Burning Paradigm
Vibe Curator & Night Owl
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- May 16, 2020
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I don't think there's any escaping that the US-China friction is poised to be another Cold War.
I don't think there's any escaping that the US-China friction is poised to be another Cold War.
I don't think there's any escaping that the US-China friction is poised to be another Cold War.
Just don't buy into the media propaganda. It's Iraq war justification 2.0 revving up.
Not saying we are going to war. Just don't believe the next idiot that claims we're getting invaded. Or that China is attempting to surpass the US or replace western powers or some other kind of shit.
Just don't buy into the media propaganda. It's Iraq war justification 2.0 revving up.
Not saying we are going to war. Just don't believe the next idiot that claims we're getting invaded. Or that China is attempting to surpass the US or replace western powers or some other kind of shit.
I don't think there's any escaping that the US-China friction is poised to be another Cold War.
I know, boring.
Its disappointing how quickly and easily this seems to be happening too since during the actual cold war the US and China were largely great allies against Russian aggression. It feels like a lot of social capital has been dispensed with and really ruined.
I would expect some sort of embarrassment or humbling in some third world theatre of conflict/war to follow from it becoming clearer and clearer that the US can not maintain its "we're number one". To be honest I think that this may be more psychological than anything else and it could be interesting to see how the anglo-sphere negotiates it, its not done well so far.
The relationship between Russia and China will be one to watch, China seems to favour order whereas Russia prefers disorder and authoritarianism. Those things appear to be fundamentally at odds to me.
some redditor said:It's likely been said before but bears repeating, but it's jarring to witness the extent to which MLK would have been similarly out of place in large parts of the current discourse as he was in the last years of his life. He was accused by some in his organization of expressing "ingratitude" towards LBJ and the Democrats by speaking out against the war in Vietnam in 1965 (kind of how Nina Turner was scolded by a white female Hillary supporter in 2016 for supporting Bernie with the words "and after all we've done for you") and was similarly constrained in speaking out against the war by the anti-communist consensus. He was, of course, also accused of being a communist agent as flippantly as many similar anti-capitalist and anti-war speakers are today of being Russian assets. He was also accused by some of his allies in his organization as "diluting" the racial issue by focusing on anti-war (like how the Women's March dismissed Cindy Sheehan's anti-war politics as a distraction in 2018) and didn't live to pursue his proposed alignment with poor and working-class whites (sounds "Nazbol-y" now as some cynics would suggest).
With movements like BLM in even greater lockstep with the Democrats, current hysteria over Russia, and growing sectarian identity politics and segregation of issues, it's hard to imagine he would have been freer to speak today than in his last few years. We're going backwards and it sucks shit.
On March 25 the conservative Heritage Foundation will host a “virtual event†titled “The Crown Under Fire: Why the Left’s Campaign to Cancel the Monarchy and Undermine a Cornerstone of Western Democracy Will Fail.†Announcement of the event left a lot of people wondering how and when the American right became partisans for the British monarchy. “Quite a plot twist here,†marveled Maggie Haberman of the New York Times. Writing in the liberal Mother Jones, James West scratched his head at the right “tearing up the Declaration of Independence to own the libs.â€