Antropologiske betraktninger om pelshvaldrift

Tag: warmonger

Cartel

What’s the matter with those people? Running around the world shooting and killing as though they were a drug cartel…! The cartel barons in Washington take it into their heads to go off and bomb Jemen, and since self-gratification is Law for cartel barons, there is nothing to stop them from doing just that: bombing Jemen. Presumably to kill and intimidate. Have they been watching too many video games? Raised in the lap of luxury, most of them – spoilt brats, no doubt – they act as though stimulated by the drugs they are so fond of pretending to make war against. They are, in general, pathologically fond of making war – wars, I should say, because one war at a time apparently affords insufficient stimulation. To get really high, they might need a WWIII.

Killing is just a game to them, it seems, as demonstrated by the famous video footage referred to as “Collateral Murder“, made available to the public by the heroic, if not yet martyred, Julian Assange.

Anyway, the Washington barons are relatively close to home in Jemen, as it were, because they have no less than 120 military bases in Japan. Actually, I thought they had 130 bases there, but according to Al Jazeera, there are only 120. As you see, I know little about Japan, but I gather that after WWII, having murdered, at two swell swoops, approx 200 thousand mostly civilian Japanese, the USA imposed total demilitarisation on Japan. Article 9 of Japan’s Constitution, once Japan had been granted independence again in 1952, reaffirmed Japanese pacifism; a good thing, as it turned out, because the country’s scarce resources could be devoted to reconstruction.

Now I ask you: To what extent is a country with 120 US military bases and, according to Al Jazeera (which normally, if not during the Gaza stand-off, is pro-USA) 53,700 military personnel, a free country? 120 military bases is, or are, no joke. A German journalist referred to Japan as “USA’s aircraft carrier”.

For the record, I add that according to Al Jazeera, (by the way, not as at today, but as at 10 September 2021) the USA has 73 military bases in South Korea (Can you honestly blame Kim Whatsisname for his belligerent posturing?)

Do I want
a) China to conquer the world?
b) Russia to conquer the world?
c) the USA to conquer the world?

Replies: a) no, b) no, c) no

Do I think
a) China will attempt to prevent WWIII
b) Russia will attempt to prevent WWIII
c) The USA will attempt to prevent WWIII

Replies: a) yes, b) yes c) no

Do I think the USA is contributing in any meaningful manner to world peace? NO!!!

Exclave

I’ve learnt a new word this week. Actually, the difference between an enclave and an exclave still isn’t clear to me, nor do I think it is all that important. (See definitions and examples in Wikipedia as at 27 June 2022). Oddly, the Wikipedia article doesn’t mention the exclave Gibraltar. I wonder why.

Kaliningrad is a Russian exclave bordered on the South by Poland and on the North by Lithuania. A railroad connects Kaliningrad with the rest of Russia and ensures supplies to the city.

On the other hand, a 100 km long so-called Suwalki Corridor lies between Kaliningrad and Belarus. The Suwalki corridor is subject to much NATO hand-wringing, since the three Baltic states would be pretty helpless if Russia/Belarus takes control of it.

Nonetheless, Lithuania proudly announced the other day that they would hereafter block rail transport of goods between Russia and Kaliningrad (see a discussion on the matter in Foreign Policy) effectively creating a blockade.

This step on the part of Lithuania, which is merely implementing sanctions imposed by the EU, is pretty reckless, I’d say. Obviously, if Russia feels pressured into taking belligerent action against a NATO country to supply its city, all hell will be lose (i.e. WWIII).

Of course, when the day comes, nobody will remember that we, the NATO countries, almost forced Russia to attack in order to supply the roughly half million people living in Kaliningrad. We will have forgotten, for the simple reason that most of us never knew; our press barely murmured something about the exclave in a subordinate clause.

I find myself asking what the heck is the matter with Warmonger Stoltenberg. (His name, by the way, means proud rock, so why not call him Rocky?) Had I asked him personally, he would of course have replied that fear of death should not prevent us from defending Democracy, or something to that effect. I would have retaliated with dramatic gestures that Russia has never threatened my country’s democracy (or non-aligned Sweden’s or Finland’s), that Ukraine never was a democracy and that every country the US and/or NATO has touched since 1950 has been reduced to rubble. I never argue well with people I passionately despise.

For Mr Stoltenberg, who grew up in the lap of luxury, “death” is just a word. More importantly, though, he has never ever had to be anything but Norwegian. For Norwegians a number of modern values are self-evident. Anybody or any country that does not share and understand those values is “wrong” and subject to kind but firm conversion efforts or, at worst, defamation. That is, of course, unless the person or country in question is an ally, like apartheid Israel. And now, at last, Norway is proudly and ridiculously carrying the banner together with the big guys — UK and France and Germany — determined to fight for global Democracy. We are going to “save” China, Afghanistan, Iran… etc. First, though, we must crush Russia. Of course, we are not alone. At the head of this crusade is USA.

USA’s national assembly has just, we are jubilantly told here in Norway, managed to agree on some gun control. The infinitesimal gun control agreed upon has, however, been offset by a gargantuan gun liberation ruling passed by the Supreme Court. See the New York Times for details. You might not have noticed this decision, at least if you live in Norway, where negative references to USA tend to be shied away from these days. Is the press grooming us to rally around our dear leader, President Biden and his lieutenant NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg?

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