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#171 Re: The Garden » Current Events Thread » 163 weeks ago
The central fact about the democratic world today is that it is leaderless.
Twenty-five years ago, we had the confident presences of Bill Clinton, Helmut Kohl and Tony Blair — and Alan Greenspan. Now we have a failing American president, a timorous German chancellor, a British prime minister about to skulk out of office in ignominy and a chairman of the Federal Reserve who last year flubbed the most important decision of his career. Elsewhere: the resignation of Italy’s prime minister, a caretaker government in Israel, the assassination of Japan’s dominant political figure.
This is bad in normal times. It is catastrophic in bad ones. We are stumbling, half-blind, into four distinct but mutually reinforcing crises, each compounding the other.
The first crisis is one of international credibility. The war in Ukraine is not merely a crisis unto itself. It is a symptom of a crisis, which began with a withdrawal from Afghanistan that telegraphed incompetence and weakness and whose consequences were easily predictable. Beyond Ukraine, in which President Biden has committed enough support to prevent outright defeat but not to secure a clear victory, there is an imminent nuclear crisis with Iran, in which the president seems to have no policy other than negotiations that are on the cusp of failure, and another looming crisis over Taiwan, in which he alternates between challenging Beijing and trying to mollify it.
Talented leaders turn proverbial lemons into lemonade. Biden seems to be mastering the trick of turning lemonade into lemons. He has risen just enough to the occasion in Ukraine — generating a moment of allied unity and resolve — to have that much more to lose if it loses. If the war is still raging in winter and Europe caves to Russian energy blackmail (by, for instance, demanding that Kyiv accept an armistice in some kind of humiliating Minsk 3 agreement), what conclusions will Tehran and Beijing draw?
The second crisis is one of economic credibility. This is distinct from a normal economic crisis, which can happen for reasons leaders do not control. The credibility crisis occurs when leaders make confident predictions, in the face of abundant contrary evidence, that turn out to be catastrophically wrong. Insisting that inflation was “temporary,” as Biden did last year, was one such prediction. His insistence on Monday that “God willing, I don’t think we’re going to see a recession” may be the next.
Economic credibility is vital when decisions are bound to be painful. At least Jimmy Carter had the guts to nominate Paul Volcker. Where is a similar confidence-inspiring move from Biden, who, remarkably, retains the same inept economic team that helped lead us into this mess? And how much graver are the consequences of economic incompetence if a U.S. recession aggravates a global recession, which the International Monetary Fund expects is coming soon?
The third crisis is in poorer countries. Sri Lanka’s political and economic collapse this month, spurred partly by the pandemic but mainly by domestic mismanagement, is a foretaste of what we can expect in other developing countries, from Pakistan to Mexico to much of Africa. But unlike in Sri Lanka, crises in those places aren’t likely to remain within their own borders. In Pakistan, economic crisis can quickly turn into a nuclear crisis. In African nations and Mexico, the risks are in the form of state collapse and mass migration.
The last time the world had a global recession (and spiking food prices), the result was the Arab Spring, civil wars in Syria and Libya, the rise of the Islamic State, migrant waves into Europe and populist revolts that included Brexit and the election of Donald Trump. Imagine all this but on a vastly greater scale, a year or two from today.
The fourth crisis is one of liberal democracy. Democracy is not its own justification. It justifies itself by what it delivers: security, stability, predictability, prosperity — and then consent, choice and freedom.
People who have spent their entire lives in stable democracies often assume that freedom is everyone’s supreme value. The depressing lesson of the past 20 years is that it isn’t. Illiberal democracy, on the Hungarian model, can be a successful form of government. Ditto for effective autocracies, like in Singapore and the United Arab Emirates. Democracies that fail at delivery — by letting prices or crime or control of borders or common understandings of right and wrong get out of hand — put the best of what they stand for at risk.
The free world will always retain formidable advantages over its antidemocratic adversaries because we are better able to acknowledge our mistakes and correct them. But the cascading crises we face would challenge even the most inspired leaders. Except for Volodymyr Zelensky, there are none.
The best thing Biden could do for the country is announce he won’t run for re-election — now, not after the midterms. Let his party sort out its own future. Appoint a confidence-inspiring Treasury secretary (if not Larry Summers, then Jamie Dimon). Ensure that Ukraine wins swiftly. Put fear and hesitation in the minds of dictators in Moscow, Tehran and Beijing.
It might be enough to rescue a floundering presidency in a sinking world.
#172 Re: The Sunset Strip » Most Recent Movie You've Seen » 164 weeks ago
Ever since I saw Iron Man 2 I decided I wouldn't pay attention to the super hero genre anymore, with a few exceptions. Then the other day I got tired of watching the same old shit so I decided to pop in the Avengers. Big movie, I remember it broke records when it came out but I never saw it.
Now I watched Batman vs. Superman and I didn't think it was very good. I saw Winter Soldier and thought that wasn't half bad.
This movie I managed 25 minutes before I had to turn it off. I was so bored the whole time. So unimpressed with everything. It made me re evaluate Justice League, which is still crap but infinitely more talent went into it than this Avengers thing. I was going to watch the sequel but that is definitely not happening now. Why did this make a billion? I don't get it.
Did you watch the Snyder version of Batman V Superman and Justice League? I think I've said it before, but the director's cut of Batman V Superman is the best superhero movie ever made in my opinion, and I LOVED Infinity War and End Game.
I've been staying current on all of Marvel's shit save this last Ms Marvel show on Disney +, and I have to say I'm over it. I was entertained by Thor, but that was largely because I'm a GN'R fanboy. Dr Strange was horrific and Sony has made sure none of their spider-man films ever really advance the plot or story.
Here's hoping Better Call Saul doesn't fuck up it's last 3 episodes.
#173 Re: The Garden » Current Events Thread » 164 weeks ago
I just saw an ad on YouTube when watching a news clip on China's military threat due to Pelosi's visit to Taiwan.
It was Desantis asking people to join the fight with him against Biden and "Bidenflation".
I think this is a sign of things to come.
I saw this too. How many foreign policy fuckups can this administration have before they're held accountable? I hate to beat a dead horse, but anyone who thinks we're better off under Biden I genuinely wonder if they suffer from mental retardation. Especially the way the media attacked Trump and predicted doomsday, while he had arguably the most successful foreign policy chops of any American president since Eisenhower.
So let's send over Pelosi, someone who has no input on foreign policy (the House doesn't even vote on treaties) and will be removed from any position of power come January 2023, to piss off China even more. We truly are in Orwellian times, and half the population is willing to believe a woman has a cock. When WW3 or this American Civil War finally happens, I'm positive those confused about basic biology will have to wait a century before they're even allowed to be in power.
#174 Re: The Garden » Current Events Thread » 164 weeks ago
Anyone read the Washington Post? Interesting article today. Carville blames what's happening to the Dems on "wokeness".
Embarrassing question, but how do you get behind the paywall?
#175 Re: The Garden » Current Events Thread » 164 weeks ago
Now that Russia has all but ended its gas supply to Western Europe, what is the sentiment like over there? Is the average European willing to continue being harmed for Ukrainians or is the idea that harming ordinary people so western leaders can pretend they’re more noble starting to lose traction with the normal folk?
I can’t imagine what this winter will be like for your average German without gas to heat their homes.
#176 Re: Guns N' Roses » Slash confirms “one or two” new songs by June » 164 weeks ago
Can you post in English please? This isn’t a Spanish forum
Yea, it’s starting to get annoying.
#177 Re: Guns N' Roses » Can you see Slash leaving again? » 164 weeks ago
I don't know why he would leave the current incarnation of this band. He gets to tour to larger crowds than he can on his own or with any of his side projects. He rakes in millions a year. He's able to satisfy his need to create with his own stuff and if Guns ever does anything, I'm sure he'll be happy to participate. But my understanding is that Slash left the first time over creative differences. As they're not currently creating anything together, nor is Slash reliant on the band to be creative, it seems highly unlikely he would sacrifice the payday and notoriety he's getting being Slash in Guns N' Roses for anything less than a substantive breach of trust or harm. It's a win/win for him currently, and leaving only hurts his legacy, notoriety and pocketbook.
#178 Re: The Garden » Current Events Thread » 164 weeks ago
My favorite outrage of the day is the current "BREAKING NEWS" that a criminal investigation has been launched into what happened with Secret Service text messages from January 6th. The same people who handwaved Clinton admittedly destroying cell phones and hard drives after a House subpoena are now outraged at the mere suggestion the Secret Service didn't maintain perfect records after a House subpoena. Weird that the House Select Committee hasn't called a single Secret Service agent who can corroborate the hearsay masqueraded as "evidence" that Trump tried to grab the wheel and force his detail to take him to the Capitol to join the riot.
Ignore the record inflation, soaring violent crime, looming recession and genuine risk of WW3. A bunch of horrible, disgusting people who are all being prosecuted and handed serious sentences rioted due to the rhetoric from the orange man that caused 1.5 million dollars in damage and delayed the certification of the election by hours. This is somehow vastly different than the millions who rioted and looted due to our rhetoric that costs over $2 Billion in damage, and shouldn't even be acknowledged.
Now excuse me while I pass a law to ensure interracial marriage isn't overturned by a Supreme Court who provided a very detailed and coherent message on why a right to abortion is fundamentally different than the privacy laws related to marriage and consensual intercourse. It doesn't matter that no other country in the world has a constitutional right to an abortion or that we can't justify the arguments of Roe or Casey. Just be outraged at the shit that doesn't affect you in anyway and ignore all the damage our policies and nonsense have caused that actually affect you in your every day life.
#179 Re: The Garden » Current Events Thread » 165 weeks ago
misterID wrote:Progressives are really beating the “Joe’s too old to be president” now. There’s no way they pressure him out of running and *not* get behind Kamala. This would be a disastrous primary.
Harris was a bad enough candidate she had to drop out very early in the 2020 primary. They should get someone else.
It seems like Newsom is interested in running and having a go at it. If this happens, I don't see how any Democrat wins in 2024. Biden would be forced to call Newsom a progressive nut, which would cause all kinds of infighting in the DNC as they try to rally around a message that appeals to coal miners/steel workers and twitter NPCs who think women can have a John Holmes length cock. The big umbrella idea works if you're cordial and acknowledge an agreed upon framework, but there is no way to connect Manchin to Sanders under the same party.
Drudge's headline says over half the GOP won't vote for Trump in 24, so that all but assures Biden will be going against DeSantis or Youngkin.
America really needs more political parties. Create or coopt existing nomenclatures, but the Jesus Heads who want a Handmaid's tale are just as out of touch with mainstream GOP support as the far-left loons who want to lynch SCOTUS justices are out of sync with the DNC. Neither party can contain the extremes and said extremes keep normal, moderate folk from being interested.
I'd be very interested in a Manchin/Collins collaboration, but I don't think that will happen. The closest we got was McCain and Lieberman in 2008, and we all remember how that eventually turned out.