Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
July 21, 2025
Not Knowing The ‘Enemy’

If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles.
If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat.
If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.

Sun Tzu, Art of War, III.18

I am always amazed how little western governments are aware of their own (lack of) capabilities as well as of the nature and capabilities of their 'enemies'.

They tend to not know the basic economic and sociological facts about their opponents. They operate on whatever nonsense they have come to believe about their 'enemies'. They overestimate their own position, miscalculate and are astonished when, as a result, the factual situation turns against them.

We may recount, as Tucker Carlson does here, that the U.S. was "assured by some of the dumbest people on the planet, who currently serve in the United States Senate, that Russia was merely 'a gas station with nuclear weapons'."

Sanctions were imposed on Russia but failed to trouble it. They hurt those who imposed them the most.

The Trump administration recently put a 50% tariff on all goods from Brazil (even though it has a trade surplus with that country). This was to punish its government and judiciary for pursuing charges against the former president Jair Bolsonaro for plotting a coup after he had lost the elections.

Brazil is a nationalistic, well developed country which is allergic to interference by foreign powers. Anyone knowing that fact could have anticipated this reaction:

For [President] Lula, whose left-wing allies face a tough 2026 election, the moment is a windfall. Polls show revived support for his administration in the face of Bolsonaro-provoked American bullying. The tariffs also harm the interests of business elites who are often the biggest boosters of Lula’s conservative opposition.

What was meant as a show of strength by MAGA and its Brazilian franchise has turned into a political gift for Lula, who now gets to credibly present himself as a symbol of national resistance while leaving his opponents scrambling to choose between loyalty to Bolsonaro and the economic interests of their own base,” observed Brazil historian Andre Pagliarini.

the U.S. trade war against China is another point where the lack of knowledge about the opponent led to the loss of the battle:

When Mr. Trump raised tariffs on Chinese exports in April, some top Trump officials thought Beijing would quickly fold, given its recent economic weakness. Instead, Beijing called Mr. Trump’s bluff by restricting rare earths needed by American makers of cars, military equipment, medical devices and electronics.

As the flow of those materials stopped, Mr. Trump and other officials began receiving calls from chief executives saying their factories would soon shut down. Ford, Suzuki and other companies shuttered factories because of the lack of supply.

Mr. Trump and his top advisers were surprised by the threat that Beijing’s countermove posed, people familiar with the matter say. That brought the United States back to the negotiating table this spring to strike a fragile trade truce, which Trump officials are now wary of upsetting. That agreement dropped tariffs from a minimum 145 percent to 30 percent, with the Chinese agreeing to allow rare earths to flow as freely as before.

Trump and his advisor likely did not even know what rare earth were. They did not know that China has a monopoly of making them into magnets. They did not know that these magnets were needed to create U.S. high-tech products.

Moreover, China used the U.S. pretext of 'national security' to make its move stick:

Mr. Trump was the first to harness the power of U.S. export controls, by targeting Chinese tech giant Huawei and putting global restrictions on American technology in his first term. But the Biden administration expanded those rules. Concerned that China’s growing A.I. capacity would advance its military, Biden officials cracked down on exports of Nvidia chips, seeing them as the most effective choke point over Chinese A.I. capabilities.

Since then, when Chinese officials raised their objections to U.S. technology controls in meetings, U.S. officials had responded by insisting that the measures were national security matters and not up for debate.

But in the meeting in Geneva in May, China finally had a powerful counterargument. Beijing insisted that its minerals and magnets, some of which go to fighter jets, drones and weaponry, were a “dual-use” technology that could be used for the military as well as civilian industries, just like A.I. and chips. It demanded reciprocity: If the United States wanted a steady flow of rare earths, Washington should also be ready to lessen its technology controls.

China has regained access to Nvidia chips and Trump is seeking a meeting with China's president Xi. Evidently, China has won this battle.

I am sure there are some specialists on China down in the bowels of the Commerce Department or State, who did know how China could hit back. They probably had gamed-out and predicted how China would hit back.

But U.S. politicians, be they Obama, Biden or Trump, are too full of themselves to doubt their own level of knowledge about their opponents. They do not know their 'enemies'. The battles they plan out and launch do inevitably end in disasters.

As I have observed the U.S. losing one foreign policy battle after the other over the last 25 years I was waiting for the moment where sanity would set in. Where realistic assumptions would be made before launching this or that new adventure. I am no longer expecting that to happen.

Some say the U.S. is in a strong position and, despite creating chaos by losing such battles, does win from it. But in reality only some are profiting from fighting and losing these battles while the country as a whole is getting diminished by it.

Comments

Posted by: oldhippie | Jul 21 2025 19:35 utc | 55
Unadulterated garbage, as you’d know if you ever went to these ‘mythical’ people’s houses and looked at their bookshelves, or what was hanging on the walls. The universal problem, is, and always will be, people who have ideas with little knowledge do not like their ideas questioned. After all, there must have been plenty of people in the Russian equivalent of the State Department and Pentagon who thought the invasion plans for the SVO were unhinged from reality, but the plan still went ahead, and tens of thousands of lives were needlessly lost, as well as billions of dollars of hardware.
Trying to pretend the ego v’s brains debate is a particularly Western problem is disingenuous to the extreme. What’s made it worse in the West is the insidious practice of prioritising ideological conformity with meritocracy, which now has fully extended itself into all areas of the society. Hence a Supreme Court Judge talking about getting away from dry wordy legal language and looking at the feels, or ruling that a hypothetical action can be illegal, or the plagiarising morons heading the leading universities, or a non-engineer heading Boeing. Or here, in the UK, a health minister who says people can identify as a llama’s, and a foreign secretary who is even dumber than he looks and sounds.

Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 16:36 utc | 201

In spite of Sun Tzu’s admonitions, most wars are informed by wishful thinking rather than firm knowledge.

Posted by: TJ | Jul 22 2025 16:40 utc | 202

Wasn’t that the problem with these Boeings crashing originally? Like there were other electronic systems on board, even entertainment and personal electronic devices, that may have interacted with the aircraft electronic control? -George 154
Not to the best of my knowledge, to be sure there may have been glitches to which I am not aware but, all the “mechanism” fatalities I know of in recent years relates to sloppy, poorly thought out software interfering with the pilots to have full flight control of their aircraft. Boeing’s 737-Max was/is a disgrace, using software to cover-up the fact that the 60 year old airframe was not designed for today’s engines should have landed several people in prison for the rest of their natural lives.
I have often joked of the software industry thusly, if the aviation-industry was run the way the software-industry is run, we would be relieved if the daily tally of fatal air crashes was under thousand…. And so here we are, shoddy-software-industry practices are being employed in the aviation-industry.
I add, there was a time when the people who PROGRAMED software in the Aerospace Industry all had science degrees in engineering or physics and they truly PROGRAMED their stuff, there WERE some very talented people back in the day. Today those people are gone, replaced by hacks whose degrees, if they have any, are probably forgeries. Even rarer is when the “manager” “managing” these circus-clowns-called-programmers has the slightest clue what his/her underlings are doing.

Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 22 2025 16:40 utc | 203

sloppy, poorly thought out software interfering with the pilots to have full flight control of their aircraft -> relates to sloppy, poorly thought out software interfering with the pilots having full flight authority over their aircraft.

Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 22 2025 16:46 utc | 204

@ milites
> Trying to pretend the ego v’s brains debate is a particularly Western problem is disingenuous to the extreme.
Did oldhippie really say what you’re implying he said?

Posted by: I forgot | Jul 22 2025 17:44 utc | 205

@ jinn | Jul 22 2025 14:50 utc | 188
Thanks for turning on a different light in my head.
Were all the “Arab Springs” countries still aligned with Russia at the time?

Posted by: I forgot | Jul 22 2025 17:53 utc | 206

Whining about America “not knowing it enemies” is a good example of the fake dissent that is often peddled by the supposed Alternative Media™.
It is criticism that narrowly focuses on the ineffective *tactics* of America’s wars–military or economic–rather than the criminal nature of these wars to begin with.
It is analogous to a guy criticizing Nazi Germany because it “did not know its enemies” and was thus defeated in World War 2–all the while, he studiously avoids criticism of Germany’s crimes against humanity that it perpetrated through its criminal wars.

Posted by: ak74 | Jul 22 2025 18:20 utc | 207

ak74 207,
I think you can hold more than one idea in your head at the same time?
If I say the Nazis were stupid for opening up a two front war, for declaring war on the US after Pearl Harbor, I’m not ignoring what went on in the death camps et al, just pointing out facts that WWII hinged upon.
I mean there is more to WWII than the death of 6,000,000 Jews and anybody who wants to talk about WWII without mentioning crimes against humanity should be able to do so without a being accused of “studiously avoiding criticism of Germany’s crimes against humanity“…yes?

Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 22 2025 19:08 utc | 208

Were all the “Arab Springs” countries still aligned with Russia at the time?
Posted by: I forgot | Jul 22 2025 17:53 utc | 206
I think it is all about the money. Libya’s relation to Russia allowed it some independence from western oil companies. Libya also invested a lot of money that it earned from its oil in industrial capital goods from Russia.
This is the same problem Russia itself has with the west. If Russia was more dependent on US companies for its resource extraction and more of the money from those enterprises flowed back into the west economies, I’m sure the west would be a lot more friendly to Russia.

Posted by: jinn | Jul 22 2025 19:17 utc | 209

Posted by: jinn | Jul 22 2025 19:17 utc | 209
You are incorrect.
Libya was taken out because they wanted a gold African currency (1)
1. “In 2009, Colonel Gaddafi, then President of the African Union, suggested to the States of the African continent to switch to a new currency, independent of the American dollar: the gold dinar.
The objective of this new currency was to divert oil revenues towards state-controlled funds rather than American banks. In other words, to stop using the dollar for oil transactions. Countries such as Nigeria, Tunisia, Egypt and Angola were ready to change their currencies. Unfortunately in March 2011, the NATO-led coalition began a military intervention in Libya in the name of freedom….
Free water, almost free gasoline, free health system and free education were commonplace for Libyans under Gaddafi’s dictatorship.
The leader, who has been in power for 41 years, has managed to gain the support of all the major tribes and buy social peace through radical measures and a policy of shared oil revenues.
Jihadism, the number one enemy of the West, Gaddafi eliminated it with Napalm in the 1990s. Although he financed many armed groups in the Sahel, Libya itself was a stable country where the risk of being kidnapped or even murdered by an armed militia was non-existent.
With an excellent management of oil revenues, the Libyan state had managed to store hundreds of tons of gold (143 tons according to WikiLeaks) and the same amount in silver. All these resources were going to make Libya the most influential country in Africa, supplanting France for example.
Gaddafi wanted to avoid American influence in his oil transactions by using this gold. He launched the gold dinar project, and other major African governments were ready to support him in this project. It was both an African dream and a nightmare for the West’s financial system.”
(2)
2. https://millenium-state.com/blog/2019/05/03/the-dinar-gold-the-real-reason-for-gaddafis-murder/

Posted by: canuk | Jul 22 2025 19:28 utc | 210

@ Posted by: canuk | Jul 22 2025 19:28 utc | 210
I wonder if it is too much of a stretch to infer that @SunOfAlabama would tacitly support the overthrow of Gaddafi, as a successful, pan-African, gold-backed dinar would have sunk MMT without trace.
I guess in @SoA’s world, Gaddafi was a “right-wing idealogue”…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jul 22 2025 19:49 utc | 211

@ jinn, canuck
I read your answers as complementary. Indeed, it’s coming back to me now: The “Wolfowitz Doctrine” said “let’s conquer all those former Soviet allies before some other power coalesces”.

Posted by: I forgot | Jul 22 2025 20:26 utc | 212

So I have just finished re-reading Barbara Tuchmans'”March of Folly”. The parallels with Vietnam and Ukraine for America are too many to mention.Except this is worse.The West neither knows its “enemy” nor knows itself.Decades of PR management and BS have overtaken any sort of rational analysis. And I’m thinking the ROW must know this?? But read the final chapter of this book, indeed the rest of it too. And weep.

Posted by: marcjf | Jul 22 2025 20:53 utc | 213

Canuk 210, nice post. Libya was a naked war of Aggression* meant to forever-chain Africans as off-shore-slaves. And we know these things for a fact from Hillary’s emails.
Ironically, as in they didn’t have a clue, nearly 100% of black Americans supported Obama’s-African-enslavement-campaign. This is why I found Black-Lives-Matter a couple years later a rather macabre parody. And it kinda explains why, in many parts of Africa, Blacks-Americans, when they bother to travel there, are despised to the point of open hostility…with Black-Americans being clueless as to why. One black NYTimes writer cluelessly penning a phrase akin to, “they hate us for our freedom”.
However, like every evil that the Hillary/Cheney/Obama/Team-Biden-Administration-[singular-intended] “accomplished” it will fail miserably. Ibrahim Traoré is willing, well trained and ready to take up the torch and do for Africa what Putin did for Russia…and yes, he faces an uphill battle with the 3LAs financing terrorists in his/surrounding countries.
For more details Obama/Hillary war crimes in Libya I offer up this link*:
https://theecologist.org/2016/mar/14/why-qaddafi-had-go-african-gold-oil-and-challenge-monetary-imperialism

Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 22 2025 20:55 utc | 214

You are incorrect.
Posted by: canuk | Jul 22 2025 19:28 utc | 210
What did I write that was incorrect?
The fact is that Gaddafi with Russia’s help used oil to make Libya economically independent from the west in food, water, energy and the other amenities to life that you mentioned. All of that was very real. Gadaffi was a threat to Western hegemony as is Russia.
The gold story is a myth as far as I can tell. The myth was useful to the CIA in enticing terrorists from all over West Asia and N Africa to descend on Libya and tear it apart looking for the gold. As far as I know all these mythical gold bars were never found, but the infrastructure that Gaddafi had built with the proceeds from oil were destroyed as a lesson to anyone else who might try that.

Posted by: jinn | Jul 22 2025 21:17 utc | 215

If your “Indian friend…followed the story closely” he’s have known that it was a 787 not a triple seven.
Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 22 2025 15:21 utc | 191

Not his mistake, mine. I’m not following along at all, other than to note yet another Boeing snafu with fatal consequences.
I can readily believe it is a software problem, as I have both worked in that biz and been a daily victim of crappy, buggy software where fitness for purpose is secondary to outsourcing economies and shipping to an arbitrary release date.
I also found ‘trained IT professionals’ to be bewilderingly incurious to the world beyond their own device screens.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Jul 22 2025 21:27 utc | 216

Russia (Medvedev was president) and China fucked up big time by supporting/not vetoing the UN Security Council resolution that the evil West/NATO leveraged into destroying Gadaffi and his Libyia. Fortunately they have learned from that.
God damn the West (the part that is evil), NATO and zionists!

Posted by: tucenz | Jul 22 2025 21:32 utc | 217

Posted by: canuk | Jul 22 2025 19:28 utc | 210
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jul 22 2025 19:49 utc | 211

Masterful diversion by the usual suspects pushing the gospel of gold and Trump.
Gold is ancillary to the issue. It’s Gaddafi’s proposal of an alternative system to the US-dictated petrodollar system that makes Gaddafi so intolerable to the US. I’ve covered this before, so here’s a truncated version:
1/ Syria wants to switch foreign currency transactions from dollars to euros. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2006/2/14/syria-picks-euros-over-dollars
2/ North Korea ditched dollars for euros in 2002. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/2531833.stm
3/ Libya initially abandoned dollars for euros, then moved onto ditching both euros and dollars in 2008 in favor of a gold-backed dinar. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/apr/21/libya-muammar-gaddafi
4/ Iraq ditched dollars for euros in October 2000. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2003/feb/16/iraq.theeuro “Iraq nets handsome profit by dumping dollar for euro”
5/ Venezuela under Maduro wanted to price oil in non-USD currencies like euros, yuan and rubles in 2017, which led to US’s coup attempt with Guiado in 2019. https://www.reuters.com/article/markets/currencies/venezuela-publishes-oil-prices-in-chinese-currency-to-shun-us-dollar-idUSKCN1BQ2D0/
6/ Iran also moved to euros and away from dollars. https://www.reuters.com/article/business/iran-switches-from-dollar-to-euro-for-official-reporting-currency-idUSKBN1HP25V/
More nations were taken out by the US because they were moving towards the euro, not gold. Therefore, the true threat to the US is the euro! That was sarcasm, if you can’t tell.
I have my issues with Sun of Alabama pushing the idea that full-fledged MMT can MAGA without accounting for USD’s role as the global reserve currency, but the gold bugs irk me just as much.

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Jul 22 2025 21:46 utc | 218

Posted by: I forgot | Jul 22 2025 17:44 utc | 205
Yup, directly and by inference:
Posted by: oldhippie | Jul 21 2025 19:35 utc | 55
‘They don’t get far. Knowing a language other than English is suspect. Intelligence is suspect.’
‘For those who speak Chinese or Russian or Arabic or Farsi the doors are closed’
Unless Russian, Chinese and Iranian diplomats have their careers curtailed for speaking their own language and have to use English. It would make a surreal, Monty Pythonesque sketch, (‘Deputy director Wang, you are being demoted. Why comrade Li? For speaking Chinese’) but doubt it’s the SOP for those ministries.
Heck, somebody in the Iranian FO thought it was a good idea to FAFO with the new US leadership team, so misunderstanding/failing to understand your enemy because of ego battles is NOT restricted to just Western nations, it’s a universal problem.

Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 21:51 utc | 219

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Jul 21 2025 22:17 utc | 100
Colbert did raise the ghost of a smile when I saw his tearful back-stage theatrics, so there is that entry in his comedian ledger.

Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 21:55 utc | 220

Posted by: I forgot | Jul 21 2025 23:53 utc | 114
Agree, but I always follow the analysts golden rule, try to follow what they’re doing, not what they’re saying, or what other people are saying they’re doing. Obama’s KYA press release today has the reek of guilt and the faintest whiff of excrement combined, the classic eau de’ dissembler. Gutless coward and narcissistic creep that he is, he’ll probably play the race card, claim that he was deceived and or blame some white guy, and the court stenographers of the MSM will happily support him in each manoeuvre.
To me the Epstein ‘files’ were likely a booby trap for Trump, and now they are chaff and flares, ejected by the DS as it caught wind of the direction Tulsi was headed and or saw Trump dodge the trap. It’s a classic reverse-blame gambit, accuse your enemy of what you were, or are doing.

Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 22:16 utc | 221

I really want to clear up a great misunderstanding about Chinese rare-earth mineral controls. It is not being accurately reported in the West.
As repeated above:

“That agreement dropped tariffs from a minimum 145 percent to 30 percent, with the Chinese agreeing to allow rare earths to flow as freely as before.”

This is not true.
It is NOT like before.
Today, every tiny iota of a gram of rare-earth minerals are traced and monitored.From mining to refinement, to destination, to end use. And all factories that use this material MUST comply with Chinese reporting systems. Any discrepancy is picked up by IA. So China is absolutely NOT NOT NOT allowing any metals to flow into the West unaccounted for.
Further, they have also tightened export monitoring, and have discovered Surreptitiously packaged goods out-bound for the West containing rare-earths.
Make no mistake, China has full control on the Rare Earth exporting. And one little slip up, one lie WILL be detected and then it’s “no soup for you”!
So Ford and Tesla will probably be able to get their motors, but the Military Industrial complex is gonna have to come up with a better way to do so.

Posted by: Rufus Arrr | Jul 22 2025 22:28 utc | 222

..
“Putin, your turn is coming—Donald Trump is the Scottie Scheffler of American politics and foreign diplomacy, and he’s about to put a whooping on your ass,” Graham said.
..
Posted by: jpc | Jul 21 2025 21:37 utc | 92
Envy! “Ladybugs” Lindsay (Graham) would like nothing more than an arse “whooping”.

Posted by: tucenz | Jul 22 2025 22:31 utc | 223

I find it rather ironic that posters, commenting on a thread about ‘not knowing the enemy’, seem to display rather a lot of ignorance about their own ideological enemies.
Posted by: Milites | Jul 21 2025 20:13 utc | 75
misunderstanding/failing to understand your enemy because of ego battles is NOT restricted to just Western nations, it’s a universal problem.
Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 21:51 utc | 219

The first step to understanding your enemy is knowing who your enemy is. Therein lies the beauty of the ongoing dedollarization process: nations around the world recognizes that America is the shared enemy of all humanity and that the dollar is simultaneously the greatest weapon and the greatest weakness of the Empire.

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Jul 23 2025 0:26 utc | 224

Are humans capable of evolving? Pursue the Art of Peace instead of war. Make friends instead of enemies. Negotiate a “win-win” instead of fighting for dominance. Admit to and right the wrongs of the past instead of aggressively doubling down. Be generous, spread the wealth and help the poor instead of promoting hoarding by the few. Put our own house in order instead of always criticizing others.
Posted by: norecovery | Jul 21 2025 18:27 utc | 36
———————————————————–
Are humans capable of evolving?
No. At least not like you’re describing.
Sounds like you wrote after a few hits on the hopium pipe.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 23 2025 1:16 utc | 225

Democrats are accusing Republicans of an “epic cover-up” as Donald Trump’s party effectively closes Congress early to prevent a vote on the Jeffrey Epstein issue.
US Congress headed for early shutdown as Republicans avoid Jeffrey Epstein vote https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-23/trump-epstein-us-justice-department-requests-interview-maxwell/105561392

Members of the US Congress appear set to start their summer holidays a day ahead of schedule, after Republican leaders cancelled legislative business that had been set for Thursday.
It is the latest twist in a political fight that has split Republicans and animated Democrats.
Congressman Thomas Massie is leading the Republican charge, with Democrats’ backing, to force a vote on a bill to release files relating to paedophile Epstein’s case.

Or they may be trying to clear the decks for something more important.

Posted by: Laurence | Jul 23 2025 1:24 utc | 226

Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 21:51 utc | 219
misunderstanding/failing to understand your enemy because of ego battles is NOT restricted to just Western nations, it’s a universal problem.
I agree totally with this.
At the risk of alienating some pro-RF barflies here, I suspect that in 2022 the RF was guilty of not having a comprehensive appreciation of the Ukraine military and the extent of (hidden) co-operation of NATO. They may also have failed to appreciate us how deeply ant-Russian sentiments had been instilled in the (western) Ukrainians since the Maiden coup.
At any rate RF intelligence was severely inadequate, or if basically sound (which I think would have been the case), was heavily compromised on its way up to the top decision makers. Unfortunately this implies a large and well entrenched “fifth column” within the RF intelligence community. Hopefully these elements have now been terminated.

Posted by: Barrel Brown | Jul 23 2025 5:16 utc | 227

Posted by: Barrel Brown | Jul 23 2025 5:16 utc | 227
Quod erat demonstrandum, eh? …

Posted by: Laurence | Jul 23 2025 5:30 utc | 228

Remembering RCAF Lt-General Charles ‘The Butcher’ Bouchard who commanded the nato military mission in Libya and was reportedly renowned for his ‘targeting’. Indeed, I will never forget the awful footage of burning Libyan civilans including lots of dead children.
It was he too who arranged the air raid ‘trap’ of Gadaffi’s motorcade enroute to what he thought were negotiations to end nato’s war. He was then captured, tortured and cruelly murdered by Islamofascists. The NDP called Bouchard a hero. And who can forget the outlandishness of a cackling Clinton on receiving news of his death. ‘We came. We saw. He died.’
As well as receiving the US Legion of Merit, Order of Canada, and assorted other ‘honours’ for his bloody service to Canada and the empire, Charles Bouchard scored the top job at Lockheed Martin. Don’t forget this proud Canadian war-criminal’s name. He has much to answer for.
F-35 Maker Hires Ex-General Who Led NATO Libya Mission
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/f-35-maker-hires-ex-general-who-led-nato-libya-mission-1.866406
“The company that makes the embattled F-35 fighter jet has hired Charles Bouchard, who was a lieutenant-general in the Canadian Forces, for a top job…”
Burn in hell monster. Free Libya!

Posted by: JohnGilberts | Jul 23 2025 6:52 utc | 229

It appears more and more Ukrainians now know well who their ‘enemy’ is. And where he is too.
“After the destruction of the anti-corruption agencies, the son of a wh*re hid in a bunker. People gathered above the bunker…”
https://x.com/anatoliisharii/status/1947762011158311205
Should read ‘son is a whore’. Zelensky – pimp of death and darkness. Time yet to grab all your blood money and f*** off to ‘daddy’ in Florida?

Posted by: JohnGilberts | Jul 23 2025 7:24 utc | 230

So Ford and Tesla will probably be able to get their motors, but the Military Industrial complex is gonna have to come up with a better way to do so.
Posted by: Rufus Arrr | Jul 22 2025 22:28 utc | 222

Like … errr … buying a few old, spare motors from Elon and doing their bit for the recycling industry? Something a bit like that for example.
What I’m saying is that cornering a commodity market for a long time is dang difficult … for a short time, yes it can be done.

Posted by: Tel | Jul 23 2025 9:17 utc | 231

Posted by: English Outsider | Jul 22 2025 15:20 utc | 190
Thanks for your extensive and well considered reply.

Posted by: George | Jul 23 2025 9:47 utc | 232

“Wishful thinking is not a viable strategy for winning a battle, or a war”.
Posted by: Barrel Brown | Jul 22 2025 9:59 utc | 159
Thanks for your encouraging comments Barrel. And your single sentence (repeated above) provided a succinct and apt synopsis of all that I wrote.

Posted by: George | Jul 23 2025 9:54 utc | 233

>>> “define neoliberal catechism or cut with the bullshit.. <<< Posted by: james | Jul 21 2025 23:12 utc | 110 . . . If you aren't aware of the definition of neoliberal, you should probably cease with your troll questions.

Posted by: seer | Jul 23 2025 12:13 utc | 234

Posted by: Barrel Brown | Jul 23 2025 5:16 utc | 227
Abso-bloody-lutely. Sometimes unquestioning supporters, often with ego investments, are the worst enemies a side can have. It was illustrated by the former head of Hezbollah’s military arm saying, after Israel’s lacklustre ‘06 offensive, that whilst his side had victory parades he was afraid the Israeli’s would be sitting down and properly analysing the operation and acting on those recommendations (which they did). Fast forward and Operation Grim-bleeper is enacted, which eradicated the top and central tiers of the organisation, without conventional military intervention, and has quite literally emasculated it (look at its non-appearance in the recent 10 day conflict between Iran and Israel).
Posters who claim the Russian plan always works like clockwork and every obvious setback was/is a cunning plan are actually harming the cause they seem so invested in. The initial Russian plan was assumptive in every tier, a how-not-to example of operational planning, with inadequate, unsuitable forces given a series of overly ambitious and unrealistic tasks, whilst ignoring the ‘enemy gets a vote’ factor. I will absolutely guarantee you that the Russian Army itself is completely aware of the myriad problems of the operation, hence the: rapid dismantling and re-folding of the unsuitable BTG concept into its previous parent divisional/brigade format, massive accelerated deployment of drones, and stand-off weapons, logistics and C3 doctrine make over, increased mobilisation and enhanced ISR capability, etc etc.
Russia’s greatest strength is her vast size and population, the former means she has the space to make catastrophic mistakes that would ensure defeat for any other country, the latter means she can learn from those mistakes. My initial reaction to the invasion was one of genuine surprise, because I thought Putin would be more aware that his armed forces were set up for territorial defence and small-scale interventions, he took the risk, survived and is now in a commanding position, but his forces have suffered unnecessarily to get to this point. Plus ça change…….

Posted by: Milites | Jul 23 2025 12:31 utc | 235

I forgot @ 205
Thank you for that. I’ve no idea what Millets is going on about.

Posted by: oldhippie | Jul 23 2025 12:59 utc | 236

Posted by: Milites | Jul 22 2025 16:36 utc | 201
Best post I have read today.
Bravo!

Posted by: canuk | Jul 23 2025 13:55 utc | 237

@ Posted by: canuk | Jul 22 2025 19:28 utc | 210
“I wonder if it is too much of a stretch to infer that @SunOfAlabama would tacitly support the overthrow of Gaddafi, as a successful, pan-African, gold-backed dinar would have sunk MMT without trace.
I guess in @SoA’s world, Gaddafi was a “right-wing idealogue”…”
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jul 22 2025 19:49 utc | 211
Very clever and quite accurate!!

Posted by: canuk | Jul 23 2025 13:58 utc | 238

@234 seer
Why not define your meaning for him though ?
Neoliberal has various conotations and is not a fixed ideology or format, it just includes a set of approaches or ideals.
What you mean when you say neoliberal, for example, I would take as a politicaly inspired divestment of corporate investment into foreign production combined with a reinvestment in financial services and levelled with government spending on a social /bureaucratic basis ?
For sure, I dislike much of that, if only because it leads to big government, population dependency, errosion of social fabric and so on. At an extremism it is globalism, one world government via financial manipulation and population control. Not good imo, but there are likely those who consider that a form of order, or the ‘least bad’.
However some like james maybe, view the social side in a political context that counters national monopoly, wealth disparity and so on. They are not ‘neoliberal’ per se, not meaningly.
The reality however is far more complex to be reduced to such opposites. For example:
-Household real wealth has improved over time and not necessarily thanks to any particular economic or political approach. Figure that invention and efficiency provides many advances as an example.
-Household wealth disparity has increased. The rich get much more wealthy, the rest less so.
So to reduces the argument to comparisons, well actually you are using previous ‘neoliberal’ wealth as a metric to compare ‘isolationist’ wealth, which is simply not possible given the variables and timescales involved…let alone taking into account that at a granular level there will always be some amongst whatever ‘cohort’ that lose and some that gain, from either or any aporoach , in terms of wealth.
Even measuring wealth is a sort of fungible definition that only has a comparison to ‘how things might have been’ if another approach was taken.
i.e.You cannot directly compare circumstance in say the 90’s to the effect choices in 2020’s are going to have on economy or society.
So the question james asked was valid, neoliberal to you I assume is ‘a picture’ of some kind, a wider sense of direction, just as wherever james is coming from (I’m not 100% certain where james is coming from, likely disparity and injustice) would only be a concept ‘neoliberal’ incorporates.
:-/
Anyway, I leave you both to work your own ways to the actual difference of perception that so disturbs the other, if so chosen. That is, if the conversation were to move past whatever initial prejudice/s of character.
I have no intention of joining in the discussion beyond the above.

Posted by: Ornot | Jul 23 2025 15:13 utc | 239

@ seer | Jul 23 2025 12:13 utc | 234
oh, but i am aware of the meaning of neoliberal which was introduced by thatcher, reagan and mulroney here in canada…. your attempt at framing this as a reflection of b’s analysis is total bullshit… thanks..

Posted by: james | Jul 23 2025 15:20 utc | 240

@ Ornot | Jul 23 2025 15:13 utc | 239
thanks… i took exception to @ seer | Jul 21 2025 18:24 utc | 33 statement shown immediately below..
“But always open to fresh data, should you ever decide to drop the neoliberal catechism.”

Posted by: james | Jul 23 2025 15:23 utc | 241

henobarbus on Not Knowing The ‘Enemy’
Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Jul 21 2025 16:51 utc | 2 Either the wage slaves of North America will do it or China/Russia will. Ideally they would all do it together, but who knows how far the wage-slaves minds have been corrupted by phoney a
Comment by Ahenobarbus | July 21, 2025 at 19:02 | Permalink
China, in it’s 5 000 years, has not been particularly belligerant. Russia is probably busy at home home. A revolt or something by the wage serfs of N. America is not too unlikely. The plutocrats don’t know history and don’t know how dangerous it is to press wage serfs too far.
I’ve sometime thought that if the USA ever did have a real revolution, changing society in a serious way, it’d be more like the Mexican Revolution, 1910-20 or so, not the French or Russia Revolutions. The Mexican Rev. was definitely poor vs rich, but not Marxist, and ought to be better known.

Posted by: lester | Jul 23 2025 16:20 utc | 242

>>> “Why not define your meaning for him though ? <<< Posted by: Ornot | Jul 23 2025 15:13 utc | 239 . . . I didn't read your post, as it appears data-free. The definition of neoliberal is well understood, or should be. If you're squealing about tariffs, and present zero data to support your assertions, you're classic neoliberal. Fairly simple. But always open to fresh dats on the matter. None to be found here though. Just neolib assertion.

Posted by: seer | Jul 23 2025 17:08 utc | 243

>>> “your attempt at framing this as a reflection of b’s analysis is total bullshit… thanks..” <<>
Posted by: james | Jul 23 2025 15:20 utc | 240
.
.
.
If you make neolib assertions in support of classic neoliberalism, absent data, you’re a neolib. Nothing complex here. If it looks like a canada goose, and quacks like one, well..

Posted by: seer | Jul 23 2025 17:12 utc | 244

Nice to see that some posters are still upholding the Marxist/communist tradition of putting Byzantine discussions, about ideological nomenclature, over analysis.
Feels like I’m listening to the Judean People’s Front battle the People’s Front of Judea, not forgetting, of course, the Judean Popular People’s Front. Splitters!

Posted by: Milites | Jul 23 2025 18:11 utc | 245

“When the Prince’s court is not on the side of the Prince, they will fill his head with solutions that do not serve his interests, but their own. Then they feign ignorance or blame subordinates when adversity presents itself as a response to those solutions.”

Posted by: MaryPeck | Jul 23 2025 23:04 utc | 246

“If you make neolib assertions in support of classic neoliberalism, absent data, you’re a neolib. Nothing complex here. If it looks like a canada goose, and quacks like one, well..”
Posted by: seer | Jul 23 2025 17:12 utc | 244
you’re the quack here seer…

Posted by: james | Jul 23 2025 23:32 utc | 247

Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 22 2025 19:08 utc | 208
Brennan: Are you capable of reading comprehension?
If antiwar dissent focuses primarily on America’s “mistakes” in waging its military and economic wars–rather than the criminality of America’s wars and broader strategic ambitions–that is not a principled dissent.
That is complaining about the failed execution of a crime–not the crime itself, which these so-called dissenters tacitly support and indeed refuse to admit is a crime to begin with.
But you know that don’t you, as this is what masquerades as much “dissent” in the USA and Westoid world.

Posted by: ak74 | Jul 24 2025 5:11 utc | 248

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Jul 22 2025 16:31 utc | 200
The Russian conventional forces capabilities and limitations were well known to the West, hence the BTG formations lasting a few months and the dislocation and eventual forced termination of the original Russian plan. What caused the main problems was the speed at which the Russians began to adapt, their real military innovation, and the unpreparedness of the West for a sustained conflict that relied more on industrial capacity than technological mastery.

Posted by: Milites | Jul 24 2025 9:33 utc | 249

>>> “you’re the quack here seer…” <<< Posted by: james | Jul 23 2025 23:32 utc | 247 . . . I get that you're butthurt. Argument is tough when you show up with only bald assertion and no data. You're there. But thanks for revealing you're in Canada. That explains much. The neolib globalists have completely captured that former nation, even more so than the euros. You really should attempt to find some hard data to support your assertions.

Posted by: seer | Jul 24 2025 11:02 utc | 250

@ seer | Jul 24 2025 11:02 utc | 250
lol… not butthurt, but a bit of a fool for continuing to engage with a jackass.. i will give you that..

Posted by: james | Jul 24 2025 13:57 utc | 251

From the article: “the U.S. was “assured by some of the dumbest people on the planet, who currently serve in the United States Senate, that Russia was merely ‘a gas station with nuclear weapons’.”
That ought to be phrased “a gas station with F**KING TEN MEGATON NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND THE MEANS TO DELIVER THEM ANYWHERE ON EARTH INCLUDING WASHINGTON DC, AND DO IT WITHIN FIFTEEN MINUTES!!!!”

Posted by: The True Nolan | Jul 24 2025 14:48 utc | 252

Posted by: The True Nolan | Jul 24 2025 14:48 utc | 252
You forgot to mention Putin’s service guarantee:
“within 15 minutes, or it’s free”
(just like with Pizza delivery but only 15min quicker)

Posted by: xLemming | Jul 24 2025 15:54 utc | 253

>>> “…not butthurt…”
Posted by: james | Jul 24 2025 13:57 utc | 251
.
.
.
That frantic denial is the surest sign of your butthurt, if your constant insult flinging wasn’t enough.
Enjoy that BoE bankster running your globalist neolib paradise.
And do consider finding some hard data to support your assertions, so you don’t have to rely on insults and bluster.

Posted by: seer | Jul 24 2025 18:30 utc | 254

@ seer | Jul 24 2025 18:30 utc | 254
lol – still trolling? i will give you this – you are a real educated donkey, lol..

Posted by: james | Jul 24 2025 18:55 utc | 255

Still vapid and butthurt, huh?
Data. Try it sometime.

Posted by: seer | Jul 25 2025 11:22 utc | 256