Fifth Columnist subversives in this era of media struggle come in various flavors:

1. The broke-dick defeatist type. These are the weak sister pathetics. The dregs, the bottom feeders, the butterball fatties who have given up on life. To them, nothing is worth anything.
2. The money-grubbing, "I'm James Bond" types. The big-baller braggart, always slinging his dick in everyone's face, telling you how great he is, and how you suck, unless you "follow his lead." Which leads inevitably to corruption and ruin.
3. The sectarian, tribalist types. These are the race-baiters, the ethnic-obsessed separatists, who try to sow divisions between groups based on race and ethnicity. The result is a weakening of the national will in the face of external threats: which is precisely their goal.
4. The "just focus on yourself, bro" types. Ostensibly harmless, their ideology necessarily inflicts harm by encouraging men to abandon their duties. For them, "politics is a waste of time" & if you just pack on enough muscle and amass enough money, all will be well.
5. The hedonist types. All these types care about is having "fun" and sacrificing everything for the moment. They operate from despair, and are too weak to summon energy to fight for causes greater than themselves.
What all these types have in common is this: they want to turn you away from your responsibilities as a citizen of a free republic. By siphoning off your energies, demoralizing you, and setting you against your fellow countrymen, they serve the interests of foreign powers.

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More from @QuintusCurtius

11 Oct
1. It's amusing to learn that when Theodore (not Franklin) Roosevelt first met Winston Churchill, the two did not enjoy warm relations. Not hard to imagine why. Both were egotistical, and both loved being the center of attention.
2. TR considered Churchill a shameless self-promoter (which, in his youth, Churchill was). Things gradually improved between them. One suspects that had TR lived longer, he would have seen Churchill grow in maturity and stature.
3. For a fascinating look at the little-known relations of Churchill and Theodore Roosevelt, see this article:
winstonchurchill.org/publications/f…
Read 4 tweets
10 Oct
1. The Battle of Tours (Oct. 10, 732) was one of the most pivotal battles in history. An Islamic army from Spain scaled the Pyrenees (a feat as heroic as Hannibal's crossing of the Alps) and entered France. Between Tours and Poitiers, they were confronted...
2. ...by a combined force of Eudes (Duke of Aquitaine) and Charles (Duke of Austrasia). These armies fought ferociously with each other for seven days. When the dust settled, Charles emerged as victor. But this was not the end!
3. In 735 Arles was captured by the caliph's forces; and in 737 they took possession of Avignon (the future seat of the popes!). They would not be driven from France completely until the campaigns of Pepin the Short in 759.
Read 4 tweets
15 Sep
1. "Compare the death rates." As if "death rate" is the only thing that matters. This is the flawed premise in the Aus./NZ approach.

Even assuming such numbers can be accurately assessed (they can't), the mentality here is that societies should passively allow the...
2. creation of a permanent biometric architecture of total control that restricts basic human autonomy. All in the name of "safety." The trade-off is pure folly, and you will live to regret it.

Sometimes societies have to accept casualties--even high casualties--in order..
3. ...to preserve their integrity, personal freedoms, and fundamental. This is what you and @clairlemon are not taking under consideration.

Casualties are inevitable. Of course, no politician in the West is willing to say this--they are far too dishonest and cowardly.
Read 4 tweets
5 Sep
1. I think it's very useful to study the British-American naval engagements of the War of 1812, and I'll give you my reasons in this thread.

Since the mid-20th century, the US has enjoyed almost uncontested technological & logistical superiority over military adversaries..
2. This situation is very unlikely to be the case in future conflicts. In fact, the US is likely to be militarily inferior to a major, first-world adversary. In such a setting, what will matter is a US commander's elan, aggressiveness, and competence.
3. This situation mirrors what existed in 1812, when the US declared war on Britain, which had the world's most powerful navy. The US was totally outclassed. Yet her navy managed to score some impressive victories against her foe.
Read 5 tweets
28 Aug
1. Gen. William "Billy" Mitchell (1879-1936) was a veteran of World War I and a visionary proponent of naval aviation in the interwar years.

In 1925, he was hauled up on charges and court-martialed for offending the top brass. His crime?
2. He had criticized Army leaders for ineptitude and incompetence for the crash of the naval airship "Shenandoah" (in which 14 men died), and for the loss of a few seaplanes in the Pacific.
3. He had also exposed his superiors' lack of vision by demonstrating the power of naval aviation and the potential of aircraft carriers. For these sins, they never forgave him. In 1925, they concocted trumped-up charges and accused him of insubordination.
Read 6 tweets
5 Aug
1. Another anecdote about the Australians. Many years ago I was visiting St. Paul's Cathedral in London. You can go up to a walkway around the dome.
I was standing there, looking a long way down over the rail, when a very heavy Australian accent from behind me said...
2. "It's a long way, deeaawwn, isn't it, mayte?" I turned around, and it was a smiling old guy with his wife. He just started talking to me, like he knew me. He starts telling me an anecdote about a friend of his who fell off the roof of his house while he was...
3. ...painting it. He and his wife looked like very nice people, old small-town pensioners going on a vacation. Not a care in the world.
Finally, his wife says, "Oh, John, don't bother the man with all that. He doesn't want to hear that..." It was hilarious.
Read 4 tweets

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