• ChatteringMonkey
    1.6k
    It does matter in that it will prompt China and Russia to a lesser extend to reconsider their strategies going forward. It's a kind of crass reminder that we do still live in a world of spheres of influence.

    I actually don't think NATO will be dismantled over Greenland, I changed my mind on this. Europeans are a bit shocked at the moment about it all, but will slowly come to the realisation that they really don't have anywhere else to go in the short term. And the US will realise that they can't take on the world on their own after all, so my guess is they will find a way to make it work, at least for now.
  • frank
    18.8k

    Since American foreign policy changes every four years, it's probably better to just react to events in the moment and forestall any long term plans (such as scrapping NATO).
  • ChatteringMonkey
    1.6k
    Yes, but it is becoming a problem more and more. Not only does it make the US difficult to govern, but it's also destabilising for its allies and the world to have wildly oscillating election cycles every 4 year. Can an empire really stay a democracy longer term?
  • frank
    18.8k
    Yes, but it is becoming a problem more and more. Not only does it make the US difficult to govern,ChatteringMonkey

    I don't think it's making the US difficult to govern. Most Americans are fairly sheep-like in person. They just want to feed their families and, so far, this hasn't been a big problem. At this point, I don't think anybody has a firm understanding of what the Republican party stands for. As an apolitical moderate, I miss the old conservatives. I understood them.

    but it's also destabilising for its allies and the world to have wildly oscillating election cycles every 4 year. Can an empire really stay a democracy longer term?ChatteringMonkey

    I think some destabilization was implied by the end of the Cold War. The world has just been cruising on old ideas. Millennials are just now becoming old enough to take power and direct policy. They don't look like hawks to me. I don't think maintaining an empire is on their radar. And if you notice, neither Venezuela nor Greenland are about empire. It's about the stability and defense of things close by. If the US was threatening to take Denmark, that would be empire building. But there's no percentage in taking Denmark.
  • T Clark
    16k
    they really don't have anywhere else to go in the short term. And the US will realise that they can't take on the world on their own after all, so my guess is they will find a way to make it work, at least for now.ChatteringMonkey

    You have more faith in rational self interest than I do. Even if NATO continues going forward for now, that doesn’t mean it isn’t already being dismantled as an effective force.
  • ChatteringMonkey
    1.6k
    I don't think it's making the US difficult to govern. Most Americans are fairly sheep-like in person. They just want to feed their families and, so far, this hasn't been a big problem. At this point, I don't think anybody has a firm understanding of what the Republican party stands for. As an apolitical moderate, I miss the old conservatives. I understood them.frank

    Sure. But isn't that part of the issue though that parties seems to be radicalising each other over time. And congress basically seems to have become mostly ineffective as it can hardly pass any new laws that can really reform where necessary. That does seem to be an issue at a time the world is changing so fast.

    I think some destabilization was implied by the end of the Cold War. The world has just been cruising on old ideas. Millennials are just now becoming old enough to take power and direct policy. They don't look like hawks to me. I don't think maintaining an empire is on their radar. And if you notice, neither Venezuela nor Greenland are about empire. It's about the stability and defense of things close by. If the US was threatening to take Denmark, that would be empire building. But there's no percentage in taking Denmark.frank

    The US did still bomb Iran, Nigeria and Yemen outside of its hemisphere just last year. It doesn't seem to want to leave Israel and the middle east (the younger generation does I'm aware). And I don't think it can give up control over the pacific and the Chinese sea because losing Taiwan would mean losing control over most of the chips produced in the world. The Monroe doctrine, focus on America first etc sounds nice in theory, and I'm sure many of the younger generations really would want to prefer that, but it seems to me geo-political realities would still steer the US into a more global direction, certainly as distances have become effectively shorter or irrelevant because of technology.
  • ChatteringMonkey
    1.6k
    You have more faith in rational self interest than I do. Even if NATO continues going forward for now, that doesn’t mean it isn’t already being dismantled as an effective force.T Clark

    Steven Miller and Marco Rubio seem to be signaling that a real conflict is certainly not what they want, even if they can't explicitly say so because of negotiation reasons. And most of European leaders certainly would prefer keeping NATO if the US doesn't make it impossible.

    It seems to me that aside from the purely political, the organisation does still function reasonably well in practice.
  • frank
    18.8k
    Sure. But isn't that part of the issue though that parties seems to be radicalising each other over time. And congress basically seems to have become mostly ineffective as it can hardly pass any new laws that can really reform where necessary. That does seem to be an issue at a time the world is changing so fast.ChatteringMonkey

    The situation is definitely in flux. How do you see it playing out?

    The US did still bomb Iran, Nigeria and Yemen outside of its hemisphere just last year. It doesn't seem to want to leave Israel and the middle east (the younger generation does I'm aware). And I don't think it can give up control over the pacific and the Chinese sea because losing Taiwan would mean losing control over most of the chips produced in the world.ChatteringMonkey

    I don't really see a coherent foreign policy in any of that, though. I really think what's been happening is that Trump gets briefed by various parties, and he renders some opinion. There's no collection of strategists looking at a map, thinking about long-term plans.

    There is an initiative led by the government to boost domestic chip manufacturing. It's not like the US doesn't have the ability to make them. Manufacturing has been outsourced because it's cheaper. My guess is that will be navigated by the bottom line. In other words, when it becomes too expensive to maintain ties with Taiwan, the US will make more of its own chips.

    The Monroe doctrine, focus on America first etc sounds nice in theory, and I'm sure many of the younger generations really would want to prefer that, but it seems to me geo-political realities would still steer the US into a more global direction, certainly as distances have become effectively shorter or irrelevant because of technology.ChatteringMonkey


    What I'm most tuned into is an abiding isolationism that's been pretty potent since the Iraq disaster. When Trump promised isolation, he was definitely playing to the crowd. When you asked if an empire can remain democratic, I was thinking of Rome. Rome's empire building was the result of armed aristocrats who gained financially from foreign conquest. The US works the opposite way. American aristocrats feel no ties to the US itself. They can just leave and be global entities if they want. So they use the American military, but they don't pay back into the system to reimburse the US government.

    In a way, severing ties with the rest of the world would allow the US to recover from this situation. I'm actually thinking out loud, so criticize at will. :grin:
  • T Clark
    16k

    I would make a prediction, but, since I’m always wrong, I won’t.
  • Tzeentch
    4.4k
    A recent podcast with Jeffrey Sachs which I would highly recommend watching in full:




    And this one too, with John Mearsheimer:

  • jorndoe
    4.2k
    And if you notice, neither Venezuela nor Greenland are about empire. It's about the stability and defense of things close by.frank

    That's what Trump has claimed a couple of times, among other things (e.g. the North Atlantic and the arctic are swarming with Russian and Chinese military).
    How much sense does that make? Check Jan 8, 2026.
  • frank
    18.8k
    That's what Trump has claimed a couple of times, among other thingsjorndoe

    Members of the US government have wanted Greenland for defense purposes since the 1860s.
  • ChatteringMonkey
    1.6k
    The situation is definitely in flux. How do you see it playing out?frank

    I was thinking about Rome too. Civil war eventually let to the end of the republic, with Ceasar (a populares) appealing to the people to set aside the elites by effectively neutering the senate going forward.

    Trump is a similar figure, in that he came in as a populist from outside of the ruling elite class to 'drain the swamp'... and he also is trying to bypass congress for the most part. The shift towards more emphasis on the executive power isn't new either.

    How it will play out exactly in practice is hard to say really, but tensions on the system will presumably only get bigger because of certain evolutions that already baked in (shift of geo-political power to Asia, the effects of Climate change, demographics etc etc).

    There is an initiative led by the government to boost domestic chip manufacturing. It's not like the US doesn't have the ability to make them. Manufacturing has been outsourced because it's cheaper. My guess is that will be navigated by the bottom line. In other words, when it becomes too expensive to maintain ties with Taiwan, the US will make more of its own chips.frank

    Can they pivot fast enough and make them at a reasonable price will be the question. Maybe automation will help because wages (and regulations) are typically the issue for manufacturing in the West compared to Asia.

    What I'm most tuned into is an abiding isolationism that's been pretty potent since the Iraq disaster. When Trump promised isolation, he was definitely playing to the crowd. When you asked if an empire can remain democratic, I was thinking of Rome. Rome's empire building was the result of armed aristocrats who gained financially from foreign conquest. The US works the opposite way. American aristocrats feel no ties to the US itself. They can just leave and be global entities if they want. So they use the American military, but they don't pay back into the system to reimburse the US government.

    In a way, severing ties with the rest of the world would allow the US to recover from this situation. I'm actually thinking out loud, so criticize at will. :grin:
    frank

    Yes when we are talking about elites these days we are really talking about capitalists. There's free flow of capital over national borders, and so they can relocate wherever they want to find the best conditions for their enterprise. That actually puts nations in competition with eachother to provide the best conditions for them... to lower wages, to get rid of environmental and other regulation etc.

    In the West, but especially in the US with politics being directly financed by capitalists, the incentives are such that their interest are being served a lot of the time. Even MAGA, originally a more populist movement, has essentially been co-opted by the tech-bros with Vance as their future candidate, even though I presume a majority of the people wouldn't support their agenda's.

    I'm not saying we should emulated them, but in China for instance this is different in that they have something that stands above corporate interests. I'm not sure what would be the best way to go about it in the US given it's traditions, but It seems to me it cannot be that capitalist interests are the most important force driving the politics of a nation.
  • Punshhh
    3.5k
    Members of the US government have wanted Greenland for defense purposes since the 1860s.
    Yes, Trump want’s Greenland to protect him from his new besty, Putin.
  • frank
    18.8k
    Can they pivot fast enough and make them at a reasonable price will be the question. Maybe automation will help because wages (and regulations) are typically the issue for manufacturing in the West compared to Asia.ChatteringMonkey

    I think in this case, a "reasonable price" will be determined by global politics. It will be a whole new world as the global scene becomes more fragmented. I once thought the world was headed toward global government, but these days I think historians will say we came close, but then it fell apart.

    US chip manufacturing capacity is projected to triple by 2032, according to a new report published by the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA), signaling progress nearly two years after President Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law.

    That increase is expected to grow the US's share of global semiconductor production to 14% by 2032 from 10% today, marking growth in the country’s manufacturing footprint for the first time in decades, according to the SIA.

    “It's going to take us years to climb back,” John Neuffer, president and CEO of SIA, said to Yahoo Finance. “But with the CHIPS Act and with all these private sector investments, we absolutely turned the corner and are heading now in the right direction.”
    here

    I'm not sure what would be the best way to go about it in the US given it's traditions, but It seems to me it cannot be that capitalist interests are the most important force driving the politics of a nation.ChatteringMonkey

    The hyper focus on capitalism started in the 1980s. In 2009, one of the primary architects of American neoliberalism, Alan Greenspan, testified to Congress that the principles underlying his decades long approach were wrong. At some point, we'll have another economic catastrophe that creates an opening for change. We'll see what the generation of millennials comes up with.
  • frank
    18.8k
    Yes, Trump want’s Greenland to protect him from his new besty, Putin.Punshhh

    The bromance has been souring lately.
  • Punshhh
    3.5k
    The bromance has been souring lately.
    Yes, Putin is too sensible to trust such a madman.
  • frank
    18.8k

    You sound pretty bitter about the whole thing. It's just politics. It doesn't mean anything. Feeling the rain on your face. That's what's important.
  • Punshhh
    3.5k
    I’m concerned about all the lives lost and suffering as a result of Trump’s behaviour.
  • jorndoe
    4.2k
    , right.
    Trump keeps claiming that the North Atlantic + Arctic are swarming with Russian and Chinese military, which is a bare postulate (+ somewhat implausible as postulated).
    Check the earlier comment (Jan 8, 2026).
    But, what's stopping House Trump from extending defense based out of Greenland?
    (I guess his claims also apply to Canada; what will Ottawa say?)
    There isn't much in the way of extending a Greenland-based defense posture, which suggests Trump wants something else.
  • frank
    18.8k
    I’m concerned about all the lives lost and suffering as a result of Trump’s behaviour.Punshhh

    Ok. Grieve then. But accept what you can't change.
  • AmadeusD
    4k
    I’m concerned about all the lives lost and suffering as a result of Trump’s behaviour.Punshhh

    Oh good God. LOL.
  • Relativist
    3.6k


    Are you guys aware of the behavior of agents engaged in identifying immigrants who are here illegally? There are numerous instance of due process violations, detaining citizens who can't provide immediate proof of citizenship, and a recent murder of a woman by an ICE agent.

    The latter has been in US news since it occurred. Immediately after the killing, the President labelled the victim a "domestic terrorist", and blocked a complete investigation. If you'd like to understand what happened, this video is a good analysis: https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1Ahcukffo7/
  • Punshhh
    3.5k
    Yes, it’s all over the news here in the U.K. We’re all well aware of it and it’s scary.
  • Relativist
    3.6k
    What most concerns me is the fact that a large segment of the US population thinks it was perfectly fine to execute her because she violated the law. There is an absence of commitment to due process.
  • AmadeusD
    4k
    I aware that this is an entirely inaccurate description of what goes on with ICE.

    As for Renee Goode, it was an horrific event. 100% Granted. However, It was warranted for the officer who in the course of duty was hit with a lethal weapon by a woman who refused lawful commands. There is absolutely no question about this whatsoever. it is tragic, it shouldn't have happened - but she shouldn't have made a job of impeding lawful federal activities and refusing lawful commands. Those are the results of the incredibly risky behaviour she undertook. They always are. There is no surprise or controversy unless you're dead set on "us v them". Due process is an absolutely ridiculous concept to bring in for this specific situation. Assaults on ICE Agents are soaring. You do not get to pretend one side is allowed to be violent, aggresive, rights-violating wankers, and ICE has to just put up with it. They are mandated to enforce the law and they do not deserve to deal with the horrific, unwarranted crap they're getting from emotionally unstable children who can't keep a job down.

    Not letting feelies take over is probably the best move right now. And unfortunately, emotional, inaccurate crap is usually what's driving responses to these things. Being detained for not being able to provide ID, for instance, is routine even for local law enforcement.

    Well aware how this will sound to those partial to the types of thinking I've outlined.
  • Mikie
    7.3k
    However, It was warranted for the officer who in the course of duty was hit with a lethal weapon by a woman who refused lawful commands.AmadeusD

    Someone’s been watching Fox News.

    Nevermind— I meant to say that this description is fair and balanced, and not at all succumbing to hysteria and propaganda like all of you people are doing. How nice to hear someone with the undisputed Real Truth on these culture war issues.
  • Mikie
    7.3k
    There are numerous instance of due process violations, detaining citizens who can't provide immediate proof of citizenship, and a recent murder of a woman by an ICE agent.Relativist

    Honestly, anyone who claims the officer who killed Good was within his bounds are either emotional or playing the partisan game. He could have merely stepped out of the way; the intention wasn’t to hit him but to drive away. The consequence for panicking isn’t death. At the very least, given his history, he himself panicked.

    But listening to those pretending to be neutral while regurgitating right wing propaganda verbatim is nauseating.
  • frank
    18.8k
    and a recent murder of a woman by an ICE agent.Relativist

    Yep. The president has no commitment to rule of law.
  • AmadeusD
    4k
    You're wrong. All MSM is absolute nonsense to me. Entertaining sometimes, but otherwise useless.

    I don't understand how you can make unfounded assumptions, and then propose them without any founding, but say someone else is being partisan man.

    THe officer was hit with a lethal weapon subsequent to a citizen illegally obstructing him, refusing lawful orders, he suffered internal injuries and had recently been attacked in a similar scneario.

    I don't quite think you're seeing hte forest for the trees. I understand the emotional response - It's tough to watch and super tragic, shitty thing to have happened. No serious person would argue otherwise (note here: If you come back at me with "well, so so and said x" yeah - not a serious person. Whatever bullet needs biting, I'm hungry - plenty of responses to this event pretending it's anything other than tragic, and as if Goode was an inherently bad person or lied about hte child abuse thing have caused me to realize that person is a knobend when perhaps I previously didn't).

    But the footage and the law is clear. This is absolute bullshit for that reason. Also, the President didn't shoot her. LOL.
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