Go Pick On Someone Your Own Size

Years ago — so many years ago I think it was the FIRST Bush administration, right after he’d said something about the axis of evil — I had a phone conversation with my brother which shocked me so much that I still remember it vividly.

He was very disapproving of Bush of course. Look, no. He’s not stupid. In fact I’m the dumb bunny of my (I was going to say birth, but it’s both, really, birth and married) family. But you have to understand the “news” they get in Europe make ours sound raving right wing. Yes, even CNN. CNN international is… well, I won’t insult piles of steaming garbage. At least they’re not communist propaganda.

Anyway, he was ranting about Rush and war monging (I THINK. It’s been a while) and then he said “He’s even picking on poor, mad little North Korea.” My jaw dropped. I don’t think I ever managed to pick it up off the floor. It’s still there, metaphorically speaking.

I was a large, ungainly child. Not fat, just built like a tank. And for those who’ve met me and are staring at the page in confusion, yeah, I gained a lot of weight since the six months in bed with pre-eclampsia and repeated dances with hypothyroidism some of which took a while for the doctors to figure out. But I was not a fat child. What I was was huge. And if you’re staring at the page and going “But you are–” Yeah, well, you see, it was Portugal in the sixties. When I stopped growing, at 5’7″ I was taller than probably half the men. (I am now shorter yes. Pre-eclampsia did weird things to my joints, okay?) In all my pictures with my class or friends, from first grade on, not only do I stand a head taller than them, but I’m built on a different scale. Brick sh*thouse comes to mind. (It’s very different in Portugal now. Keep that in mind when we talk about the effects of nutrition. A lot of younger people over six feet.)

Anyway, perhaps because of my size and my being … uh… combative, dad sent me to school with a set of instructions that included “never physically fight someone smaller than you.” Dad truly didn’t understand what evil lives in the heart of little girls. Oh, not mine. Neither subtlety nor conniving were ever part of my character. I’m too ADD to plan underhanded attacks, and as for subtlety, I plain can’t be arsed and besides my face is glass fronted. Most little girls…. uh… Make use of the weapons they have. I’m trying to remember which British author said the most conniving thing in nature is a school boy. He OBVIOUSLY never hung out with school girls.

I was completely unprepared for the character shredding, undermining, “pranks” that destroyed my belongings, etc. And the solution would have made dad very worried, if he’d ever known about them which he didn’t. I couldn’t nor did I want to change my entire personality to retaliate in kind. Frankly, besides the fact that it was against my inclinations, that kind of underhanded attack struck me as something that, for lack of a better term, stains the soul. So once the mess obtruded on my consciousness (you’d really need to know me very well to know how much it takes for me to realize I’m being harassed much less who is doing it) I arranged for a moment where no one saw it, smacked the idiot once or twice and told her next time I’d wipe the floor with her. It’s REMARKABLE how that stopped the shenanigans cold. In fact it stopped them so much I aggregated a circle of friends who were also socially awkward and likely to be the target of such bullying. (Later, in the bigger schools, I also acquired a bunch of LITTLE (or handicapped) friends who were the target of PHYSICAL bullying from larger people. But they weren’t conniving. They were all Odds, bless them. I wish I had pictures. We were the most ridiculously assorted bunch.) I acquired them because being my friend, even if I never did anything (and sometimes I did) to protect them meant they could say “if you mess with me, she’ll be upset.)

However, to dad’s advice, I never picked on those smaller than myself. Actually I never picked on anyone. My basic attitude is that I very much would like to be left alone, preferably with a book and (these days) a cup of coffee. Frankly I think this attitude attracted a lot of the nonsense, but I have ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA WHY. Still don’t.

Anyway, countries of course aren’t people. The dynamic in “girl’s schools’ works though, in a weird way, only more so.

The reason my jaw dropped is that my brother seemed utterly unaware that not only was North Korea hell on Earth for its citizens (do they consent? Who knows? No, seriously. When you’re brought up in that kind of regime, you don’t even know there’s alternatives) but also a danger in the larger sphere. Turns out nuclear bombs are not that difficult to build though thank the Lord apparently near impossible to build functionally for most of the schrecklich regimes of this world. Even “little mad North Korea” can build nukes. And while reaching us with one is unlikely, reaching South Korea or much of the Asian sphere is within their means. And this is not just bad because of alliances, but because it disrupts global trade and America lives and dies by global trade. (Among our many virtues. You don’t kill people you hope to sell to. that would be stupid.)

Beyond nuclear danger though, which our own missiles might or might not deter (say, if a regime is nuts and wants to bring about the apocalypse, “we’ll nuke you back” might mean very little. Just off the top of my head.) The world is not the size it was even in World War II. Not only is travel faster, but money and propaganda flow freely.

Which are the way the weak battle the strong. See my brother’s indignation on behalf of poor little mad North Korea. Note I don’t ask him his opinion of Hamass. I’d like us to remain friends.

In that way the world and the relations between countries are a lot closer to an all girl school and anything between men. Though in our feminized age, a lot of men fall into the worst female behavior, so my guess is this is about to become a universal problem even at the interpersonal level, if it hasn’t already.

Which brings me “To what does size have to do with it?” or even relative health or capacity for war.

Sure, the US can and is wiping the floor with Iran. This is justified because Iran has killed a lot of Americans in terrorism, and I don’t put it beyond them and the current axis of evil, including Venezuela and China to have financed most of the invasion of our borders (helped, of course by the enemy within) which was a genuine and disturbing innovative way of war. “Attack by human wave, with the human wave weaponized to disrupt and hate and the host country.” (A lot of the recruiting for ‘immigration’ was via communist group membership and worse, criminal organizations.) And that stroke of genius tactic almost did for us, will probably do Europe in, and our only chance of surviving it is to keep the left out of power long enough. That is evil, diabolic, and weaponizes our compassion and generosity against us, helped by a giant dose of insidious propaganda.

So should we hit “little mad” countries. Yes. At least when they’re attacking us by various insidious means. Because as the actress said to the Bishop “what does size have to do with it?”

Sure, if the US took it upon itself to attack countries because they’re small, that would be wrong and evil. But Lichtenstein is safe from us, and I don’t see Portugal on the hit list.

Look, the more important thing is you can’t really apply the size or “many against one” thing to nations that you’d apply to people. If we did, then the allies ganging up on “poor little Germany” which was certainly mad and by LAND MASS much much smaller than the rest, would be wrong and evil and a terrible injustice.

But you see, it’s not land mass that makes a country dangerous. Or even population. It’s what they try or succeed to do to countries that just want to be left alone, and often, in fact, to their own people. (No, we’re not the world’s social worker, but there are limits. And their actions against their own people and the world are often linked. See Germany.)

Take the current hotness for terrorist mass shooters. I don’t care if the tactical armored guy with the gun intent on shooting kids in synagogue is a shrimp, and if he’s taken down by ten big footballs players who beat him to death with his own gun. He was a clear and present danger.

Anyone who pushes the “look at big country attacking little country” is selling you something. Russia invading Ukraine isn’t wrong because the Ukraine is smaller. It’s wrong because Russia’s aggression came out of nowhere (trust me on this. False flag doesn’t justify it) and is fueled by Russia’s deranged fantasies of reviving past glory. You can disagree on the causes (and you’d be wrong, but never mind) but from my perspective, size ain’t got nothing to do with it.

In the same way, the US has a lot of land mass, resources and wealth, but it’s not stomping around the world trying to destroy small lands. Anyone who tells you that is also selling you snake shoes. We are mostly, at heart, businessmen. And businessmen can’t sell to the dead.

It’s time people realized the international sphere is NOT in fact a scaled up kindergarten. And even if it were, sometimes the little kid is a stone cold psychopath, and a slap and the promise of more stop a lot of suffering before it happens. Yes, sometimes the big guy ALSO uses that as an excuse.

Which is why sane people judge individually and not generally and blinded by their prejudices.

Unfortunately sane people are rare in this world, and propaganda makes them rarer.

Keep that in mind when propaganda buffets you.

169 thoughts on “Go Pick On Someone Your Own Size

  1. Of course, sometimes we’re the Big Guy that the little guys want to slap down some guy that’s bullying them. [Twisted Grin]

    Liked by 2 people

  2. having also had a trans Atlantic childhood, my a— still burns about the citizens of what were once genuine colonial powers, complaining about what the US was doing. Lots of scars there, mostly because I didn’t do the young American abroad thing and act like a commie, or be apologetic at all. Still don’t. My sister does. They like her, they call me for advice, you decide.

    as for the press, according to the press were in a quagmire, the foreign language press is actually not as bad, though the foreign language editorial pages are … interesting. ONe often wonders if we live on the same planet. the key thing though, is that the money professionals are still trading this as a temporary interruption in oil supply and the gap between the press hysteria and the real world —market prices are the real world, everything else is bunk — is among the highest I have ever seen.

    that’s not to say everything is tickity boo, just that it’s quite normal volatility around events and certainly significantly less than it would have been had Iran popped a nuke, which is the alternative they’re all missing, whether through ignorance or not.

    Liked by 4 people

      1. And by Iran’s own admissions, they were days/weeks away from having functioning canned sunlight. Which they bragged about (and the analysts agreed about.) That was bad, but they had the temerity to add on “and we’ll use one on Israel and 5 on the Great Satan.”

        Dumbasses.

        At least we have Trump/Vance and not The Kackler/Walz.

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      2. Had Iran popped a nuke, I don’t think this internet thingy would still be working. Banks and ATMs would be nonfunctional. Anyone still alive who turned on the radio (if it would still power up) and would only hear — static. Every since the Cuban Missile crisis, one of the first things I do after a power failure is to turn on a battery operated radio to make sure it still powers up and to hear something still coming in over the air waves.

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        1. No. Just no. And please stop with the fantasy doomcasting.

          Even a multi-megaton thermonuke would only have local EMP effect if used on/over a city. And if you are close enough to -that- for EMP to be bothersome, the broken windows, heat flash, and firestorm are bigger problems.

          To use the nuke as an EMP weapon, they have to loft it way the hell up. And the USA is so big that it would take absolute minimum of four -big- weapon to significantly zorch the majority of the 48 contiguous states.

          The MadMullahs were days away from assembling a “Little Boy” “gun type” weapon, crude and no more than about 15-20kT. -Maybe- they can do a “fat man” implosion device, -maybe- with some basic boosting with tritium or lithium. So -maybe-20-50kT.

          Loft -that- and you might annoy half of Pennsylvania, You don’t wreck the USA with such relative popgun rounds.

          Once you can reliably implode a detonation, and there are tricks to -reliable-, you can develop the multistage monsters called thermonuclear weapons. You -must- test to figure some things out. That takes time, and material.

          -Israel- can be wiped out with three to five “Little boy” gun-type weapons., Israel is -tiny-.

          We are decidedly not.

          So folks, stop with the doomcasting. Yes, nuclear MadMullahs can mass murder hundreds of thousands, potentially millions. No, they cannot end the world, the USA, or even Pennsylvania. Delaware and DC? Sure.

          But that over-hyped EMP crap is just that. Worst case crap based on a Tsar Bomba at full power in exactly the right altitude and location and everyone on the ground doing exactly he wrong thing at the wrong time, and doing exactly nothing right, ever.

          Moose Marbles. Grade D horror fiction for doom gooners. Y’all are -way- to smart to be buying that beyond-global-warmdooming “EMP” stuff.

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          1. Long ago (on 20 years ago) I pondered the question of what Iran was trying for in the nuclear world in this post https://tregonsee.blogspot.com/2006/01/what-have-iranians-got.html . The follow on discusses, among other things, the thought of an EMP strike that had been proposed on the new extinct BMEWS (Barking Moonbat Early Warning System) blog. Basically the executive summary is this:

            1. Iran has been making Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU). One can either make simple gun type bombs (US Mk-1 little Boy) or use implosion methods similar to those used with Plutonium. The latter takes skill in explosive forming of materials (which Iran has in spades) but there are also some other hitches there which would take testing including likely a full up test
            2. The power of EMP is directly proportional to the initial flux of gamma radiation (and to some degree neutrons) which is roughly proportional to the size of the explosion. The classic example of EMP was the Starfish Prime test. That involved a 1.4 MT fusion device detonated at 400 mi altitude. Smaller fission weapons were tested in the South Atlantic (Argus 1-3 1.5Kt) and Pacific (Checkmate 5-7Kt) based on warheads for exoatmospheric nuclear armed interceptors. They were further from major habitation and seemed to cause little EMP at the low (<100 miles) altitude they were detonated and far lower
            3. Pure Fission weapons are limited to roughly less than 500Kt (upper limit was US Ivy King test) with anything over 100kt taking a fair bit of fiddling.
            4. Fusion weapons, even crude ones like the Sakharov layer cake design are hard to make and will take a fair bit of testing to perfect. In general the path has been to fusion and then to fusion boosted weapons likely because you need the detailed physics of the fusion which you ONLY learn through fusion experimentation as the details are closely held secrets of the fusion (US, Russia, UK, France, China, and perhaps India and Israel) countries.

            On top of that using a Nuclear weapon for an EMP strike in no way fits with Iran’s insane eschatological views. They want to start the final war so the Hidden/12th Imam comes out of hiding and initiates their version of Armageddon. An EMP is far too cold and calculating to be of interest to them, they want Tel Aviv, Washington DC, etc in flames to start the war.

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            1. That too.

              The EMP doomers get annoying because they are even further shark jumped into “exaggerated risk” than the climate doomers. Some of them jump the shark, the orca, and the blue whale into “chemtrails” territory.

              We were planning to defend the USA from ICBMs and bombers with thousands (!) of ~1MT Nike-whatsis interceptors. (“Safeguard”) We had the starter set deployed and live at one point. The interceptor warheads were optimized to throw neutrons and hard gamma/Xray rads to wreck warheads at a distance. The rads zorch the electronics and the neutrons activate some of the incoming fissile material, causing more radiological havoc and spoiling the planned earth-shattering kaboom. “oh dear….”

              (We used significant amounts of gold in the interceptor warheads for technical reasons. Which might explain the rumors of “missing” gold reserves. The gold would be neutron activated from such use, thus “hot”.)

              If one crude 20kT warhead, or even a 5MT multistage monster, could wreck everything and collapse civilization, then a few thousand 1MT rad-hard throwers? all in an afternoon? We actually built this system after the EMP tests.

              C’mon.

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              1. I see 2 missiles for the Sentinel program. There’s the Spartan a follow on to Nike-Zeus with a 5 mt W71 meant to intercept FAR out likely in the coast phase with a range of ~450 nautical miles. The other fun one is the Sprint, It had a MUCH shorter range and was meant for terminal phase intercept. It could accelerate at 100 G (!!!) and reached speeds topping mach 10, It had a low kiloton yield Enhanced Radiation Weapon (i.e. like a neutron bomb) to hopefully stop warheads just before they reached their detonation point. The USSR then pushed their number of missiles/Mirved warheads up and this brought us both to the negotiating table ultimately creating the (now defunct) ABM treaty. the USSR sis build one Galosh (Nato code name) site to protect Moscow and we built a Sentinel site with Spartan’s to protect the Minuteman missile fields

                I remember making a model as a kid (5th or 6th grade) that had all sorts of missiles up to Titan, Atlas and other missiles in scale and included Nike Hercules, Nike Zeus and Spartan. It must have been like 1:120 scale as even the monster Titan II(103′) was less than a foot long and some like the sidewinder were delicate and a royal pain to paint and get the decals on (Found it it was 1:128 scale, made today by Atlantis Models, who I think bought up lots of the 60’s molds)

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          2. Now do Europe … a 1 or 2 nuke EMP could easily take out the entire EU … the US would be in a hurt locker … an Iran could deliver those over Europe …

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            1. They’re not that small.

              The Soviet claimed theoretical highest output for their biggest bomb was 100kt, which gives a 250m radius for EMP; that isn’t even big enough to take out all of the United Kingdom.

              Use that calculator I linked (just below here, on the page) and this radius map. And remember this is stuff where it’s if it had nothing go wrong to reduce output.

              https://www.calcmaps.com/map-radius/

              Liked by 1 person

          3. Plus, a lot of the really important equipment isn’t as subject to EMP damage as one might think. Most vehicles and personal computers would probably be toast if they’re in the zone; they have no protection whatsoever. But the digital relays that control the power grid, for instance, are hardened against EMPs (there are standards that have been in place for decades by now) and can react within milliseconds to isolate other equipment from dangerous surges and prevent cascading outages. A worst-case EMP could cause plenty of disruption and damage, but it wouldn’t be a national or even regional kill shot by any means.

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          4. As I recall from my Physics of Modern Weapons Systems class, one 2 MT warhead exploded 100 mi above Omaha would generate enough EMP to take out the continental 48.

            No, Iran has/had nowhere near the capability to produce a 2 MT yield. Only a couple countries do. But EMP is nothing to take lightly.

            Liked by 1 person

        2. Here’s a calculator that’s useful for worst-case checking.

          https://calculator.academy/emp-radius-calculator/

          Worst case, because it doesn’t include ANY of the mitigating factors, it assumes the absolute perfect situation.

          To get a 500 mile radius– which I picked out of the air because that’s what we use for “a long day of travel” with the kids– it would take a bomb some six times larger than the biggest ever designed. (more than three times what the Soviets claimed they could get out of it)

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          1. I believe that is a surface / airburst calculator. A widespread EMP calculator should use both yield and altitude.

            The effect is from a shock front of hard radiation slamming into atmosphere. A tropospheric burst cant get the running front, as it is immediately in contact. The space version has no air to soak up the yield, or convert to work, so the whole wretched mess has a long running jump before it hits enough air to trigger the zorch formation.

            Trying to recall the conversation (like 30+ years ago), but it is like three or four orders of magnitude worse if it goes off in vacuum then hits atmosphere after a long run. Which is why a 5MT on a Titan II fired to 400km would do a job on a biggish area of eastern Russia, whereas the same weapon airbursting Pittsburgh wouldn’t zorch computers in Erie, PA.

            The Russian fossil-tech of vacuum tubes in the 1980s was amazingly resistant to EMP, so too funny.

            Liked by 1 person

        3. Nah. You’re falling for the people who tried to scare us with Nuclear Winter. The internet might be noisy and slow, but ONE nuke wouldn’t be enough to stop it. or even five.

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  3. Acts of waging war, and methods by which war is waged are potentially independent factors in estimating if this or that nation state actor is a problem for other nation state actors.

    The norms of warfare, and of other lesser elements of intercultural communication, are ultimately slightly dependent on shared values and very much a contract enforced by reprisal. (Norms of warfare is a contract negotiated by warfare, and enforced by reprisal. Reprisal is a special kind of warfare.)

    Nukes and germs, basically, are a little relevant to methods.

    Fundamentally, international travel, and border enforcement without flamethrowers, are a little incompatible with widespread germ warfare.

    What you do not punish you get more of, when it comes to cultural mixtures. In particular, to cultural mixtures like the so called international community.

    When US feds and the PRC collaborated to do research they should not have done? For the US, that became a yet to be addressed internal security problem. For the ChiComs, it was a Tuesday.

    I don’t have anything new to say in conclusion, or tying back to the broader context, or to the specific context. The circle trigon members of the aggressor nation (EU), can take their minitru whingings and get stuffed.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. And this our Constitution enables the issuance of “Letters of Marque and (Letters of) Reprisal” Generally, commerce raiding at sea and various raiding nastiness on land.

      If they were ineffective, our opponents and detractors would not go to such length to convince us to abandon them.

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  4. Listening to the bearded monkeys talk about Epstein island-and their lefty enablers gleefully repeating what they say is equally draw dropping. The founding bearded monkey left detailed explicit rules for how to rape little girls, which I post on their pages at every opportunity. America has a splinter in its eye it publicly acknowledges and tries to fix, while the bearded monkeys have a beam that they brag about.

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    1. I really have to throw the flag on this play. You should not be slurring an entire population like that, due to the misbehavior of a few bad Monkeys.

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      1. I like to stipulate that the insult term “bearded monkeys” I’m fond of comes from author Khaled Hosseini (a true wordsmith of the highest order), specifically his novel the Kite Runner, and it doesn’t apply to all Iranians, or even all Middle Easterners, merely the fanatical assholes, who quite rightly hated by their non fanatical neighbors more than anyone else, largely because they have to live with them. My personal experience with Iranians has been largely positive. They are intelligent and civilized people rightly proud of their culture and history. A lot of them-even the ones officially Muslim-have an even worse slur for the fanatics: “Lizard Eaters” which come from the lament of a Persian King in the Epic National poem of Iran the Shahnameh (Book of Kings) “Damn this fate, that uncivilized lizard eating Arabs have come to make me Muslim.”

        I hope and pray fervently they can free themselves from the pedophilia barbarism that was forced upon them at sword point in the tenth century, and if we can help, all the better.

        Liked by 3 people

            1. And there are rumors the current candidate is gay, which is why he wasn’t in the public eye much. Also severely injured and about as compos mentis as Biden. Hmm.

              Then the anti-semites are desperately trying to claim Bibi is also hors de combat and no doubt they’d try for Trump being senile.

              *Sigh.*

              Liked by 1 person

              1. “You see, it’s the slow knife… the knife that takes its time, the knife that waits years without forgetting, then slips quietly between the bones”

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  5. Size of the Evil must be considered. Sometimes the real whirling b(#####)ds are short. The Law may call it “disparity of force”, and no Judge is likely to accept “He really needed whoopin”.

    If you are quick, you can get away with tempting the first punch, which never quite lands. Just be prepared for the other guy to be faster than you thought. As Mr. Tyson said “Everyone has a plan until they get hit in the mouth.”

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  6. I spent a year watching the Korean DMZ and points North in the 80s . There were still lots of scars, physically on the countryside and mentally in the ROKs I served with who had family alive the first time the poor widdle Kims came South.

    Even today, the NORKs maintain an army of 1 Million troops, more than the ROK and the US Army (worldwide) combined. (Less than 30,000 US troops actually stationed there, down quite a bit from when I was stationed there)

    And use I Remember the Pueblo, and the 31 men on the EC-121 BEGGAR SHADOW aircraft.

    My sympathy for the regime of the DPRK is distinctly limited.

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  7. Darlin’s daughter unfortunately inherited her body type from me.

    When she move from private school to the public high school, she too collected a group of friends that had previously been bullied. Previously. She would sometimes go actively looking for bullies to explain to them the error of their ways.

    As for the mean girls. None ever showed up to proposed “meetings” after school once she explained she had her (at that time) green belt and had training from her dad, so she used kicks and punches, not scratching and hair pulling.

    (Yes I’m bragging. Deal)

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    1. My dear departed sister fought a straight-up duel with some chick who badly misjudged her own Karate skillset. (Decent, probably brown belt, from what I observed.)

      Sis was a -brawler-, with a high threshold of pain, and no fear. Plus could give “focus your rage” lesson to Sith or Hulk. Also 5’6 and about 160 or so. -big- solid girl even at 16.

      The Karate Kiddo and sis traded minor blows for a few seconds, then KK threw a beautifully done lunge punch and broke Sis’ nose. CRAK! Sis stepped one step back reached up, tugged her squashed nose back in place, stepped forward and started throwing roundhouse punches. Each one produced an audible “thud” and moved the chick about 2 feet. (Sis was swim team for a few years.)

      It was a slaughter. Chick couldn’t hit hard enough to make sis flinch, not even several other well thrown punches. But I noticed sis wasn’t putting the chick down. No head shots beyond some open hand palm slap/strikes that were more humiliation than hits.

      Yup. Sis wanted to keep beating her, so was pulling punches and going for the body. Worked her over bad. Then, Second Chick jumped sis from behind, like a monkey on mama. Sis ignored her flailing and kept pounding Karate Kiddo. I stepped in just long enough to peel off chick2 and set her down on the ground in a slow “throw” with no damage and a “no no no” finger wave. (think the T2 scene )

      Finally someone called cops and the approaching siren caused the fight to stop. We disengaged and began to withdraw.

      I then had to deal with four “gents” who objected to me putting C2 on her ass. (gently! Zero damage.) For some reason, the “gents” were not -quite- willing to get fisty with me, so we discussed “fair fight” rules briefly, and I managed to shame them (!) as they realized A) I was right, and B) they were unwilling to attack me. (heh)

      Doc fixed her nose with minimal work. “Better than original” sis claimed. -No one- ever hit sis again at that school. I was told Karate Kiddo was out for a week.

      Later, sis became rather adept at SCA stick and board fighting. (heh)

      Good times, good times.

      Liked by 6 people

      1. “Chick couldn’t hit hard enough to make sis flinch, not even several other well thrown punches”

        Last time I was in a karate class (Shorin-Ryu) I was a beginner – in that style. At 5’10” and over 200# (not all-fat but not at all in shape) short of a kick to the head almost no other student could do anything significant, so I told them to go full power, not be-nice-to-your-training-partner. Mostly teenagers. Sensei Ron of course, being my size, in good shape, and waaaay better than me, was another story. Rokku-dan? something like that.

        (Start that early if you can – Ron’s son, about 6, couldn’t hurt anyone, but darn his forms were slick! )

        Was it Fritz Lieber who opined ‘A good big man will beat a good little man almost every time’?

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        1. “The race not always to the swift, the battle not always to the strong. But that’s the way to bet.”

          Which is why “never frighten a little man. He’ll kill you.” Because he knows he only has a second or two to Solve The Problem.

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          1. Which is why, as a fairly large dude with (I’ve been told) an intimidating mein, I figure anybody that wants to push a fight with me has to be treated as truly dangerous, and that goes double for the little guys.

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            1. Old story: Dan Blocker (Hoss Cartwright on the TV show Bonanza) was a big guy, and often was challenged to fight. He’d sometimes reply ‘OK, you start fighting. But if I find out about it …’

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        2. All you need is one watch of the video of Schwarzenegger getting kicked in the back (and not really even noticing) to realize how true that statement is about the big man and the little man.

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          1. Now, kick a big man in the back -of the head- and its a whole ‘nother game.

            Of course, it is -dang- hard to do -that- unless you (or someoen else) have already taken him down somewhat. (grin)

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        1. for those not familiar ‐ many SCA fighters are all about “killing” your friends all day — and doing massive bruises-received comparisons while drinking with same friends around the fire that night!

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            1. They just need to avoid the rhino hides. Mind you, that problem is probably self-correcting to a degree. I don’t know if the knight who used to refuse to take blows unless he threw up in his helmet survived to retirement age with any brain cells to rub together.

              I’m sorry to say the knight responsible for bringing my beloved and I together has cancer and is a shadow of his former self. Good guy.

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            1. 🤘 Went into the pit a time or two just to say I’d done it, but the moshing life is not for me. Too hard to groove with the music when people are elbowing you in the kidney and trying to knock you down. Controlling the edge of the pit can be fun for a while, though, and as a Size Large Human, it’s a valuable service I can provide. :) There’s usually a handful of small people that gather in my shadow; they stand just far enough back to see over my shoulder, and get to be closer to the stage without getting knocked around.

              One of my favorite memories of such was when suddenly I realized nobody had so much as bumped into me for a couple minutes. Looking around, I realized that the mosh pit had shifted location while I was grooving, and I had become the little guy in somebody else’s shadow — my son, who is basically a giant, was now on the edge of the pit, and nobody wanted to irritate the enormous blond Viking. (Funny thing, as peaceful as I am, he’s even more so; if the bumping and jostling became inconvenient, he’d just leave.)

              I’ll tell you who really has my respect, is that one girl you tend to see every so often…five foot-nothing, 90 pounds, ricocheting around the pit like a demented pinball, comes out only for a mid-show hydration break, then right back at it. That’s the kind of toughness I ain’t got, and I don’t mind admitting it.

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    2. I’m 5’8″, but due to a few proportional mismatches I read as taller. The funny part is that I have never, not once, been in a physical fight. I suspect a lot of it is physical stance and a good case of RBF—people are more scared of me than is warranted by my actual nature.

      I also suspect there’s a little bit of “I will not mess around” that comes through, which is true. No, I don’t want to hurt you. But if I have to, I will do everything I can to make sure you don’t hurt me… and I think maybe people notice that.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. I’m only 5’5. and average build – not the least athletic, but amazingly, the only real bullying I got in middle school was the social kind – the mean girls playing social-exclusion games. Which after the 8th grade had no effect on me, because I walked away from their stupid games and ignored them. In high school, I did get physically threatened a couple of times, by the tough girl element, but I suppose I had the RBF element going for me too. Threats to beat me up after school outside of the campus were never delivered on. I guess it was because I had been in some of the same classes as the tough girl element, and had some friends among them. I helped them out, academically, when I got assigned to regular classes by mistake (not the honors and AE classes that I was usually assigned to) and I guess they figured that anyone who effortlessly pulled down As and Bs was in league with dark powers, and was not to be messed with.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. I’ve mentioned two of our son’s run-ins with bullies.

          First one, racist white kid was badmouthing one of the few black kids in the school behind his back. Son told him, “Shut up or I’ll give you a fat lip.” Kid didn’t shut up. Son provided fat lip. Teacher in the next class asked how kid got the fat lip, which wound up with our son and my beloved in the princpal’s office. Principal and assistant explained about the school’s “zero tolerance,” policy and asked son how he felt. Son replied, “He was talking racist trash, so I hit him. He talks it again, I’ll hit him again.”

          That won him a five-day suspension, for “showing no remorse.”

          Flash forward a year, with a new (female) principal. Bully in son’s class is tormenting a “special needs,” kid. Son’s friends noted that as he was below 18, if he got in trouble it would be expunged and suggested he handle the bully on behalf of the group.

          The principal “accidentally,” bumped into him and asked what was going on. Son told her about the bullying. Her response was, “(Redacted), you kinow we have a zero-tolderance policy on school violence. If something were to happen to the bully on campus, we would have to take notice. However, if something happened to the bully in the gas station parking lot across the street…”

          The bully heard about it and suddenly lost all interest n tormenting his victim. Win-win all around…

          Liked by 4 people

          1. These days being off campus doesn’t matter. Wrong on all kinds of ways. But still happens.

            Never had to follow through on it, but we (hubby) told our son that “Don’t start anything. You are allowed to finish it.” Only one instance came close. He walked “between” a bully and his victim, “accidentally”. When called to the front office his response was “What? I was just walking to my locker.”

            Liked by 2 people

            1. My high school buddy “Kraut” beat the snot out of someone who kept up the “band fag” routine at K a leetle too much. K baited the first punch, let it “land” just a bit, then went to work. “Mouth” was wrecked.

              Got a ten day suspension. When Papa K came to collect K, the Principal started a lecture. Herr K, from the old country, and a vet, said “Shut up. I vant to know only vun thing. (to K) Son, did you vin?” “Yes papa.” “Goot. Ve go.” and he took his son to lunch, the talked, and he gave him his first cigar.

              Family Honor was upheld.

              Herr K was one scary Mike Foxtrot. Vet from Germany. Face scar from a blade cut. Hints of Waffen, not Wehrmacht service. Quietly going native here in the USA, but very old school.

              I have family from Prussia, so I recognize the type. Lol.

              Liked by 2 people

  8. “…if a regime is nuts and wants to bring about the apocalypse, “we’ll nuke you back” might mean very little. Just off the top of my head.”

    And we all know, or should, that’s exactly the goal of the ruling Iranian sect hoping to bring about the return of the Mahdi.

    Liked by 4 people

    1. They might think twice if we were to suggest that we would nuke Mecca & Medina…..but then again, this is a cult built on martyrdom, so……scratch that idea…..for now.

      Liked by 3 people

      1. Or.

        “OK. So you say. We will refrain from any apocalyptic canned sunshine events. We will just use thousands of smart bombs, drones, and even “ginsu missiles” to kill the mullah-ocracy and adjacent family and friends. Eventually, someone sane will be in charge, sign the peace deal, and we Americans will go back to arguing American politics, versus annihilating all your expensive impotent useless war-toys and more useless impotent mullahs. You mullah-morons will all die ignobly and uselessly, to no purpose. Explain that to your new landlord while screaming about the heat.”

        Liked by 6 people

        1. Not so much the types of destruction (conventional HE vs nukes), but the idea of destroying The Ultra Sacred Shrines of Mecca & Medina. SOOOOO sacred that no western unbelievers are allowed within city limits of either one (ask me how I know).

          I’d almost try to compare it to destroying the Vatican for Catholics, or the Latter Day Saints Temple in SLC…..but comparing the reactions of these two Christian based religions to the reactions of muzzies………well, there is no comparison.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Why go out of our way to piss off three quarters of a billion people, when all we need to do is take down a few thousand mullahs of an annoying side-sect? Much of the 3/4B would quietly thank us for ridding them of the annoyance.

            Don’t give -those- p-word madmullahs the satisfaction.

            And we can save your method for a more general conflict.

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      2. They might not care; remember that Mecca & Medina are in Saudi Arabia, and are controlled by the wrong kind of Muslims.

        It occurs to me it would be interesting to compare the Sunni – Shia conflict with the Catholic – Reformed conflict of the 1500s, when the Inquisition ran rampant across parts of Europe and Holland fought an 80 year war to be rid of them.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. It still sort of matters. All faithful followers of Islam are required to visit Mecca at least once in their lifetime. If Mecca (and the rock that’s essentially the faith’s super-relic) are wiped from existence, that could be an issue.

          Though rebuilding on the rubble isn’t out of the question, I suppose. Pilgrims could still visit. But there’s still the issue of the stone that would no longer be there. I’m not sure what effect that might have.

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          1. You didn’t mention how radioactive the rubble of Mecca would be and how long that would persist. Visiting once in a lifetime might even continue, with proviso that any hajj would be the very last thing any hajji would do in his lifetime.

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            1. They never set the specific distance to the stone, right? They could circle it at a safe distance.

              Convincing most of them to walk their gonads through a fallout zone, repeatedly, would likely make some folks giggle.

              Liked by 1 person

            2. For how long? As has been noted in the comments here in the past, Hiroshima and Nagasaki aren’t exactly irradiated wastelands these days. A modern nuke would be more powerful, and presumably release more radiation. But it’ll still fade over time.

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Depends.

                A multistage weapon, with the U238 jacket, makes a big bang and very much fallout. the majority of yield is the fast-fission of the jacket via the Fusion neutron flux. U328>Pu239>kaboom. Note the fission products of Pu239 are … nasty, and persistent. And you get quite a bit of un-fizzed Pu, which salts the earth in a way that Rome would weep to inflict on Carthage. (24kYear half life. ouch) Way more than “Fat Man”. Plus the scooped up dirt and debris doped with the stuff.

                Now, surface burst that pig and you excavate a big crater for even more fallout. egads its a perma-killer. (We almost did that to Goldsboro NC. Oops-dropped a big one in 1961. A single switch stopped the firing sequence. We would still be avoiding the dead zone…)

                Keep in mind what we intended to do was dig up the silos in Russia with the things. And they ours. Ick.

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              1. Ditto the land around Chernobyl. Granted, that was a different sort of fallout, and not deliberate in the sense that weapons are, but “ZOMG mutant rats, EOTWAWKI” just did not happen.

                Liked by 2 people

          2. Ironically enough, all the construction of stuff to house pilgrims is — not turning up any archeological evidence of the great city that Islam claims that Mecca was.

            Liked by 1 person

      3. That’s a hard one. Depending on the sub-group of Sunni, Shia, or “only they know and no one else claims them,” Mecca might be needed intact for the Last Battle. (In at least two Muslim “end Times” stories, the faithful and the Mahdi fall back to Mecca for the last glorious stand just before Issa Bin Maryam returns and all the unbelievers go straight to the fires of Jehanna and so on and so forth. )

        And someone would probably flatten Tel Aviv and possibly Jerusalem in paybacks, try for NYC and LA, too. So yeah, M and M are not the greatest of targets.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. I basically feel that enthusiastic talk of targeting may not be warranted today, as we may have won, and there may be spot of realignment with our allies and enemies in the mid east.

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          1. Yes. Never say or do anything that physically OR psychologically punishes an opponent for cooperating.

            I hope Our Man with the famously incontinent foresphincter refrains from crowing about “backing down” or “caving in” when (and if) that happens. I sure wouldn’t bet on it, though.

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            1. Good point. Try to leave an “honorable foe” an honorable way out to not embarrass them too much. Key word here is “honorable”. Don’t rub their face in their defeat.

              Now, if the enemy is a bunch of “rats” (I’ll refrain from stronger language so as to not have Our Gracious Hostess get too red), then take them to the ground and bury them deep. If they’ve proven themselves to be “rats”, then they’ll most likely regroup, rearm, and stab yo as soon as your back is turned.

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              1. “Try to leave an “honorable foe” an honorable way out”

                Classic Art of War advice:

                “When you surround an army, leave an outlet free. Do not press a desperate foe too hard.”

                (Yes, I had to look it up – I remembered it existed but not precisely where.)

                There might occasionally be honor among thieves; I’ve not heard of much honor among rats.

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                1. TY for the reminder. I knew I’d heard/read the basic concept somewhere, I’d forgotten that it was in The Art of War.

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            2. Note the Orange One’s frequent praise of Iranian ordinary folks, versus their mullahs.

              I have no doubt the man is familiar with and acts upon Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War”. Heck, note his book title “the Art of the Deal”.

              Did everyone not see that?

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          2. May be….But following the “carrot and stick” school of motivation, You can suggest that as long as they behave we won’t make their “Holy of Holies” into rubble.

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            1. “make their “Holy of Holies” into rubble” Is there anything in the Quran that states the Holy of Holies still has to be in a single piece? I can easily imagine future true believers going to Mecca visiting a deep black hole in a field of black rubble and then dying within a few hours from radiation exposure.

              Liked by 1 person

  9. It’s true that we live by global trade. But one of Peter Zeihan’s points is that if global trade collapses overnight, the US will likely be the only country that doesn’t flirt with death. Yeah, it’d be hard as we got a bunch of industries stood back up, and told the enviro paper shufflers where they can stick their court summons. But we’d pull out of it okay in the end.

    Everyone else?

    Well, if we weren’t directly supporting them, they’d be in deep, deep trouble.

    Liked by 2 people

      1. Oh, absolutely (no matter how tempting watching the enviros get smacked down in favor of saving the country). Plus, we would be forced to watch the collapse of the rest of the world from afar. Americans would hate that.

        Liked by 2 people

        1. It occurred to me after I posted the above, but I should probably also note that the ones who are the most hell-bent on trying to wreck the global trade system are also, in many cases, the ones who would crash the hardest if it were to collapse. For example, China is happily attempting to kick out the pillars that make it work even though China is also one of the countries most heavily reliant on it, as it ships in food and raw materials, and ships out (or more accurately these days *tries to*) finished products to other parts of the world. Kick out the pillars that support global trade, and that all collapses.

          Liked by 1 person

        1. $5/gal is well in the rear view mirror out here, last seen by me on the day before the latest gas tax increase deferral failed to be renewed (yeah), so we got +$0.18 taxes on 1 March, which was right before the Persian festivities related increases hit as well. My local Chevron sign read $5.89 for regular this morning.

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          1. Actually on second thought it was before that – I think the fillup I am thinking of included a $0.10 Safeway club discount at the pump that dropped my purchase to $4.99/gal.

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          2. List price for regular in Very southern Oregon was $4.19.9/gallon. Was glad I could take the 40 cents/gallon gas discount from the Fred Meyer. They did 4X fuel points for February & March at the local store, because a whacking great WinCo opened up next door. Haven’t been in the new store yet, but I gather it got a lot of people from Albertsons/Safeway and the Fred Meyer (Kroger). It’s still settling down for customer preference.

            Not sure where our gasoline actually comes from, but we get to pay some measure of Left Coast insanity.

            Liked by 1 person

            1. 4x February & March entire month must be just specific FM’s. Our area isn’t having anything other than 4x Friday, or specialty categories (prepaid cards, clothing, electronics). Which is normal. They did have long weekend 4x (Thurs–Sunday) this last weekend. It is nice to get up to $1 off, once or twice a month.

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          3. Last time I tanked up, it was $5.19 at Costco, but it was also the People’s Republic of California (“Gas companies are gouging people!” NO, California is pretty much an island, we either make our own gas or import it at huge cost due to the Jones Act, we have a special blend for every month of the year it seems like, and Gavin Newscum seems intent on killing any industry that might actually do something in the state).

            Liked by 2 people

            1. And having suddenly noticed that the EVs they’ve been so heavily encouraging don’t pay any gas taxes yet still run on California roads, there’s a proposal to add an annual mileage tax for every vehicle registered in the state (not just EVs) so they can collect more than the existing gas tax 2025 revenue of SEVEN POINT NINE BILLION DOLLARS (Dr. Evil laugh).

              Betcha Sacramento forgets to eliminate the existing gas taxes if they do implement the mileage tax…

              Liked by 1 person

                1. It’s political poison enough that they’d been “studying” a mileage tax for a decade, and just voted to extend the funding for that “study” through 2035.

                  Assuming they really do need a bunch more billions of dollars to “fix” the eternally crappy California roads, the correct way to do it is either just gather those taxes from the annual registration fee and take the heat, or if it has to be use-indexed, the one thing that is automatically indexed to road use would be a tire tax.

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  10. Though in our feminized age, a lot of men fall into the worst female behavior, so my guess is this is about to become a universal problem even at the interpersonal level, if it hasn’t already.

    Post-Christian is probably more accurate.

    The “you’re not allowed to respond to my abuse” is a classic favorite of most human cultures, even though the “everyone has a right to their innate dignity as a human being” is objectively more successful.

    It can be observed that it’s not about actual power by looking at the knots they’ll tie themselves into so they can justify a, say, rich black celeb who went to expensive schools his whole life is “disadvantaged,” but a pregnant nurse that just got off her shift and was assaulted by thugs over a rental bike is “privileged.”

    Liked by 5 people

    1. Objectively more successful, but it takes longer, and more individual investment and committment to morals.

      If you’re only out for yourself and/or your tribe, it makes shorter-term sense to head for the top position and then say no one can challenge your behavior. See, for example, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who rose from a lowly soldier to shogun and then decreed no one else was going to get that chance, taking all the weapons away from non-samurai.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Classic ‘pull the ladder up behind you’– come to think of it, matches how communist revolutions tend to purge their useful local tools, too. Betray once, might betray again, are a threat.

        It also tends to result in enough surplus that folks can indulge– for some time at least– raider behavior.

        So the looters can fancy themselves super-duper smart, because they don’t follow the rules.

        Then when it stops working, it’s “bad luck”.

        Liked by 2 people

        1. Yep. This.

          Was doing a bit more research on Genghis Khan since I stumbled on a book I hadn’t seen before. Reconfirmed, the guy was objectively evil. I did not know about the time he apparently gave orders to his men they were each to kill 300 of the enemy and if they came up short he would execute them.

          Yeah. You want inspiration for an Evil Overlord, he’s right there….

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                1. Amused Given much of my background is a mishmash of Celtic and other oddities, very likely!

                  Celtic I have Irish, Scots, Welsh, Scots-Irish – yes that’s a separate category – and a bunch of Nobody Knows For Sure. Unfortunately I inherited the dratted probably-Norwegian skin type from a different ancestral line instead of any of those Celtic ones. Meaning swimming pools eat my feet – yes, as seen in that CSI ep with poor Greg. It be ow.

                  Liked by 1 person

                  1. Same.

                    Both.

                    Written VS verbal. Meetings were hell on earth, usually.

                    Scouts, all levels, were not a problem, but they are designed not to be boring for (now) 5 to 21-year-old (Cubs, Scouts, Venture/Explorer), boys, and now girls. Meetings were designed for those who need to keep moving (upper two are led by the “youth” themselves).

                    Heritage. Not sure about the Scots-Irish, but wouldn’t surprise me. Definitely English, Scots (recent not that far back either), with some French Jew, and who knows whatever. This is just the maternal and paternal grandmother lines. I don’t know what all paternal line through paternal grandfather adds, as only one survivor past 1959, and she never said.

                    Liked by 2 people

              1. I understand. I listen to podcasts while driving or cleaning house. I was an early adopter of podcasts, because the radio landscape was so stultifying at the time I was driving my children about town.

                Liked by 1 person

                1. The way my brain works I generally have to work to pick out human voices. I’ll hear other noises much farther away, I can be driven to distraction by sounds like a running fan other people easily tune out, but people talking doesn’t get my attention as fast as it does most people. So listening to a lecture, or podcast, or even the radio, is a deliberate thing.

                  Heck, if I find a vid on YT where someone’s discussing interesting politcs I usually put on the Transcript and read through that rather than listen to it! It’s faster and takes less effort from my brain.

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                  1. “vid on YT where someone’s discussing interesting politics I usually put on the Transcript and read through that rather than listen to it! It’s faster and takes less effort from my brain.

                    Same. Any topic. Any story.

                    I’d be a horrible jury member.

                    Part of the problem is not only the distractions, being talked at makes me zone out, eventually. Lectures were hell. I eventually learned to cope and deal. But never quite 100% translated that into office meetings. Luckily, because of departments were I worked, meetings weren’t very often. Especially the last 12 years.

                    Liked by 2 people

        1. Agreed.

          Heh. Same line of thinking that denies NINA ever happened, Irish were “white” and couldn’t be discriminated against ever…. etc., etc., too many other examples in history to count.

          But the “Holocaust survivors are white privileged” is indeed a special level of “were you hit in the head as a child?” level of reasoning.

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  11. Neil Smith’s “non-aggression principle” is a great phrase to summarize the things you talked about. Or “don’t start nothing”. Or “FAFO”. In all these, the crucial question is “who started it?”

    Those girl punks you straighted out in school started it, and they Found Out. Likewise, Iran started it (47 years ago and ongoing ever since) and, finally at long last, Found Out.

    Liked by 3 people

  12. Then later–gratitude having the half life of one of the more ephemeral items on the Table of Elements–we are the Bad Guys who pick on everybody and should be thrown out of the alliances we created and funded for decades.

    Liked by 3 people

  13. I just wanted to be left the heck alone to be my slothful, nerdy self. I was not given that option, because I refused to stop being my slothful, nerdy self. Twice I had people stand up for me, and once I got clobbered harder later. It wasn’t until the ROTC commander put out the word during my senior year that I was no longer fair game, and the school admins realized I was bringing glory to the administration, that I was left alone.

    No wonder 1) I’m more than a little strange and 2) I fight hard and dirty, now that I can. So size has nothing to do with being the “victim” or “aggressor.” Attitude, and deeds, those are the determining factors.

    Liked by 2 people

        1. Me three.

          Though, being short of height and reach, I’d arrange for the beating to take place near where the sisters (yay, catholic schools!) were eating lunch. Only happened twice.

          Liked by 1 person

    1. True, there are those who Just Can’t Tolerate someone who doesn’t give them whatever reward they’re trying to get, be it Obedience, Attention, Fear… whatever they’re after, anyone withholding it is A Problem.

      But I think it’s deeper than that. Even the non-sociopaths have the monkey instinct to enforce Group Solidarity–aka Conformity. A Solitary Someone is not only failing to Conform, but also not Contributing to whatever group project the rest of them are engaged in.

      Men get a little bit more leeway on that–not a lot–because the go-along-to-get-along trait isn’t as useful to them in a Conquered Culture situation. The conquerors are probably gonna slaughter them, regardless.

      But cooperative women and children–especially girls–are much more likely to survive. The only ones likely to get culled are the troublemakers who Stand Out.

      And, because drawing hostile attention from the New Bosses may entail Collateral Casualties, the wimmen tend to get pro-active about bullying the Conspicuous back into line.

      It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies and nosers-out of unorthodoxy…

      Liked by 2 people

  14. The only times I got any peace through the end of high school were the times I fought back. 3 times, total. The individuals in question never bothered me again, but their friends continued unabated. Since high school, no one has bothered me.

    I’ve been told I move like I’m hunting. Some time in my mid twenties I figured out how to move in a way that makes the predators veer off and go elsewhere. It’s not conscious. I’m still not sure exactly what the difference is. I just know it works.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Situational awareness, stepping with certainty, quiet footsteps. Slight forward lean, center of gravity rock-solid. Also good if they’ve ever seen you move fast successfully (such as a dodge or an unexpected catch.) It all adds up to Not A Target, sometimes even Will Hit Back And Do It Better.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Huh. Interesting. The timing is right. This is about when I got into both dance and karate (same set of skills) and I had to learn to walk loudly to avoid startling co-workers. Situational awareness was survival.

        Liked by 1 person

  15. In other news, Paul Ehrlich has shuffled off this mortal coil. Aside from reposted obituaries, not one word on my Twitter feed is positive. looking at what’s being said, the man just plain hated people (including, presumably, himself).

    Liked by 2 people

      1. …Yes, I’m still bitter. That book was used as justification to ruin a great deal of my and my siblings’ lives. Granted, knowing my parents, they would have found other reasons, but “You should never get married or even think about it, no one should have children,” was incredibly toxic to… well, just about everything when it came to trying to figure out how to live with people.

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      2. Comprehensive take down may be hard, as I think uncertainty in estimating today’s population and today’s calorie averages may only arrive at the level of weak evidence, that is not truly conclusive.

        Liked by 1 person

      1. How much did he do to help mainstream abortion? Millions and millions of unborn children, waiting…

        (Story a few years ago of a former abortionist who repented and became a pro-life activist after a vision of a field of many, many children and being told they were the kids who never had a chance to live because of him).

        Liked by 2 people

  16. It’s quite easy to call the bigger man the bully. Size is obvious. As is physical strength. Metaphorically speaking, we have both in spades. Any fool can calculate strength, as they say.

    What was done to Maduro was a capability that existed, more or less, in some form or fashion, for longer than just the last month or two. You may have heard things like glass this place or nook ’em till they glow. Those things are still possible. And we haven’t done them yet because we’re not bloody fools. Not out of fear. Because it’d be wasteful and we like making money, as some wise person might’ve said recently.

    For a long, long time we’ve put up with overinflated egos out in the world talking down America and taking what they please from us. All without but a token resistance, when it wasn’t active abetting from traitors within. And we allowed it because those in power were weak, corrupt, and, to put it frankly, not the brightest bulbs on the Christmas tree.

    As a nation and militarily, we are strong. But that strength is not clumsy and imprecise unless directed so by utter fools at the top (to include the five sided edifice of fvckery). Very few truly understand just how precise that strength can be when applied with skill. Other nations often judge us on what they would do in our place- but only with the capabilities their limited understanding allows.

    When they speak of us it is always filtered through this same clouded lens. Skilled manipulators and propagandists they may well be- I can grant them that. But that is a hollow strength not backed by the same level of sophistication and capacity that we alone of all the world wield.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The reason there’s not “a glassy place where Afghanistan used to be” post-9/11 was self restraint. There’s nothing anywhere in the imaginary corpus of “international law” where it says either “attacked nations have to stand there and take it” or “attacked nations have to use proportional response as determined by foreigners.”

      There were brief flashes of awareness of this potential right after 9/11 in public statements and diplomatic-breath-holding around the world, but that faded fast. There are some corners of the globe, however, where this was never leared.

      Doing a “make rubble bounce harder” every few decades is useful in spreading this concept.

      Liked by 2 people

  17. ”Go pick on someone your own size” also definitionally prevents any and all “collective action” interventions which the early UN was supposed to use to be the world peace police, as by definition the UN would be bigger than any one country.

    This, however, is likely not what the one world government folks objecting to military actions in the national interests of the US had in mind.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I’m reminded of the classic Calvin and Hobbes strip where Calvin asks Moe why the bully doesn’t pick on someone his own size. The bully responds “They’d hit back”.

      Liked by 1 person

  18. “See my brother’s indignation on behalf of poor little mad North Korea.”

    I was thinking about this, and about advertising this morning. “Poor mad little North Korea” isn’t the most insane thing I’ve heard lately. It’s a fairly common thought process in this deluded country of mine. America is “big”, and Canada is “smaller” but plucky, so they better watch it!

    #CarkMarney won a whole election on the strength of that. Elbows up, right? And he won it after TEN YEARS of disastrous madness from the #Lieberals that among other things made Canada a net-importer of electricity. (I’m assuming for the sake of argument the election was proper. In truth I have questions about that.)

    This “big guy vs. small guy” formulation falls apart -instantly- when you pull your head out of your nether regions and THINK for two seconds about it. Really, it is among the most feeble of rhetorical devices. BUT NO ONE EVER DOES THAT. No one seems to ever say to themselves “wait a second, this is f-ing stupidity.”

    Because everything we see, hear, read, reinforces the rhetorical device. Big bad America is pushing around the smaller countries. As if the world is public school, and we are out on the playground for recess. Because everything we see, hear and read is put there to make us comply to somebody’s plan.

    We are the most propagandized people in history. It’s not even close. Almost everything we see during a day is marketing of some description or other. There’s marketing all over my computer screen right now, little icons of pixel art begging me to click them. (Are they really begging though? No, but my mind immediately personifies them because that’s what I’ve been trained to do since I was born. See? It’s insidious.)

    So when people who are smart enough to know better come up with things like “poor little mad North Korea” it’s the result of them being constantly pummeled with this crap. But knowing that doesn’t really help, because you are not going to change their opinion. It’s being kept in place by propaganda programs with the power of nations behind them. You are going to have to be magical to blast through that in a conversation.

    I am not that magical. The most I’ve got available is “yeah right, as if,” and wave them off. In the land of the blind, the one eyed man spends all his energy avoiding being pushed off the stairs by the Normies who can’t see where they’re going but still think they’re right.

    Elbows up!

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    1. When I was at university, I was witness (and party) to a conversation between a German student, and a Canadian student (this was a US university).

      The German student, a young man, in a fascinated way, was asking what makes Canada different from America. The Canadian girl had a whole laundry list of reasons why Canadia was superior to America, and went on at some length.

      Then the German turned to me, to ask what I, as an American, thought the difference between Canada and America was.

      “Canada likes to think they’re a separate country. And we let them.”

      Took him at least a minute to stop laughing. She left in a huff.

      Liked by 4 people

    2. I have a new comparison!

      Canadians are sorta like American blacks.

      In population size, and maybe in poverty.

      In the manner of my sense of humor, it would therefore be appropriate for Canadians to address Canadians as ‘nigga, please’.

      The obvious difference is two fold.

      One, there has never been a real American civil war between American whites and American blacks.

      Two, it is right and proper to deny Canadians votes in American political elections.

      Imagine what a shitshow it would be if the American DoE and congress had programs for historicially Canadian and Quebecois universities.

      (Actually, I have no grudge against HBaCU, my grudge is against US universities in general. I think general universities are defrauding black students with this critical theory adulturation of curriculums, so I would expect this could also be a HBaCU problem, but I haven’t even heard an especially passionate rant about HBaCU. )

      Liked by 1 person

      1. “Canukkah, please.”

        “Canuggah, eh?”

        Almost as bad as “Maple Mexicans”.

        I am going to start a war, I am…..

        (big grin)

        Liked by 1 person

    3. DID he win it? Look, you guys started with the machine voting. And I remember the crowds and crowds of people by the side of the road supporting the truckers.
      I might be wrong. You guys tend to buy the Euro thing more, and your media is more wretched than ours. And yet….

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      1. The main thing I remember about Carney is that he abused his position to bring down the UK government, in spite of the fact that his office supposedly was non-political. I was rather amazed to see a British weasel elected to major office in Canada. Is he a dual citizen?

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      2. Imagine that Iran is like two Canadas stacked on top of each other, in a trenchcoat.

        I can then envision that Mary Simon got about half as many votes as Ayatollah Ali K.

        Two conclusions can both have nothing to do with reality. 1. Iran can clearly take us in a fight, because Canada can. 2. We can totally take Canada in a fight.

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