Yes but Trump, and I'm sure the Iranians know about computer viruses now.
Fuck Israel
except the US wants an armed conflict. there are war hawks in the inner circle of the white house who explicitly want the option. they want regime change in iran, not to sabotage a few more centrifuges at their refineries. that's the whole point.Larssen wrote:
why are you all entertaining a fantasy war with Iran? It will not happen. If only for the fact that the Stuxnet virus already proved to be much more (cost) effective at sabotaging the Iranian nuclear ambitions than any conventional military option would be. You wouldn't be able to formulate a strategic objective that could hold up to any scrutiny. If the US and other western powers wished to do so, there's other ways to influence the situation, all of them better than an invasion.
You're tech savvy I reckon, you should know it's a little more complicated than just 'knowing about computer viruses'.Dilbert_X wrote:
I'm sure the Iranians know about computer viruses now.
Last edited by uziq (2019-05-23 06:27:11)
https://www.economist.com/middle-east-a … -theocracyuziq wrote:
can you cite your claim that iran's theocratic political philosophy is 'losing steam'? they are the shia bulwark in the region with multiple sunni enemies around them. i think that denominational dynamic will keep iran humming along just fine for a very long time.
Last edited by Larssen (2019-05-23 06:49:11)
Last edited by uziq (2019-05-23 09:31:52)
Yes, ISIS spun out of the hipster trend.Larssen wrote:
I don't see theocratic governance survive the current wave of globalisation & urbanisation.
ISIS was the ultimate culmination of fundamentalist, jihadist aggression against changes brought about by globalisation. It failed spectacularly. What will they do now? Retreat into more subversive terrorism? To achieve what? Sure, they will continue to be violent but their 'dream' is gone and their long term goals truly unachievable. The only ones who now keep their faith in that future are hardcore zealots and no one else. It's a lost cause and always was, their threat at its peak still barely registering.Dilbert_X wrote:
Yes, ISIS spun out of the hipster trend.Larssen wrote:
I don't see theocratic governance survive the current wave of globalisation & urbanisation.
Globalisation is about more than the political powers that be. It's the unavoidable intermingling of cultures due to advances in travel, communication, education etc. You can hop on the internet and write to people all over the globe in real time, even in languages you don't know assisted by automated translation services. You use/consume products from various countries and cultures every week and have access to food from all over the world in any given medium sized city. People have also massively moved from rural to urban areas everywhere for decades now with major implications for local cultures.The uneven effects of globalization has lead many western countries to backslide into isolationist politics and authoritarian rhetoric. I wouldn't bet on globalization to save the day here there or anywhere.
ISIS was the culmination of radical nuts in America trying to create a new world order - thats what failed spectacularlyLarssen wrote:
ISIS was the ultimate culmination of fundamentalist, jihadist aggression against changes brought about by globalisation. It failed spectacularly. What will they do now? Retreat into more subversive terrorism? To achieve what? Sure, they will continue to be violent but their 'dream' is gone and their long term goals truly unachievable. The only ones who now keep their faith in that future are hardcore zealots and no one else. It's a lost cause and always was, their threat at its peak still barely registering.Dilbert_X wrote:
Yes, ISIS spun out of the hipster trend.Larssen wrote:
I don't see theocratic governance survive the current wave of globalisation & urbanisation.Globalisation is about more than the political powers that be. It's the unavoidable intermingling of cultures due to advances in travel, communication, education etc. You can hop on the internet and write to people all over the globe in real time, even in languages you don't know assisted by automated translation services. You use/consume products from various countries and cultures every week and have access to food from all over the world in any given medium sized city. People have also massively moved from rural to urban areas everywhere for decades now with major implications for local cultures.The uneven effects of globalization has lead many western countries to backslide into isolationist politics and authoritarian rhetoric. I wouldn't bet on globalization to save the day here there or anywhere.
Of course the road ahead is rocky because all of this challenges the stability and fundamental structure of nation states, but restrictive, nationalist and religious conservatism are fighting a losing battle here and they know it.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2019-05-23 15:32:16)
????Dilbert_X wrote:
ISIS was the culmination of radical nuts in America trying to create a new world order - thats what failed spectacularly
Pretty much the entire UN decided it should fail. Internally ISIS never achieved anything resembling a stable government or economy. It was doomed. Ironically it first thrived because of globalisation as well - ISIS members were often from anywhere but Syria.ISIS failed because America and Russia decided it should fail, not because teenagers prefer to spend their time on facebook.
Polarised sure, but the 'insular' thing is a myth. There's no escaping the global economy (& its demand for movement of people, goods, services & money) or emerging global cultures. Can't quite shut down the internet either.Most countries are turning inward and becoming more insular and polarised - Britain, America for two.
You sound like 2007. CamPoe 2007.Larssen wrote:
Globalisation is about more than the political powers that be. It's the unavoidable intermingling of cultures due to advances in travel, communication, education etc. You can hop on the internet and write to people all over the globe in real time, even in languages you don't know assisted by automated translation services. You use/consume products from various countries and cultures every week and have access to food from all over the world in any given medium sized city. People have also massively moved from rural to urban areas everywhere for decades now with major implications for local cultures.
How prescient!The future is now! Soon every American home will integrate their television, phone and computer. You'll be able to visit the Louvre on one channel, or watch female wrestling on another. You can do your shopping at home, or play Mortal Kombat with a friend from Vietnam. There's no end to the possibilities!
i feel like i'm being spoken to by a bagehot editorial from the economist that isn't especially enlightening.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You sound like 2007. CamPoe 2007.Larssen wrote:
Globalisation is about more than the political powers that be. It's the unavoidable intermingling of cultures due to advances in travel, communication, education etc. You can hop on the internet and write to people all over the globe in real time, even in languages you don't know assisted by automated translation services. You use/consume products from various countries and cultures every week and have access to food from all over the world in any given medium sized city. People have also massively moved from rural to urban areas everywhere for decades now with major implications for local cultures.
plenty of water in the (soon to not be) ice caps.Dilbert_X wrote:
There's only so much water in the sea Ken.
A rising tide in one place means a falling tide somewhere else.
Think of the sea as money, the moon as Chinese imperialist ambition, the ships are Chinese communist party apparatchiks.
(I think this is my best analogy ever)
jay is the living encapsulation of the fact that a little reading can be a terrible thing. the man applies analysis and synthesizes arguments like a paraplegic robs banks.SuperJail Warden wrote:
It turns out that when you give the average person more access to communication tools and information it doesn't actually raise them up.