Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Saturday, August 7, 2021

‘The US is ready’: Indo-Pacific Command leader confident in ability to defend Taiwan … US Military is capable, however #UsefulIdiotBiden’s Marxist Socialist Democratic Regime has no interest in confronting China!

AIR LAND SEA FRONT HISTORY CULTURE POLITICS LOGIN SIGNUP ‘The US is ready’: Indo-Pacific Command leader confident in ability to defend Taiwan FEATUREDWIB POLITICS August 6, 2021 Staff Writer 0 Top Articles by War Is Boring Taliban terrorists reportedly shoot 21-year-old Afghan girl for not wearing veilTaiwan praises US approval of $750 million arms sales package READ MORE Japan to deploy nukes near Taiwan next year, ups ante with ChinaThree missiles fired from Lebanon towards IsraelUS steps up Somalia strikes as al-Qaida ally attacks escalate Taiwan praises US approval of$750 million arms sales package Taiwan praises US approval of $750 million arms sales package Wyatt Olson Stars and Stripes The United States is capable of assisting and defending Taiwan in the event of a military crisis, the commander of all U.S. forces in the Pacific said Thursday. “There is a narrative that we see often in the media that talks about the U.S. and the West in decline,” Adm. John Aquilino, head of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, said during a virtual appearance at the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado when asked to describe America’s ability to defend Taiwan. “I think what I’d start with is that that narrative is certainly being pushed by our adversaries,” Aquilino said. “I want to be very clear — we have the world’s greatest military on the planet. “We are here to continue to operate to ensure peace and prosperity through the region, and we have to be in a position to ensure that status quo remains as it applies to Taiwan.” Aquilino said Beijing’s heavy-handed actions in Hong Kong since last year have heightened his concern over China’s intentions toward Taiwan, which the Communist Party of China regards as a renegade province that must, at some point, become reunified with the mainland. Beijing had guaranteed a degree of autonomy for Hong Kong when the British government turned the colony over to China in 1997. But last summer it imposed a new security law that was quickly used to imprison and harass pro-democracy advocates. The move has left many international observers wondering if Beijing is planning overt military action to reunify Taiwan. Chinese military aircraft have stepped up incursions into Taiwan’s air defense identification zone over the past year. The U.S. State Department on Wednesday approved the sale of about $750 million in arms to Taiwan, the first such sale by President Joe Biden’s administration. It includes 40 self-propelled howitzers. The sale “interferes in China’s internal affairs and undermines China’s sovereignty and security interests,” a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement posted online Thursday. ” China will resolutely take legitimate and necessary counter-measures in light of the development of the situation,” said the statement, which offered no further details. In light of China’s more aggressive posture toward Taiwan, Hong Kong and the contested South China Sea, questions about how the U.S. would respond to a military crisis in the Taiwan Strait are no longer academic. During a conference call with reporters Sunday while in Guam, Gen. Charles Flynn, commander of U.S. Army Pacific, was asked whether soldiers could rapidly deploy “in case Taiwan is invaded by China.” “The Army is always able to rapidly deploy,” Flynn said. “And we have a range of forces out here in the Pacific — from forcible entry forces to motorized forces to sustainment, communications, cyber, electronic warfare, intelligence, security-force assistance — all ranges of capabilities within the Army, that can move at speed and at scale, to conduct operations across the region.” Aquilino echoed Flynn in his remarks Thursday. “The U.S. is ready for any contingency should it occur,” he said, touting the concept of “integrated deterrence” in such an event. “That view of integrated deterrence is designed for the entire joint force to be able to operate in a synchronized fashion in all domains — as we integrate cyberspace and space capabilities — as we do it with all forms of U.S. national power,” he said. “And as we synchronize those with our most critical asset — and that is our allies and partners. “So, when we pull all those together, let me just say that I have a level of confidence that the U.S. military and Department of Defense is in a good place.” ___ (c)2021 the Stars and Stripes

Wednesday, August 4, 2021


It’s probably because it’s painful that we don’t do it very often. But when was the last time you thought about a moment when whatever you said or did was wrong? Like, really, really, really wrong?

Maybe you were gung-ho about invading Iraq. Maybe you confidently sold a bunch of cryptocurrency in 2014 before the crash that you were sure was coming. Maybe you fell for a scam or you got caught up in bad company. Maybe you’re older and grew up with a negative view of Martin Luther King Jr and his “agitation tactics.” Maybe you, in some college phase, were optimistic about the potential of Hugo Chavez or some other dictator. 

The point is: You have had moments when you were wrong. It happens to all of us. And yet, as we’ve talked about before, we struggle with coming to terms with it, despite its universality. Clearly, it wasn’t easy for Seneca to come to terms with how badly he misjudged Nero. Don’t you think Marcus Aurelius had at least a little bit of trouble seeing the truth about Lucius Verus or Avidius Cassius

Admitting you have been wrong about something can be very uncomfortable, especially the more public your error was. But we can’t shy away from the reality of that uncomfortable truth. If anything, we have to deliberately seek out this discomfort...because wisdom, at the very minimum, is about not making the same mistake twice. If Marcus had been able to wrestle with his blindness to certain people’s flaws, might he have been able to avoid disaster with his son Commodus? Nowhere in Seneca’s writings—in his extensive personal correspondence—does he deal with his complicity in Nero’s misdeeds. Had he been willing to discuss it, probe it, might he have acted sooner, more overtly? This self-reflection and self-criticism—which Seneca claimed to do nightly—might have saved many lives...including his own. 

We are all wrong from time to time. We all have held stupid and utterly incorrect opinions. There is some shame in that, but the truly shameful thing is to deny that it happened and refuse to learn from the experience. Which is why we have to take some time to think about our own thinking, and let the acknowledgement of the errors of our ways make us better.

ADAM SCHIFF: COMMUNISM AT WORK?

ADAM SCHIFF: COMMUNISM AT WORK? It is one thing to have empathy for those who are afflicted by circumstances beyond their control, but it is quite something else to extend the misery and suffering to countless others in another form of communist wealth redistribution. Another email full of bullschiff… VOTE THE SUMBITCH OUT OF OFFICE IN CA-28 DISTRICT Stephen — Today, 3.6 million Americans woke... Read more

Science May Have Lost It’s Way…

THE FACE OF SCIENTIFIC CORRUPTION? Science is a free-for-all, a systematic methodology to observe, test, report, validate, or refute knowledge about our universe. A competition of ideas, from uncredentialled amateurs to highly credentialed “experts,” where the work of a single individual can falsify any generally accepted fact or finding. And, peer-review is not a guarantee of validity, it is little more than a journal publication... Read more

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RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG — Joseph Moran (@JMM7156) May 2, 2023 from Twitter https://twitter....