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Saturday, July 16, 2022

This Proxy War Has No Exit Strategy

I really wish I knew who is charge. Nothing the Biden administration is doing makes any sense to me. Could it really just be incompetence, bullheadedness and stupidity? I suppose that's what happens when you give idiots a big pile of money.

This Proxy War Has No Exit Strategy by Caitlin Johnstone shows just rotten the current situation is.  Here's the opening three paragraphs.

The International Committee of the Democratic Socialists of America has released a statement opposing the US government’s ongoing proxy war in Ukraine, saying the billions being funneled into the military-industrial complex “at a time when ordinary Americans are struggling to pay for housing, groceries, and fuel” is “a slap in the face for working people.” The statement advocates a negotiated settlement for peace, saying continuing to pour weapons into the country will “needlessly prolong the war, resulting in more civilian deaths” and that it “risks escalating and widening the war — up to and including nuclear war.”

In response to this entirely reasonable and moderate position, the DSA is currently being raked over the coals with accusations of Kremlin loyalty and facilitation of murder and bloodshed by blue-checkmarked narrative managers on Twitter. This is because the only acceptable positions for anyone of significant influence to have about this war range from supporting continuing current proxy warfare operations to initiating a direct hot war between NATO and Russia.

That’s how narrow the permissible spectrum of debate has been shrunk regarding this conflict: status quo hawkish to omnicidal hawkish. Anything outside that spectrum gets framed as radical extremism. As Noam Chomsky said: “The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum — even encourage the more critical and dissident views. That gives people the sense that there’s free thinking going on, while all the time the presuppositions of the system are being reinforced by the limits put on the range of the debate.”

She goes on at length, but the opening was enough for me. The bit about the Democratic Socialists gave me pause, but if they are opposed to the government's support of Ukraine, they can't be all bad.

Noam Chomsky also gave me pause. He has appeared here before, several years ago, and I was also hesitant back then, but I checked and he passed the smell test.

Update the next day. Added link to Caitlin's story that I forgot.

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