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James Towner's avatar

It is getting very difficult to maintain a positive attitude about the future of a country when so many people are willing to take such gross advantage of our honest attempts to provide help to people in need. It becomes doubly difficult when those responsible for protecting us are also complicit. Yes, I am talking about Mr. Trump and his whole cabal of hypocritical thiefs and liars!

Johan's avatar

Notice the death hierarchy embedded in how we discuss war.

Coverage typically leads with American casualties, then mentions civilian deaths as context. Whose deaths count as tragedy vs. acceptable cost reveals whose lives the system treats as mattering.

As I wrote in “What Societies Are Actually For”: Systems that treat like cases alike are justice systems. Systems that don’t are enforcement mechanisms. When children’s deaths are mentioned after soldiers’—we’re revealing hierarchy, not discussing morality.

Civilization’s moral basis—preventing the stronger from exploiting the weaker—collapses when: the stronger defines whose deaths deserve grief, institutions stop constraining power, Congress can’t check war-making, international law only applies to losers, and moral appeals exist without enforcement.

The direct line from coup attempt to Venezuela to Iran is operational doctrine. Each violation normalizes the next.

The gap: Appealing to “our sacred duty to stop this” requires functional institutions. Congress, courts, international law didn’t stop Venezuela. Didn’t stop Iran. Won’t stop what’s next.

The fabric frayed because people tasked with maintaining it chose not to when tested.

We’re past appeal. We’re just watching theater—the little games people play while pretending mechanisms still function.

—Johan

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