… S/He/It does represent modern America.
More important question:
Wy are the real pretty girls in the background collaborating with this travesty?
That Red Head looks really hot!
(
)
Well, the Leftard WAS right about something.
The Covid VAXX IS killing some of the right people.
Legions of moronic VAXXers are dying in legions.
On the one hand: Freude! Freude! Freude!
Well … Schadenfreude actually.
On the other hand: the Depopulationist agenda is fully functioning.
On the positive side: Woketards, Leftards, (fascist) Left Wing Pro-Transgressives … and assorted morons will be dying first.
Arrogant pieces of shite, they were.
So, there is THAT! Freude! Freude! Freude!
More on the Julie Woketard.
May I invite you, again, to frequent Gab Social (don’t have to join, but I have; special groups … many topics).
Here, Obama loses the crowd; presumably his type of crowd, as he never spoke to any other:
This the view of Torba, the leader of Gab:
Running Gab with integrity comes at a steep cost. It is worth that cost because what we are working to build here matters and must come from a place of integrity. Here are some things we could be doing, but are not doing in order to maintain the integrity of our community and mission.
1. Banning “hate speech” to get into the app stores like Truth Social, Parler, and Rumble do. Never going to happen here, thus we are banned from both app stores.
2. Allowing p*rn like Twitter and Reddit do. Never going go happen here. Thus, we have much less traffic than Reddit and Twitter.
3. Tracking your every move and collecting as much personal data on you as possible like Facebook does. Never going to happen here. Thus, we make much less money than Facebook.
4. Censoring “fake news,” “misinformation” or whatever other nonsense terms they want to use to silence dissent. Never going to happen here. Thus, we get smeared by the press, academics, and regime elites.
I read on Vox Day, that “they” (the powers that be) have allowed Musk to buy Twitter, because all of the other gatekeeping alternatives (Parler, Truth Social …) have failed.
I don’t think Musk will turn Twitter into a real free speech platform.
Musk can not be real.
NOBODY can run four or five serious companies at the same time, be on social Media all the time, have female problems, opine on world politics, have videos of himself doing stunts, spends hours with Joe Rogan, etc., etc., etc.
Mile Mathis’s view is that Musk is an actor.
Sadly, very, I have to agree with this:
If anything, Fred isn’t pessimistic enough.
The mediocrities with their hands on the reins of power are PERFECTLY capable of bumbling themselves–and us–into nuclear armageddon.
World history is full of such stupidity, and it’s not only those guilty of the stupidity who end up paying.
May God protect us!
PS As an aside.
It would go slightly different than what Fred (a man of the 60s) wrote:
After that Fred elaborates on how such a war may unfold. It is typical Fred who uses his words as swords, and it is a delight. A great piece. However, one small detail which needs to be pointed out. It is all about accuracy and CEP, or Circular Error Probable, and how this accuracy was growing, while CEP was shrinking over decades from Counter-value posture of strategic nuclear forces of USSR and the US–meaning blowing the shit out of well-sized targets easy to hit, such as cities–to Counter-force when accuracy of the delivery systems increased dramatically and the necessity to strike large area targets (to trade effect for low accuracy), which cities naturally are, diminished. Today modern ICBMs can deliver MIRVs with accuracy measured in tens of meters and that is enough to hit a specific military formation’s camp, production plant or the area of the ICBM silo. So, suddenly, the collapse of such a country as the US hinges not on wiping out a number of urban areas such as NYC or Chicago–that is easy and counter-value weapons such as Poseidon do exist and are being perfected, but on something much more sinister.
This is the part that got me shattered:
Civilians still will die, but not in high tens or hundreds of millions, but something on the scale of 10-20 million at the start and after that … well, enter what Fred describes …
https://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/search?q=fred
What would happen in, say, New York City even if, improbably, it were not bombed? Here we will ignore the likelihood of sheer, boiling panic and resultant chaos on learning that much of the country had been flattened.
In the first few days there would be panic buying with shelves at supermarkets being emptied. Hunger would soon become serious.
By day four, people would be hunting each other with knives to get their food. By the end of the second week, people would be eating each other. Literally.
This happens in famines.
https://thesaker.is/on-going-seriously-boom/
Yup!
You can get the African out of Africa, but you can’t get …
Yikes!
Note: Libtards first. (
)
Sooo, THAT was the plan … 30 some years ago (or even before):
Hu has been one of the leaders of the pro-globalist faction in China for decades.
He was supposed to be the architect of
the transition of the seat of The Empire That Never Ended from Washington DC to Beijing.
I wonder what bi-national (((Americans))) were going to “organize/supervise/oversee” that transition.
Hum!
(:-))
Xi is in Complete Control
You may recall a few weeks ago that the globalist media was excitedly reporting that mysterious events in China, particularly around Beijing, possibly indicated that a coup against President Xi was taking place. You may also recall that I told you the idea President Xi’s control over the Party and the government was slipping was complete nonsense; the Chinese leader is not only very smart and extremely effective but is far more popular with his people than are any of the political leaders across the former West.
And now, it is obvious to everyone that Xi is not only going to continue calling the shots, but is strong enough to continue rooting out the remnants of the pro-globalist faction in China:
Former general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), Hu Jintao, was forcibly escorted out of the 20th Chinese Communist Party National Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing by Kong Shaoxun, the deputy director of the General Office of the CPC Central Committee, moments before the de-facto Emperor of China, Xi Jingping, was re-elected to another five-year term on Saturday.
At the first plenary session of the CCP’s 20th Central Committee on Sunday, Xi hinted at his intraparty purges that have made him the most authoritarian leader of China since Mao Zedong.
“Driven by a strong sense of mission, we have resolved to offend a few thousand rather than fail 1.4 billion and to clear out the party of all its ills. We’ve used a combination of measures to take out tigers, swat flies, and hunt down foxes, punishing corrupt officials of all types,” Xi said.
A video shows that Jintao was involuntarily escorted from the auditorium during the last day of congress on Saturday.
He refused assistance from a CCP aid and attempted to pick up a document on the table, an action which the paramount leader of China stopped by when he placed his hand on the document.
Another high-ranking CCP member to the left of Jintao was seen almost getting up from his seat before his companion next to him tapped him on the back to sit back down.
It’s hard to exaggerate the significance of this public arrest of Hu Jintao. Hu has been one of the leaders of the pro-globalist faction in China for decades. He was supposed to be the architect of the transition of the seat of The Empire That Never Ended from Washington DC to Beijing.
This probably signifies some massive changes coming soon, although what they will be is hard to say. Regardless, expect to see the anti-Russian emphasis in the media to shift soon to an anti-Chinese one, as China is by far the more serious threat to the tottering globalist world order.
https://voxday.net/2022/10/25/xi-is-in-complete-control/
PS By the way, the US State Department (foreign affairs) wrote an analysis of Xi Jinping career.
They found that he is NOT corrupt (in the venal sense of the word).
One may speculate that he is corrupt in the Robespierrian sense of word: power corrupts.
BUT, he is not “offing” his opponents like a mad Jacobin (or Bolshevik).
Here is something interesting that I think you will like.
It is about a society’s ability to mobilize for war.
There is always something new and useful to learn.
As usual the yellowing is my ow editorializing.
A Brief History of Military Force Generation
One of the peculiarities of European history is the truly shocking extent to which the Romans were far ahead of their time in the sphere of military mobilization. Rome conquered the world largely because it had a truly exceptional mobilization capacity, for centuries consistently generating high levels of mass military participation from the male population of Italy.
Caesar brought more than 60,000 men to the Battle of Alesia when he conquered Gaul – a force generation that would not be matched for centuries in the post-Roman world.
After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, state capacity in Europe deteriorated rapidly. Royal authority in both France and Germany was curtailed as the aristocracy and urban authorities grew in power. Despite the stereotype of despotic monarchy, political power in the middle ages was highly fragmented, and taxation and mobilization were highly localized. The Roman capacity to mobilize large armies that were centrally controlled and financed was lost, and warfare became the domain of a narrow fighting class – the petty gentry, or knights.
Consequentially, medieval European armies were shockingly small.
At pivotal English-French battles like Agincourt and Crecy, English armies numbered less than 10,000, and the French no more than 30,000. The world historical Battle of Hastings – which sealed the Norman conquest of Britain – pitted two armies of fewer than 10,000 men against each other. The Battle of Grunwald – in which a Polish-Lithuanian coalition defeated the Teutonic Knights – was one of the largest battles in Medieval Europe and still featured two armies that numbered at most 30,000.
European mobilization powers and state capacity were shockingly low in this era compared to other states around the world. Chinese armies routinely numbered in the low hundreds of thousands, and the Mongols, even with significantly lower bureaucratic sophistication, could field 80,000 men.
The situation began to shift radically as intensified military competition – in particular the savage 30 years’ war – forced European states to at last begin a shift back towards centralized state capacity. The model of military mobilization shifted at last from the servitor system – where a small, self-funded military class provided military service – to the fiscal military state, where armies were raised, funded, directed, and sustained through the fiscal-bureaucratic systems of centralized governments.
Through the early modern period, military service models acquired a unique admixture of conscription, professional service, and the servitor system.
The aristocracy continued to provide military service in the emerging officer corps, while conscription and impressment were used to fill out the ranks. Notably, however, conscripts were inducted into very long terms of service. This reflected the political needs of monarchy in the age of absolutism. The army was not a forum for popular political participation in the regime – it was an instrument for the regime to defend itself from both foreign enemies and peasant jacqueries. Therefore, conscripts were not rotated back into society. It was necessary to turn the army into a distinct social class with some element of remoteness from the population at large – this was a professional military institution that served as an internal bulwark of the regime.
The rise of nationalistic regimes and mass politics allowed the scale of armies to increase much further. Governments in the late 19th century now had less to fear from their own populations than did the absolute monarchies of the past – this changed the nature of military service and at last returned Europe to the system that the Romans had in millennia past. Military service was now a form of mass political participation – this allowed for conscripts to be called up, trained, and rotated back into society – the reserve cadre system that characterized armies in both of the world wars.
In sum, the cycle of military mobilization systems in Europe is a mirror of the political system. Armies were very small during the era where there was little to no mass political participation with the regime. Rome fielded large armies because there was significant political buy-in and a cohesive identity in the form of Roman citizenship. This allowed Rome to generate high military participation, even in the Republican era where the Roman state was very small and bureaucratically sparse. Medieval Europe had fragmented political authority and an extremely low sense of cohesive political identity, and consequently its armies were shockingly small. Armies began to grow in size again as the sense of national identity and participation grew, and it is no coincidence that the largest war in history – the Nazi-Soviet War – was fought between two regimes that had totalizing ideologies that generated an extremely high level of political participation.
That brings us to today. In the 21st century, with its interconnectedness and crushing availability of both information and misinformation, the process of generating mass political – and hence military – participation is much more nuanced. No country wields a totalizing utopian vision, and it is inarguable that the sense of national cohesion is significantly lower now than it was one hundred years ago.
Putin, very simply, could not have conducted a large scale mobilization at the onset of the war. He possessed neither a coercive mechanism nor the manifest threat to generate mass political support. Few Russians would have believed that there was some existential threat lurking in the shadow – they needed to be shown, and the west has not disappointed. Likewise, few Russians would likely have supported the obliteration of Ukrainian infrastructure and urban utilities in the opening days of the war. But now, the only vocal criticism of Putin within Russia is on the side of further escalation. The problem with Putin, from the Russian perspective, is that he has not gone far enough. In other words – mass politics have already moved ahead of the government, making mobilization and escalation politically trivial.
Above all, we must remember that Clausewitz’s maxim remains true.
The military situation is merely a subset of the political situation, and military mobilization is also political mobilization – a manifestation of society’s political participation in the state.
https://bigserge.substack.com/p/politics-by-other-means
PS Alesia was ONE of the wars the Roman could deal at the same time.
Looking at Pirate Bay for interesting things to watch.
Crap, Crap, Crap … except for the House of Dragon which is acceptable.
The kind of trash I will NOT watch: Prey 2022
Genre: Action, Thriller
Director: Dan (((Trachtenberg)))
Plot:
In the Comanche Nation in 1717, a fierce and highly skilled warrior named Naru learns the prey SHE is stalking is a highly evolved alien with a technologically advanced arsenal.
A “fierce and highly skilled FEMALE warrior”.
Jesus!
These Feminazi Female Warriors are SURE doing their EQUAL (50/50) share of the fightings, the killings and dyings on the steps of the Ukraine.
The world is in AWE at the Fearlessness of the “fierce and highly skilled FEMALE warriors” … “fighting the highly evolved RUSSIAN alien with a technologically advanced arsenal..”
Maybe more.
Napo Lion Bonaparte
Autism Candles by Nathan Young
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