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Is America Still a Serious Nation?

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Mon, Feb 28, 2022 05:23 PM

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There is a lesson to be learned from Ukraine                                     ?

There is a lesson to be learned from Ukraine                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 [Is America Still a Serious Nation?]( There is a lesson to be learned from Ukraine [John Hawkins]( Feb 28 It was a bit of a surprise that Russia stormed into Ukraine because as a practical matter, it didn’t necessarily make a lot of sense. There was no casus belli or threat to Russia from Ukraine. Sure, Russia didn’t potentially want another NATO member shoved up against its border down the road and may have liked the idea of turning that nation into a puppet state, but there is no compelling reason for Russia to invade right now. That doubly so since Russia didn’t appear to be fully prepared for the invasion. Granted, you can’t necessarily take the news you hear at the beginning of a war at face value, but the general consensus from policy experts seems to be that the invasion isn’t off to a great start. Surprisingly, Ukraine still has planes in the air, some pretty embarrassing footage of captured Russian soldiers has leaked out, the West has stood surprisingly strong, there have been significant protests in Russia, Putin and company have faced damaging sanctions, and no major Ukrainian cities have been taken… yet. It is still entirely possible that Russia will pour more resources into Ukraine, quickly crush the Ukrainian military, and settle in for years of bloody guerilla fighting fed by massive arms shipments and aid from the West as the Russian economy bleeds out because of sanctions, but that seems like a Pyrrhic victory at best. How all of that ultimately plays out remains to be seen, but the one thing that has been noticeable since the beginning of the invasion is that it seems to have focused people’s minds on more serious issues. [[Twitter avatar for @DonaldJTrumpJr]Donald Trump Jr. @DonaldJTrumpJr Maybe it’s time we start worrying about real shit instead of our pronouns?]([February 24th 2022 28,151 Retweets162,155 Likes]( The people in Ukraine have REAL problems. How much of what we fight over in American politics represents a real-world practical problem and how much of it represents self-created nonsense problems? Can we even tell the difference anymore? For example, it seems pretty notable that at a time when the whole world is rallying against Russia and that nation is being hit with punishing sanctions that both Europe and the United States are continuing to buy their energy. Why are we in the United States doing that? Because if we cut off the supply of Russian oil, prices would spike dramatically. Would we be in an entirely different situation if the Keystone Pipeline were up and running? Absolutely, because the pipeline would have supplied us with more oil than we get from Russia. Unfortunately, Democrats have been slow-walking the pipeline since 2008 and Biden killed it. That wasn’t done because of any real or substantial objections to the pipeline, it was done as a political ploy to placate environmentalists. We’re talking about an incredibly valuable source of energy that would have produced large amounts of jobs and oil that were killed for no other reason than to appeal to people whose thinking doesn’t go any deeper than, “Oil bad! Must stop more oil.” On top of that, runaway inflation also means it’s politically difficult for Biden to make a decision that would increase the price of gas. Both parties and the Fed bear responsibility for that, but it’s worth noting that even as the inflation was cranking up, Democrats kept pumping more money into the economy without any regard to the consequences. That’s where we are in America. We are so sure of our place in the world, so sure that the Golden Goose will keep on laying golden eggs, so sure that there’s nothing that can really threaten us, that we have allowed our government to become like two cliques of squabbling children fighting over who gets to hand out monopoly money. Do you know why they don’t have fights over things like Critical Race Theory, gender pronouns, and men in women’s bathrooms in places like Ukraine? For one thing, they’re not as degenerate as us, but the key reason is that they have REAL PROBLEMS. On the other hand, we don’t really even have “first-world problems” in America. We have spoiled brat problems that we invent to give our status-hungry academics something to do and our failing citizens something to fixate on. This is us: We’re in a comfortable, air-conditioned house, eating delivered pizza for dinner with a couple of beers before we go to sleep in our comfortable bed thinking, “Wow, life sure is hard.” Then, we invent things to complain about online. “Oh, did you hear what that Karen did?” “Can you believe what AOC (if you’re conservative) / Marjorie Taylor Greene (if you’re liberal) said?” We get huffy over some supposedly outrageous quote about Trump or Biden – and we’re careless about the things that really matter. It’s like that brilliant speech from one of my all-time favorite movies, Limitless, when Carl Von Loon explains to Eddie Morra that he hasn’t earned the incredible gift that he has: “You do know you’re a freak? Your deductive powers are a gift from God, or chance, or a stray shot of sperm, or whatever or whoever the hell wrote your life script – a gift, not earned. You do not know what I know because you have not earned those powers. You’re careless with those powers and you flaunt them, and you throw them around like a brat with his trust fund. You haven’t had to climb up all the greasy little rungs, you haven’t been bored blind at the fundraisers, you haven’t done the time in that first marriage to the girl with the right father; you think you can leap over all in a single bound; you haven’t had to bribe or charm or threaten your way to a seat at that table; you don’t know how to assess your competition because you haven’t competed. Don’t make me your competition.”... Subscribe to Culturcidal by John Hawkins to read the rest. Become a paying subscriber of Culturcidal by John Hawkins to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. [Subscribe]( A subscription gets you: Paid subscriber only posts & special bonus posts. Have input into the topics I write about. A weekly Q&A session once we hit 100 members. A members only forum at 500 members. © 2022 John Hawkins [Unsubscribe]( 548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104 [Publish on Substack](

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