the answer to most axiological problems concerning humans
    The reason we avoid something is usually because we fear its influence. For example, one avoids doing drugs because drugs may ruin one's life.

    In the case of life itself however it becomes a bit less clear what it is we're trying to avoid (or gain control over). Death perhaps?
  • Withdrawal is the answer to most axiological problems concerning humans
    Human social interaction, for all its surface appeal and fleeting “highs,” often pulls us into cycles of drama, pain, and struggle that leave lasting marks. Entangling ourselves in the lives and expectations of others can feel exhilarating initially, like a quick fix of validation or belonging, but it frequently devolves into complex webs of obligation, conflict, and disappointment. Much like a drug, social interaction can create a dependency- where we crave that next connection or approval, only to find it comes with an equal measure of stress, misunderstandings, and sometimes even betrayal. In the end, the temporary buzz fades, often leaving us more entangled and drained than before.schopenhauer1

    Genuinely, I think much of the negative influence we experience from social interactions are a product of the aforementioned whims of passion and desire.

    Asceticism and isolation can be a way to regain control over these influences.

    Fasting can be productive, but don't starve yourself. Even Buddha seemed to have felt this wasn't necessary. But what's stopping you from practicising asceticism?
  • Withdrawal is the answer to most axiological problems concerning humans
    Asceticism and isolation are tried and tested spiritual methods which we see all over the world and throughout the ages, so I think there is merit to them.

    Most (all?) spiritual beliefs that prescribe these practices seem to agree that they are not ends in themselves, but serve to balance the mind against the whims of our passions and desires.

    Once the ascetic believes they have attained a certain level of insight, they may feel they can return to normal (or perhaps monastic) life and be better able to act in accordance to just principles.

    In some ways I view the problems you describe similarly as for example addictive substances. One can avoid them like the plague, in fear of the damage they might do. Or one may, treading cautiously, confront the danger and rise above it. The latter approach bears a certain risk - this is true.
  • In Support of Western Supremacy, Nationalism, and Imperialism.
    For those who are upset at my rhetoric (and perhaps the lens by which I am analyzing this), I challenge you to try to justify, in your response to this OP, e.g., why Western, democratic values should not be forcibly imposed on obviously degenerate, inferior societies at least in principle—like Talibanian Afghanistan, North Korea, Iran, China, India, etc. Some societies are so obviously structured in a way antithetical to the human good, that it is virtually impossible to justify leaving them be in the name of anti-imperialism.Bob Ross

    The fact that you would name countries like Iran, China and India in this list betrays an ignorance that is hard to explain in mere words.

    Meanwhile, the US is aiding and abetting genocide in Palestine as we speak, and has a well-documented track record of genocide running throughout its history. (Native Americans, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, East-Timor, countless conflicts in the Middle-East with death tolls running in the millions, etc.)

    This thread reads like a bad joke - the last spasms of a morally bankrupt empire whose outdated propaganda apparently still holds some unfortunate souls in its grasp.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    A defeat for the US establishment is a win for the rest of the world.
  • Animalism: Are We Animals?
    What a load of Philo-babble. :lol:

    "Numerically identical to an animal" - this is the reason I can't take modern philosophy seriously. I scanned through the paper briefly, and maybe I missed it, but I couldn't even find the definition of 'animal' the writer uses to make his point.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Nonsense. If that had been the case, I'm sure the initial accounts would have mentioned it. None of them do.

    Instead, they mention a certain British clown traveling to Kiev, after which the negotiations are mysteriously aborted even though all signs were that an agreement was close.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    That “diplomatic solution” was giving into absurd Russian demands.Michael

    Nope. The Ukrainians put their signature under the draft, so unfortunately this narrative doesn't work.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    The point of contention was whether a diplomatic solution was possible with the Russians.

    Answer: yes, it was possible, and this is confirmed to us first-hand by a Ukrainian account no less.

    It is clear as day.

    If you want to believe my views, based on neutral, Western and Ukrainian sources are a product of propaganda, I think that says more about your own biases than mine.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    No, I'm talking about this:



    Bennett's comments were obviously highly controversial, which is probably why he was pressured to backtrack on them.

    However, Ukrainian diplomat Alexander Chaly who was part of the Ukrainian delegation in Istanbul gave a first-hand account that confirmed Bennett's initial statements.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    You can find first-hand accounts by a member of the Ukrainian delegation to the Istanbul negotiations online. They gave an interview and confirmed that it was the West who blocked the deal.

    This was already reported on earlier by Israeli mediator Naftali Bennett, but the Ukrainian diplomat confirmed it.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    The Russians sat down with the Ukrainians and produced a deal under which the Ukrainians put their signature.

    That's a fact you'll somehow have to deal with if you want to argue the Russians cannot be reasoned with.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    As if there would be a "diplomatic solution" for the artificial state that ought to be part of Russia (or at least parts that are Novorossiya) and is ruled by nazis.ssu

    In March/April 2022 there was a basis for peace, agreed upon and signed by the Ukrainian delegation. The West blocked it.

    In other words, the West is the pink elephant in the room that does not want peace. It's obvious once you simply look at their actions rather than their words.

    Oh and ermm.. Lol!
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Somehow you seem not to understand that it's an European objective to not let Russia defeat and conquer Ukraine (or take the parts it wants and put a "denazified" puppet regime in the carcass state that is left).ssu

    It's obvious that the US/NATO insistence on a military rather than a diplomatic solution is a guarantee for Ukraine's eventual collapse.

    So either US/NATO decisionmakers are utterly incompetent, or they are pursuing a completely different agenda that has nothing to do with the survival and well-being of Ukraine.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Trump is just a populist in the purest sense of the word. Populism is a reaction to a failed political establishment.

    We're seeing the exact same thing happen in my home country, however we aren't as melodramatic about it.
  • Climate change denial
    Warm showers? What decadence. You should have cold showers if you truly care about the climate. It's more healthy too.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Pulling the rug on the Ukrainians wouldn't weaken NATO. It would strengthen it.

    What's weakening NATO is the fact that we're trying to drag Ukraine in even though it would lead to endless conflict with the Russians, undermining the security of everyone involved.

    The only ones who would be weakened are the clowns who got us into this mess in the first place - good riddance I say to that.

    And yea, Ukraine is hardly the first disaster Washington has created, but that's their problem.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    As I've been discussing with Tzeentch, one possibility is the US wants to more-or-less start collapsing the global economy by massive chaos in the various Eurasian "crossroads". @Tzeentch views events in line with this general geopolitical strategy.boethius

    I have to correct you here.

    My point was not that the US is trying to crash the global economy, but that it is trying to disrupt land-based trade connections between its main rivals in order to maintain control of global trade.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Trump would be better for Europe. The worst thing he can do is pressure European countries to pay for their own security, which we ought to be doing anyway.

    Also, a Trump victory may expedite European populism so we can get rid of our tragically incompetent and corrupt political establishment.

    And since many in Europe hate Trump, a Trump-led America is likely going to motivate Europeans to start using their own brains again (assuming those haven't completely atrophied by now...).

    If he actually manages to end the war in Ukraine that'd be a bonus.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    This isn't about Biden, or even the election.

    It's about using the word 'evil' to describe a person whose crimes do not extend much further than being an idiot and the fact that he shouldn't be running for president, while ignoring the actual evil that is being perpetrated by the US government as we speak.

    Apparently, paying hush money to a pornstar is the epitome of evil while aiding and abetting genocidal maniacs is simply 'an unfortunate state of affairs' for which no one seems to bear responsibility.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Right.

    The entire US political system kowtowing to a lobby of genocidal lunatics - 'an unfortunate state of affairs'.

    But Orange Doofus saying words we don't like, or Elon Musk making money (what was his crime again?) - oh, now that's evil!

    They're not even in the same ballpark son. Anyone who is unable to see that must have a very thin grasp on reality indeed.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    If you would use the word 'evil' to describe Orange Doofus or Elon Musk, what word would you use to describe the current administration as it is literally supplying Israel with the bombs its throwing on hospitals and refugee camps?
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    The Iranians apparently want Kamala to win. :lol:

    Election interference, anyone?

    Lol, what a shit show. :rofl:

    Accused Iranian hackers successfully peddle stolen Trump emails
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)


    Shouldn't one's vote depend on which comedian gives you your best money's worth?
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    The worst thing about Trump is how he functions as a lightning rid to distract from all the vile shit that is being perpetrated by the US government as we speak.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    The only rape in all these events that's actually proven is the Israelis raping prisoners on camera.

    How do you explain that?

    Ah yes ...
    boethius

    "Accuse the other side of that which you are guilty" - J. Goebbels.BitconnectCarlos

    :100:

    And given Israel's conduct it's not the only lesson they're taking from the Nazi playbook.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    That's profoundly cute, coming from someone who is literally spinning apologetics for a genocide.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Main difference is that this genocide is being broadcast live and there's also no plausible deniability, muddy the waters, kind of usual bullshit people easily swallow as you mention above. Israeli officials literally just get up on podiums and declare their intention to starve the Palestinians, that rape is ok, that their animals, that children are just future terrorists and must be killed etc.

    Normally you have clear evidence of mass murder on the one hand and a long winded plausible deniability bullshit narrative on the other and most people are then like "huh, who's to say what happened".
    boethius

    One could make the prediction that this will be the straw that finally breaks the camel's back.

    Not an altogether unreasonable prediction, but at the same time I don't think it's obvious enough to take it as proof of US incompetence.

    But they didn't!

    The famous child burning photograph turned public opinion against the war, massive protests, huge cultural change.

    It was so shocking to American elites that they did not in fact get away with it, they wanted to "win the war", that they completely reorganized the military, and in particular the draft, in order to be sure not to be bothered by public opinion in subsequent wars they will want to wage.

    Of course, US remained a superpower and the threat of the Soviet Union was still current and so on and there were plenty of "rational" parties involved in US politics at the time.

    For example, in 1975 you not only have the end of the Vietnam war but also the Churchill committee that investigated the CIA (for the first and only time). That no one was held accountable represents the fact corruption wins out over democracy basically in a process that continues to this day getting more and more corrupt all the time, but the fact the investigation happened at all represents things were on a knifes edge. It could have easily gone another way.
    boethius

    The US suffered strategic defeat in Vietnam and had to pay a price, but did it take responsibility for the millions of innocent dead it caused, and the effects of chemical warfare that last up until this day?

    I'll let you be the judge, but in my opinion Vietnam vets paid the worst price, and the US itself largely got away with it.

    Did Afghanistan really need to be wrecked?boethius

    Of course.

    Afghanistan connects Russia and China to India.

    Can't have the continental powers developing land-based trade relations on Uncle Sam's watch now can we?

    Don't get me wrong, I do get the basic geopolitical idea of crashing the rest of the global economy and then sitting pretty in North America ... but how do you actually go about doing that?boethius

    The plan isn't so much crashing the global economy. The plan is, if things were to come to blows with China, to be able to cut off its land-based trade by sowing chaos in the bottlenecks that connect it to the rest of the world.

    China is connected to Europe via Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Iran. It's connected to India via Pakistan and Bangladesh.

    What do we see in all these regions? Long-standing US involvement.

    The US empire benefited from a strong Europe.boethius

    Emphasis on the past tense.

    When the Soviet Union was the big bad, the US empire benfitted from a strong Europe.

    Today however Europe is unlikely to get directly involved in a war with the new big bad, China. In fact, a strong Europe would likely be able to slip US influence if it got into a war with China, and actually be able to benefit from the conflict. That's why Europe is now treated as a potential rival and no longer as an actual ally.

    Not only that, but Europe can also potentially function as a critical market that can keep the Chinese economy afloat after its sea-based trade is cut off - this is why the disruption of Chinese-European trade routes is a fundamental part of US Eurasian strategy.

    Europe's position in relation to the US empire fundamentally changed after the Cold War ended, and the Europeans were too slow the realize.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    For example, we go from abandoning Afghanistan and "fighting for democracy" there to a discourse of fighting for democracy in Ukraine as the most important thing to ever happen and Putin is literally Hitler and a genocidal maniac ... to supporting an actual genocide in Gaza!?boethius

    Who would believe that bullshit, right? Well, as it turns out a lot of people continue to believe that bullshit. Propaganda is a powerful thing.

    And if we're honest, how is Gaza any different from the de facto and actual genocides the US has perpetrated and supported, like those in Vietnam, East-Timor and the Middle-East, with casualty figures running into the millions?

    It's crazy, but they continue to get away with it. I can't blame the Americans for thinking they'll get away with it again.

    I'm open to the possibility that they won't - times are changing - but that will require US assets from putting their money where their mouth is. No sign of that so far. Just "Oooh"ing and "Aaah"ing.

    ... and then escalate to regional war with Iran ... which the whole point of abandoning Afghanistan was that Iran was no longer such a big priority and the region generally, time to pivot to East-Asa.boethius

    Iran and Afghanistan are part of the same geographical region, so in my opinion this is not so strange.

    Afghanistan has been wrecked, while Iran is now threatening to jump the gun on US intervention.

    So the switch makes sense, and again I see continuity.

    I would also point out that Ukraine and Iran both play vital roles in that they connect China to the rest of the world - they may very well be part of the 'pivot to Asia', in that they directly relate to US strategy vis-á-vis China.

    Add into that blowing up critical infrastructure of key allies, going from decades of the war on terror to now conducting state terrorism openly is ok and actually super clever if you kill some enemies in their living rooms with their families, running low of ammunition after deuces of outspending essentially the rest of the world on the military for decades (where'd the money go??) and so on.boethius

    Yep. It's all bullshit.

    I'm as surprised as you are that people keep falling for this shit, but alas here we are.

    By bombing Nord Stream the US has rolled out a plan that has been in place since at least 2014, of transfering European energy dependency from Russia to the US.

    And the US has succeeded. Germany and the rest of Europe took it like a bitch. The US reaps the benefits.

    The main point I'm trying to make is we're in a phase where the top elites, what I refer to as the Imperial primary beneficiaries, have personal plans that are more important to them than the interests of the empire.boethius

    Maybe this is true, but I will believe it only when the US empire is definitively put in the trashbin of history. Until that happens, history shows they're way too dangerous to underestimate.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    I'm saying "this plane is definitely going down" and your reply is "well we still have a lot of fuel so can't be that bad".boethius

    We actually agree that the plane is definitely going down, however I think a better representation of our arguments is "Plan vs. No plan", and to that end I've tried to repeatedly point out that there is clear continuity in US policy over the course of decades, both with regards to Ukraine and Iran.

    A continuity that is in line with geopolitical theories like for example Heartland theory by Mackinder and Geographical Pivot theory by Brzezinski.

    I view that continuity as a clear indicator of a wider strategy, and the idea that the US has operated on the basis of complex geopolitical strategies is not a difficult argument to make considering its history of achieving, maintaining and defending hegemony, and continuously outmanoeuvring geopolitical rivals and unfortunate assets.

    Though I did read it, I don't have the time nor energy to respond to your full post. If we could narrow the discussion down to one or two subjects that would be neat.




    ... And neither do Americans.
  • US Election 2024 (All general discussion)
    Will it be Muppet A or Muppet B?

    Oh, the suspense is palpable.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    But then you'd want to negotiate with the ultranationalists to delay their genocide the time to attack whoever needs to be attacked.

    There is no strategic path in which genocide is necessary nor conducive.
    boethius

    Whatever the case, the Israelis disagree and the Americans don't feel called upon to correct them.

    Your argument has been premised on the US imperial goal being avoiding regional integration and so becoming a land corridor, attacking Iran is not necessary to avoid this regional integration.

    Furthermore, Israel isn't destabilizing Iran either and can't really wage war on Iran. It could nuke Iran as we've already discussed but that doesn't require a genocide and you're position on Israel using nukes is that would be too high a diplomatic cost (but not for genocide?).

    As far as attacking Iran goes, as mentioned we've been hearing the neocon reasons for this being important for decades but no actual pathway has ever been presented for how you actually go about attacking Iran.
    boethius

    Israel has proven capable of assassinating high-profile targets within Iran, and it's likely they are holding back various means at their disposal for when shit truly hits the fan.

    So personally I would not underestimate Israel's capability to hurt and/or destabilize Iran in significant ways, even without the nuclear option.

    If things were to come to global conflict, I believe Israel may use nuclear weapons on Iran.

    Now, Israel will "get away" with the genocide to the extent that no one can intervene due to the US protecting Israel, but this is at a massive diplomatic cost to the US and not really the world shrugging off the genocide.boethius

    I think the onus is on you to provide clear indications of this diplomatic cost.

    So far, I'm not seeing it.

    When countries start putting their money where their mouth is, and impose tangible costs on Israel or the United States, I might change my mind.

    People are pretty mad about it, including as mentioned nearly 2 billion muslims.boethius

    This is true, but I think the signal from Israel is that they are definitively abandoning rapprochement (and thus embracing conflict - as good ultranationalists do) - probably because they now believe it was never feasible to begin with.

    Without a solution to the Palestinian problem, no rapprochement. And any real solution to the Palestinian problem (either a Palestinian state or an end to the apartheid) would be anathema to the Israeli hardliners.

    We're talking about the US empire, which is its hegemonic influence outside its borders.

    Now, if the grand strategy you're talking about at the end of the day is just the US spoiling as much of the rest of the global economy as it retreats into isolationism on their island as you say, that's simply accepting US imperial decline.
    boethius

    The US still has Europe, the Anglosphere and several East-Asian nations like Japan and South-Korea in the palm of its hand.

    I think one shouldn't exaggerate the decline of the US empire.

    Yes, Ukraine paid far higher a price than America for the war with Russia ... but the important question is what did the US gain?boethius

    Eastern Europe is a vital bottleneck that connects China, via Russia, to Europe over land. (Iran is the other one, remember?)

    What the US has done is economically decouple Europe and Russia, and created long-lasting conflict with fertile soil for further escalation.

    A forever war in Ukraine is the goal, and it's what they're getting.

    In the case of the anticipated global conflict (which may be instigated by the US, or simply turn out to be an inevitability), this serves two purposes: it denies China overland access to European markets, and it involves two potential US rivals, Russia and Europe, in a war with each other.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    If Israel fully embraces the ultranationalist path, genocide/ethnic cleansing is not necessarily desirable to the US, it is inevitable. In the case of Israel, and indeed most ultranationalist endeavors, crimes against humanity are par for the course.

    I'm sure the US has made peace with that fact decades ago, which is why US support for Israel remains unchanged no matter how many American bombs fall on hospitals and refugee camps.

    There's plenty of ultra-violent groups in the Middle East already completely willing and able to cause further chaos for the right price, training, equipment and a large amount of intelligence.boethius

    That isn't necessarily true.

    Iran is the target here, and there is no other proxy that could destabilize Iran.

    Therefore, if America actually wanted to get into a big war in the Middle-East [...]boethius

    The Americans are not going to get directly involved in this war if they can help it. They are going to stay on the sideline and have the Israelis do their dirty work, just like they use the Ukrainians to fight the Russians.

    The genocide places significant pressure on US alliances which you do actually need when going into a global conflict.boethius

    Does it?

    I'm seeing some hand-wringing, strongly-worded letters, etc.

    Is there any chance of alliances dissolving over US support for Israel? I see no sign of that, to be honest. As far as I can tell, they're getting away with it.

    Likewise escalating the war in Ukraine was an obvious blunder.

    Likewise getting into long wars in the Middle-East.

    Likewise destroying the empires finances.

    Likewise offshoring critical production.

    Likewise a lot of things are obvious blunders in terms of geopolitical strategy.
    boethius

    You may view these as 'obvious blunders', but to me they are not obvious at all.

    The US is doing quite well, all things considered. The ones who are paying the price are the Ukrainians, the Europeans, soon it will be the Israelis too, but the Americans are safe on their island, with their economy doing largely fine.


    Finally, I believe it is the US that has a vested interest in pressing the issue when it comes to global conflict.

    With Russia, China and Iran in an alliance with each other, the Eurasian continent is dangerously united. This creates an economic base that the US simply cannot compete with in the long run.

    In other words, the status quo favors BRICS, so it is basically up to the US to throw a wrench in the wheel which most-likely will be in the form of global, large-scale conflict.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Power to do what though?

    Defend their own borders? Nuke the world? Bomb a few weaker states into a internal chaos. Sure.

    The US has no where near the power it did even a decades ago, let alone 2 decades or 3 deuces ago. It's in imperial decline.

    We could of course discuss exactly what the US power status is at the moment, but my point here is not to argue that the US does not have a lot of power. Indeed, it is precisely because the US build up such a large amount of power that it can withstand such incredible levels of corruption without collapsing yet. However, the waste is very evident wherever one looks.

    But perhaps that would be best to discuss in a new thread.
    boethius

    :up:

    Is the main point I'm responding to, which I feel is fair to assess as the US needing Israel to commit a genocide for "strategic reasons", those reasons being solidifying Israel's position (which also the genocide is unlikely to accomplish).

    If you're objection is the use of the word "need" in the sense of some sort of categorical need, then I agree that's not what you're saying, but in this case I'm using need in the sense of "need for these strategic reasons" and those reasons being strengthening Israel's position through genocide. My intention was not to connote that you were suggesting the genocide was some sort of US strategic imperative.

    My argument is that the US empire is not benefiting at all from the genocide and is in fact greatly harmed by it in various ways. If the US benefits from chaos in the Middle-East generally speaking, which I also disagree with, that is easily achieved without a genocide.

    I.e. if your theory was true then it would make sense to say "The US needed Israel to commit a genocide to better secure the latter's borders and so the strategic position of it's proxy would be improved to more optimally contribute to further Imperial machinations".
    boethius

    If Washington wants to sow chaos in the Middle-East, a nuclear-armed Israel that fully embraces violent ultranationalism is the perfect vessel to do so.

    Genocide and ethnic cleansing, while dooming the Israelis in the long run, are critical steps towards its short-to-medium-term survival as an ultranationalist nation. Since, if it goes down the ultranationalist path (as increasingly seems to be the case) it will soon be at war with various neighbors, at which point the housing millions of possible partisans within their borders would become a critical strategic vulnerability.

    In other words, Washington doesn't need Israel to commit a genocide, but it doesn't exactly have a reason to stop it either. If anything it means they might get more use out of their proxy before it eventually kicks the bucket.

    Damage to US reputation/prestige is the price to pay, but if we are entering the prelude to global conflict, that really isn't all that significant.


    PS: I would be exceedingly careful with ascribing the label "obvious blunder" to the actions of great powers.

    People incorrectly interpret the actions of great powers all the time, as was for example the case with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which many must have deemed 'an obvious blunder' at the time.

    The great powers' chess game is vastly superior to ours.

    My litmus test for this is whether or not the great power in question shows signs of backtracking, or instead continues to double down. In the case of the US we see them continuously double down on 'obvious blunders' - in my view a clear indicator that they may not be blunders after all.