Let’s analyse 13 claims from the 1941 Congressional testimony of Nazi lover and America First-er Charles Lindbergh in opposition to the bill to send aid to Britain as it desperately fought Hitler.
Do let me know if you have seen someone more recently copying this rhetoric. ⬇️
Claim 1: We must oppose sending aid to a close democratic ally threatened by an authoritarian, antidemocratic dictatorship because doing so would… destroy U.S. democracy.
Claim 2: It is NOT that I want the aggressor to win, of course! It’s just that, you see, we can’t control or influence who does. We need “realism.”
Claim 3: While it’s not that I want the aggressor to win, I don’t want the aggressor to lose, you see. I want a “negotiated peace.”
Claim 4: It’s not like I’m saying peace entirely depends on the will of the aggressive dictator. Hey, look, negotiating is a two-way street!
Same quote as above.
Claim 5 (in response to objection that the victims of brutal aggression aren’t exactly an equal side to such a negotiation): Wars have two sides!
Same quote as above.
Claim 6: We should not be sending any aid to this ally because they are not capable of winning no matter what.
Claim 7: Aiding this ally will only lead to more bloodshed and devastation.
Claim 8: The U.S. faces no threat from the aggressor trying to destroy this ally. In fact, the threat is from within, from the warmongers who are trying to usurp democracy and subvert the will of the people.
Claim 9: If we send aid to this ally, we’d be dangerously depleting our own abilities to protect ourselves against the aggressor that is, by Claim 8, also not a threat to us at all.
Claim 10: The aggressor the ally faces is omnipotent. It’s completely futile to try to oppose him regardless of how much aid we send.
(A stronger variant of Claim 3)
Claim 11: We aren’t ready for war against that aggressor. Our military needs years to rebuild.
Claim 12: Aiding this ally against the aggressor would involve us in a protracted (“forever”) war that would compromise and even directly threaten the U.S.
(Stronger variant of Claim 9 + the result of claim 11)
Claim 13: If we end up having to fight the aggressor (that both does not pose a threat to us and that poses a serious threat to us), those who want to aid our ally will be to blame!
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I must point out one sentence from JD Vance’s Munich speech that shook me to my core with particular revulsion and anger: “If Russia buying digital advertising for a few hundred thousand dollars poses a danger to your democracy, your democracy wasn't very strong to begin with."
He was, of course, talking about Romania. The excellent @Daractenus has addressed much of this undeserved assault. Here I want to point out the horrendously, sadistically injurious implications of this victim-blaming logical fallacy.
The statement is absurd, ignorant and irresponsible on its face. History is full of examples of events enacted cheaply and often by a few malicious people that inflicted grievous damage on otherwise mighty structures of power.
You should sit down for this. Read and retweet.
The new Undersecretary of Public Diplomacy, @DarrenJBeattie, is a white supremacist, a Kremlin and Beijing lover who hates Ukraine and Taiwan, and a promoter of anti-Western vitriol. Receipts below.
⬇️
As the Jan. 6 revolt was underway, Beattie, who even before the 2020 election was urging Trump to start executing a coup, tweeted at conservative black lawmakers that they must “learn their natural place” (presumably as slaves) and “take a knee to MAGA.”
This ugly creature later tweeted that only “competent white men” are fit to be in charge.
If only the world had known this and had allowed white men to be in charge: there would have been no WW1, WW2, Holocaust, genocides, Great Depression, and so on. Oh wait…
Here’s a simple set of seven truths that, if accepted, will go a long way towards the de-programming of the Western public from decades, centuries even, of Moscow’s propaganda.
⬇️
1. No nation exists for the purpose of either affirming or denying Russian World.
The fact that many nations’ histories are “tangled” with that of Russia is a sign of relentless Russian aggression and imperialism, not a sign of destiny or of being “fraternal nations.”
2. No existing nation is a “former” something or other.
History is full of subjugations and depravities. Using such language perpetuates them. Moreover, it always privileges one discourse, that of the imperialist.
The political class in the U.S. from left to right and top to bottom suffers from that disease of the mind that ancient Greeks knew fully well inevitably leads to downfall — hubris, in this case gigantic, unshakeable hubris.
The hubris of the Republican Party and MAGA is, of course, monumental. The history of politics rarely knows such toxic bad faith, permanent delusion and cynical intent to keep lying to the end. However, this wouldn’t be possible without the hubris of their opponents.
Obama, Biden, their retinue and much of the Democratic Party have displayed equally breathtaking hubris, zero humility and no capacity for introspection. Yes, they were “on the right side of history” by instinct and posture but their arrogance squandered that capital entirely.
Even three years of a genocidal full invasion and ten years of overall aggression against Ukraine have not cured many minds of the spell they’ve been under for decades. The spell that leads to the conviction that, no matter what, Russia is entitled to its “sphere of influence.”
And that it is entitled to deferential attitude on our part as to Russia’s feelings and opinions as to what happens in that “sphere of influence,” a euphemistic term for “imperial control over less-than-fully-sovereign states.”
This is really the true underlying cause of the commonly heard statement that “Country X or Y isn’t worth going to nuclear war over.”
It isn’t at all about a nuclear war. It is about the fact that such countries are, deep inside many Western minds, not truly sovereign entities.
The takeover of the FBI and overall intelligence community by Trump’s team isn’t really aimed at retribution against political enemies, which is the red meat he throws to the fevered base. It is worse. It is, I believe, aimed at dismantling U.S. counterintelligence. Short 🧵
FBI counterintelligence has been the most persistent and greatest threat to Trump since 2016. Time and again, it has picked up contact after contact between his team and Russian intelligence. If he doesn’t dismantle it, the threat would be even greater this time around.
Some might say it doesn’t appear U.S. counterintelligence does much at all.
Counterintelligence works. The problem has been that findings related to Republicans and certain shady billionaires tend to be suppressed by higher-ups terrified of appearing politically-motivated.