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Why is the United States in constant military conflicts?
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2018-06-15 at 1:13 PM UTCBy 1945, the Council on Foreign Relations, and various foundations and
other organizations interlocked with it, had virtually taken over the
U.S. State Department.
Some CFR members were later identified as Soviet espionage agents: for
example, Alger Hiss and Lauchlin Currie.
The ultimate aim of the Council on Foreign Relations (however well-intentioned its prominent and powerful members may be) is the same as the ultimate aim of international communism:
to create a one-world socialist system and make the United States an official part of it. -
2018-06-15 at 1:33 PM UTC
Originally posted by Rock_N_Rollover By 1945, the Council on Foreign Relations, and various foundations and
other organizations interlocked with it, had virtually taken over the
U.S. State Department.
Some CFR members were later identified as Soviet espionage agents: for
example, Alger Hiss and Lauchlin Currie.
The ultimate aim of the Council on Foreign Relations (however well-intentioned its prominent and powerful members may be) is the same as the ultimate aim of international communism:
to create a one-world socialist system and make the United States an official part of it.
And there's even a higher tier of command and control. A large group of outcast aliens, who have been organizing most of this from the shadows. They have amazing sciences, which can render themselves completely invisible, transport matter in the blink of an eye, replicate anything, and they have mastered the art of psychological warfare. -
2018-06-15 at 1:37 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra because the US hasn't had to deal with an actual war that threatened their home soil since the civil war, so your average person's understanding of what war actually is is limited, to say the least
It is also a tragedy of history. When the "Greatest Generation" went to war in Europe, they saw, and they came back. But Americans have forgotten. -
2018-06-15 at 1:46 PM UTCIt's also because nowadays, we just send robots to bomb terrorist training camps AKA elementary schools and wedding parties.
The soldiers piloting these drones are basically playing a video game, it's like the AC-130 mission from COD4 to them. You don't have to empathize with little brown pixels on the other side of the planet. Nigga is probably sitting in a DxRacer chair in an air conditioned cubicle in New Hampshire or some shit, using an Xbox controller to kill darkies indiscriminately.
So the human cost that we can actually see at home has gone down. -
2018-06-15 at 4:46 PM UTC
Originally posted by Captain It's also because nowadays, we just send robots to bomb terrorist training camps AKA elementary schools and wedding parties.
The soldiers piloting these drones are basically playing a video game, it's like the AC-130 mission from COD4 to them. You don't have to empathize with little brown pixels on the other side of the planet. Nigga is probably sitting in a DxRacer chair in an air conditioned cubicle in New Hampshire or some shit, using an Xbox controller to kill darkies indiscriminately.
So the human cost that we can actually see at home has gone down.
human lives has always been cheap.
as a pakisthanian, you shouldve known better. -
2018-06-15 at 5:30 PM UTC
Originally posted by Captain It's also because nowadays, we just send robots to bomb terrorist training camps AKA elementary schools and wedding parties.
The soldiers piloting these drones are basically playing a video game, it's like the AC-130 mission from COD4 to them. You don't have to empathize with little brown pixels on the other side of the planet. Nigga is probably sitting in a DxRacer chair in an air conditioned cubicle in New Hampshire or some shit, using an Xbox controller to kill darkies indiscriminately.
So the human cost that we can actually see at home has gone down.
I was actually going to write a bit about the (conscious) trend of weapons designs that detach the operator more and more from personal responsibility and actively prevent symp/emp/athy but I never get around to it
My suspicion is that while they prevent short-term issues like breakdowns and failures in the field, they will cause major long-term mental and social issues less obvious than PTSD -
2018-06-15 at 5:41 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra I was actually going to write a bit about the (conscious) trend of weapons designs that detach the operator more and more from personal responsibility and actively prevent symp/emp/athy but I never get around to it
My suspicion is that while they prevent short-term issues like breakdowns and failures in the field, they will cause major long-term mental and social issues less obvious than PTSD
you been watching too much black mirror. -
2018-06-15 at 5:45 PM UTCwas there actually a black mirror episode on that? I haven't seen the latest season yet
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2018-06-15 at 6:54 PM UTC
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2018-06-15 at 7:11 PM UTCPolitical correctness taking over rational thinking.
Any of you niggas live in Germany?
I want some more guns.
Fuck open borders. -
2018-06-15 at 7:24 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra was there actually a black mirror episode on that? I haven't seen the latest season yet
sorry. memory corruption.
was actually criminal minds.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7042722/?ref_=ttep_ep18 -
2018-06-15 at 8:44 PM UTC
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2018-06-15 at 9:19 PM UTCNiggas around the world don’t know how to act
Ya get uncle sams boot
That was simple -
2018-06-15 at 9:24 PM UTC
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2018-06-15 at 11:52 PM UTCIt's good to see there's at least one issue everyone can agree on
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2018-06-16 at 5:08 PM UTC
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2018-06-16 at 5:09 PM UTC
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2018-06-16 at 5:36 PM UTC
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2018-06-16 at 5:37 PM UTCMoney money money greedy whores
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2018-06-16 at 5:50 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra ISIS-K
mercenaries are being relocated to the pakistan-afghanistan border (from syria) to cause problems for the taliban
ISIS mercenaries ???
like how does that work, like they are getting paid to fight or like they are getting paid while fighting ???
i always thot it was a volunteer thing.