government

No War is Inevitable, No War is “Good”

“No war is inevitable until it has begun.” – Patrick J. Buchanan, Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War

The debates about the war with Iran can be quite curious in that those who pretend to be experts seem to lack the context of history. Every war seems imminent or unavoidable to them. They are appalled at the idea the United States can be pulled into war by other countries or interests. The world’s superpower cannot be convinced to do something not in its best interest, they claim.

In fact, this has occurred more times than we care to admit.

The U.S. had managed to stay out of the tragically avoidable World War I for its first couple years. It wasn’t her fight. A war rooted in antiquated alliances and ideas of empire which turned Europeans against each other in a horrific disaster. America had long held to George Washington’s plea for the nation to avoid entangling alliances (also known as the Washington Doctrine of Unstable Alliances). In his farewell address, he said:

The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible. Europe has a set of primary interests, which to us have none, or a very remote relation. Hence she must be engaged in frequent controversies the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves, by artificial ties, in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics, or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities… it is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world; so far, I mean, as we are now at liberty to do it; for let me not be understood as capable of patronizing infidelity to existing engagements.

Britain and France’s war had become costly in lives and material, and they needed help. As Buchanan writes, “British propaganda had convinced us the Germans were beasts and we must join the good war for a new world where Prussian militarism would never menace mankind again.” But there was more. Lies about German atrocities. The sinking of the ocean liner Lusitania by a German submarine had caused outrage, yet it had been carrying munitions. The Brits also cut transatlantic cables, impeding communication with Germany. It is true, German subs had targeted some American ships, and at one point tried to bribe Mexico into attacking the U.S., but was it worth sending millions of soldiers to Europe?

At the end of the war, with over 100,000 dead, and 200,000 injured, Americans wondered what was the point of the sacrifice. They believed they had been “hoodwinked and swindled…And the next time Britain rang for help, America would take her time in answering the call…until France had been overrun and Britain thrown off the continent at Dunkirk.”

Flash forward a few decades to Vietnam. The militant anti-communist wing of the U.S. government pushed the “falling dominoes” narrative: If Vietnam fell to the communists, than so so would all of Southeast Asia. Initially, President Kennedy seemed to support this, but as time went on, his position began to shift. In October 1963, with U.S. troop presence still relatively small, he said, “We need a way to get out of Vietnam. This is a way of doing it. And to leave forces there when they’re not needed, I think, is wasteful, and it complicates both their problems and ours.”

Less than a month later, he was murdered and the warhawks continued to ratchet up the war, and stumbled face-first into an escalation trap. The communists would eventually take over Vietnam and rule to this day. Did Southeast Asia become a communist empire and unite to become some menace to the world?

No, Vietnam now is an important trade partner with the U.S., exporting tens of billions of dollars of goods to us.

There are just wars, but there are no good wars. Every war has consequences, unintended and otherwise. We must take great care to not allow ourselves to be convinced to enter a war that hasn’t first been brought to us. Not every threat is existential. Not every world leader we don’t like is a Hitler. Diplomacy is not a sign of weakness, but one of strength and respect for life.

Peace through strength means show we can act when we must, and defend ourselves when required. However, more often than not, when we are told we must go war, the exact opposite is true.

Categories: government, Modern History | Tags: , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hearts and Minds Don’t Change With Bombs

It is disturbing the war champions are in tears now the war with Iran may be over. They are so obsessed with war, they ignore the history of how these conflicts play out, or why wars should be avoided to begin with.

Regime change was always a complete fantasy. Brute force never brings about the uprising of the people. It only hardens the people as their country is destroyed. How did “bombing Vietnam back to stone age” work out? Did Iraqis welcome Americans like the French did in the 1940s? Did twenty years of war empower the Afghans to resist the Taliban? Have decades of sanctions helped the Cuban people, or made them suffer?

The other typical outcome is complete chaos; a death spiral into dystopian destruction. See Libya, Somalia, and Syria.

The thinking person is forced to ask this: Do the Iranian people want to be “liberated?” That question is hard for some to fathom, but must be asked. In spite of their repressive government, and propaganda they are told, do Iranians see us as liberators?

Here’s some history the commentators leave out:

The U.S. toppled the Iranian government in the 1950s, installing a leader not known for his stellar human rights record — like torture and executions — which led to the Islamic Revolution. We supported Iraq (yeah, we helped create Saddam) in their war with Iran that caused hundreds of thousands of casualties. Add to that decades of economic sanctions.

Think Iranians might have tough time seeing the U.S. as a friend, regardless of how bad their rulers may be?

This reminds us of how Germany was oppressed, starved, and economically gutted by the Allies after World War I. Did Germany become a submissive, third world state? No, the perfect environment was created for the Third Reich to rise. People wonder how the Germans let the Nazis take control, but if you understand what happened after World War I, it is no surprise at all. Oppression and violence from the outside unites people, even if their leaders are disreputable.

Maybe, someday, change will come to Iran. No doubt there are people in Iran who dream of revolution. Most organic, true revolutions happen from within. One might say the Iranian government prevents this from happening. Or the Iranians are unarmed and scared. These arguments only take us so far. The American colonials were exponentially outmatched by the British Empire. Yet they won.

Also consider we left many other Middle East countries alone, not telling them how to live or govern, and they shifted westward in their society. Our closest allies — economically and strategically — in the region are not democracies. Even though we may want to, it’s not up to us to tell others how to live.

Forcing change from the outside is doomed to fail. From within, hearts and minds will change. Maybe slowly, but they will change.

Categories: government, Modern History | Tags: , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Existential Threat

While the U.S. is bogged down in another expensive distraction, the actual threat continues to quietly, yet not so secretly, build its empire.

The Chinese mentality of extreme patience, and long-term planning on the scale of decades or longer, will be our undoing. They’re an ancient culture that acts carefully with purpose. They have overlaid communistic totalitarianism onto ancient Chinese culture and philosophy. The U.S. is young, often acting out like a teenager trying to figure out adulthood. If we ever grow up, we could learn a lot from China.

While they have spend recent decades spreading out over the world, building alliances and obtaining resources thorough economic and financial agreements, we have spent trillions on war, bankrupting ourselves and putting ourselves at risk. Ironically, our reliance on Chinese goods has funded their plans and expansion.

The point of no return is almost here. We must change course.

The clock is ticking.

Categories: government | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

Our History, and Future, Defined by the Land

“The Europeans used ink to draw lines on maps: they were lines that did not exist in reality and created some of the most artificial borders the world has seen.” – Tim Marshall, Prisoners of Geography

Unfortunately, geography is often taught as an exercise in memorizing places on map. In reality, what is on those maps have defined and constrained nations, wars, and civilizations.

As Marshall details in his book, Prisoners of Geography, the success and failure of nations is directly affected by the physical characteristics (weather, rivers, seas, mountains and deserts) of their location. Decisions by leaders, and their nation’s “strength and vulnerabilities,” must yield to geography.

Sometimes, it is artificial geography, as the quote at the beginning alludes to, that is impacting our world. Many of the problems in Africa and the Middle East are caused by borders not drawn along cultural or natural lines, but rather are arbitrary ones imagined by empire builders. The downstream affects of these fabricated boundaries have saddled world history with a legacy of war and chaos.

Even in our modern world where technology can overcome these obstacles to an extent, geography still can be an immovable force.

Just look at what is going on in the Straits of Hormuz.

Categories: government, History, Modern History | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Law of Unintended Consequences

“A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.” – Ronald Reagan

Every war is bound by the Law of Unintended Consequences. If you study history, you know this. Most of our “leaders” don’t study history, or if they do, they don’t have the IQ to understand it. Let’s take a look how this applies to the war with Iran:

Law of Unintended Consequences Example 1:

Countries see what is happening in Iran and Venezuela, and other recent debacles like Libya and Iraq, and are asking, “How can we avoid being attacked or invaded?”

Simple: Get some nuclear weapons.

This has been the position of North Korea, now more solidified in recent weeks as the war with Iran unfolded.

We’ve been technically at war with North Korea since 1950. Their leaders have been evil, dangerous, oppressive, and killed millions. On the scale of evil and threat, they rank much higher than Iran.

One thing the leaders of North Korea are not: stupid.

So because of a new war allegedly over nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles (the threat of missiles and nukes was quickly refuted), we will likely have more proliferation of a horrific weapon that should never had been invented — a weapon that was an unintended consequence of World War II.

Law of Unintended Consequences Example #2:

It is clear some things in this war aren’t going as planned or hoped (and hope is bad way to conduct a war).

Fuel and other shortages are already occuring around the world. Military planners have long warned this would happen in a war with Iran. To alleviate the fuel shortages, sanctions were lifted on Russia.

The country we are at war with via Ukraine.

Since we effectively handed over funding to Russia, Ukraine attacked their refineries, putting the world at risk.

Russia is providing weapons and intelligence to Iran. North Korean troops are in Ukraine. Weapons and troops that deter China are being pulled from the Far East allies Japan and South Korea.

We are one mistep from global meltdown.

Or maybe the World War has already begun.

If cooler heads don’t end the war now, the chances of this spiraling out of control increase exponentially by the day.

And many consequences, known and unknown, will impact many, many generations.

Categories: government | Tags: , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proper Human Health is Yours, If You Want it

People are tired of being sick. Never before in our history — our human history — have we had this level of chronic diseases, neurological disorders, and allergies. Add on top of those the problems of declining fertility and lifespans. I have been writing about the movement to return us to Proper Human Health, or as others have called it, the Proper Human Diet.

Still, many people, even doctors, are still locked in this endless cycle of misery of medication, physical decline, and refusal to address root causes. That we have convinced ourselves this is normal in only a few generations is mind-boggling and sad.

Here are a couple enlightening and important discussions on human health, and healthcare, to help you reclaim your health:


Dr. Nasha Winters speaks with Dr. Philip Ovadia on how surviving terminal cancer led her down a decades-long study on truly understanding cancer, and how we got so much wrong on this disease.


Artificial intelligence can be a powerful tool in medicine for research, breakthroughs, and efficiency. It can also exacerbate the problems in sick care – I mean healthcare – such as insurance deciding what is best for you, or dictating to the doctors what they are allowed to do.

Vanessa Wingårdh explores the problematic use of AI by healthcare providers. This is about making more money, not making you healthy. They know exactly what they are doing.


Is it a surprise science keeps confirming sunlight is good for us and necessary for our health? It shouldn’t be. Out ancestors innately knew this. We spend a lot of time and technology money relearning what was once known.

Check out this discussion on The Diary Of A CEO with Dr. Roger Seheult.


“We’ve destroyed the nutrient density of our entire food supply through industrial agriculture. The health of our soil is the very basis of our health. We cannot thrive until we rehabilitate the soil, the plants, and the animals. This isn’t hippie talk. This is hard science with staggering data.” – Mark Hyman, MD

Industrialized farming is one of the root causes of declining health. We can no longer afford to ignore where our food comes from, and how it is raised and processed.

Read more here and listen to Mark’s discussion with Autumn Smith.


And finally, check out Sandy Abram‘s 14 Harsh Truths about healthcare:

Categories: government, health | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Attacks from Outer Space

If NASA would make its role in planetary defense more well known, people would better grasp the importance of the space program. Still a too-small fraction of expenditures, there are nonetheless many men and women around the world working to protect humanity. Robin George Andrews’ book, How to Kill an Asteroid, takes us behind the scenes into these little-known programs. The Solar System is full of rocks big enough to destroy cities, countries, and entire civilizations.

One thing Andrews doesn’t cover in his book, is the other threat from space: Solar storms and superstorms, some of which could also crumble modern civilization. NASA and NOAA monitor the solar weather closely, but on Earth we have not done enough to harden our infrastructure, as depicted in William R. Forstchen’s novel, 48 Hours. A Coronal Mass Ejection may have nearly ended humanity, as Robert Schoch outlines in Forgotten Civilization. Threats from the sky aren’t just conjecture, we know they have struck Earth in the past.

Next time you wonder why we explore space, wonder why we don’t spend more time and money protecting the planet.

Categories: government | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

Are You Paying Attention?

Some highly recommended documentaries attempting to pull back the curtain on the government and social media. Are you ready for what will be revealed?

Categories: Critical Thinking, government, Modern History, Mysteries | Tags: , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dark and Light of Democracy

“We often forget how fragile a creation democracy is – a delicate eggshell in the rough-and-tumble of history. Even in the cradle of democracy, ancient Athens, rule by the people could barely survive for a couple of centuries. And throughout its brief history, Athenian democracy was besieged from within by the forces of oligarchy and tyranny. There were plots led by generals to impose military rule. There were secret clubs of aristocrat who hired squads of assassins to kill popular leaders. Terror reigned during these convulsions…

“Our country’s cheerleaders are wedded to the notion of American exceptionalism. But when it comes to the machinations of power, we are all too similar to other societies and ones that have come before us…no matter where power rules, there is the same determination by those in high places to keep their activities hidden.” – David Talbot

Allen Dulles was the father of the deep state. Anyone who thinks the problems of the national security state, undermining the Constitution, and abuse of power are something new, you’re in for a surprise. Talbot details how it all began. Like Dulles’ daughter said:

“It’s very important to understand it all – the dark and the light.”

Categories: government, History, Modern History | Tags: , , , , , | Leave a comment

Freedom Dies Without You

“We tend to assume that our American legacy promises us liberty and the pursuit of happiness—no questions asked. But I learned from my reading of the founders’ work that just as you aren’t promised freedom in the American contract without the reciprocal expectation that you will risk yourself to defend freedom, so you aren’t promised happiness or even the purely self-regarding right to pursue happiness. That’s a myth.” – Naomi Wolf, Give Me Liberty

Many people think democracy is some sort of self-propagating institution. Once set in motion, it needs little guidance or attention. This couldn’t be further from the truth. As soon as people stop paying attention, those in power abuse their power. A small amount of bureaucrats can shape, influence, undermine and destroy the people’s rights. Once it starts, it slowly gets worse, a little at a time. In modern times, this has been referred to as moving the Overton Window. The Founders of the United States understood this well. It’s embedded in the Declaration of Independence.

As Naomi Wolf writes, the Declaration’s language:

“…is quite difficult; it is the formal language of a very formal time far removed from our own…We tend to think that the Declaration intends something pleasant and benign…but it turns out the Declaration of Independence is about our continual duty as Americans to rebel…[its] first long sentence asserts the ‘right to revolution.'”

In fact, the Declaration “…charges us categorically and always as Americans to rise up in person against threats to liberty.”

Democracy is not a natural state. It requires attention, participation, protest — and when necessary — restoration.

Paying attention only on election day is to not pay attention at all. If you are too busy to understand and protect democracy, you will lose your freedom. Many in history have awoken to an oppressive government, only to ask, “How did it come to this?”

Categories: government, History | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.