The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

A Few Words About the Taliban

One of the cardinal sins of American propaganda and thinking is that they often seem to want to assume their enemies are stupid, cowards, corrupt, immoral, blah, blah, blah. (This is weird, because if your enemies are shit, then there’s little to be proud of if you win and a lot to be ashamed of if you lose.) My favorite was calling the 9/11 bombers cowards, when they were willing to die. (Insert idiots talking about virgins in heaven here.)

One thing to understand about the Taliban is that they’ve been at war now for decades. The US military has the best e-lint in the world, a fleet of drones, bombers and an army of special force assassins.

You fuck up even once as a member of the Taliban and you may get dead. Since the US likes bombs and doesn’t care about how many people they kill to get one “terrorist,” you won’t just get dead, you’ll take some of your friends and family with you.

You fuck up serially, and you WILL get dead, and you WILL cause the death of your friends and family. (Being captured, of course, is much worse. If anyone reading this thinks the US doesn’t still torture, well…)

Because of this, the Taliban leadership and even its lower ranks is made up of competent people who are true believers. It’s a harsh life in which you cannot make mistakes. Only brave, competent, true believers sign up and survive.

The Taliban, like Hezbollah, does not tolerate people who are serial fuck-ups. In this they are the exact opposite of US elites, who not only tolerate serial fuck-ups, but promote them.

The Taliban will rule Afghanistan effectively, in line with their beliefs and goals. Before the invasion they ended 99 percent of Afghanistan’s poppy production in areas they controlled. These are serious people, in ways that American leaders haven’t been since the ’50s.

I say this without any pleasure. The Taliban are my ideological enemies and I want religious fundamentalism wiped from the world. But it is what it is, and people need to take their blinkers off.


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43 Comments

  1. Synoptocon

    Funny how things get more and more certain as one gets further and further away.

  2. Jason

    It seems that what is opposed is in fact perpetually maintained.

  3. Plague Species

    My view about the Taliban is independent of any American propaganda. I can be critical of America and Americans and the Taliban just as I can walk and chew gum and dribble a basketball at the same time.

    The Taliban ARE cowards. My definition of a coward is someone who bullies others they know are defenseless and can’t fight back. The Taliban treat women like shit. They bully and beat them and murder them and torture them and rape them because they know they cannot fight back. They know women are defenseless. That’s cowardice in its purest form.

    It remains to be seen what will come of the Taliban and Afghanistan. I’m not making any predictions, but what I will say is, if the Taliban prove to be problematic, it will be Pakistan’s problem and Saudi Arabia’s problem and Russia’s problem and China’s problem, and for me at least, that’s satisfying and a good thing considering their tacit approval of the Taliban and their support of the Taliban. They can have each other because they all deserve each other.

    As for the Taliban and drugs, they were against Poppy production before they were for it, but they are now for it considering drug sales account for a sizable portion of their operating budget. They are hypocrites, plain and simple. They can change their morality on a dime when it comes to something like drug use and drug dealing, but not when it comes to women’s rights.

    The Taliban are cowards and hypocrites. Thugs. Gangsters. F*ck ’em and f*ck every country that supports and enables them.

  4. Hugh

    To run a state, you need bureaucrats. And you need to do what those bureaucrats tell you to do. You need people to maintain the roads. And you need people who know how to maintain the roads. You need food because your country doesn’t produce enough to feed a third of its people and your population is young and expanding. Being God-warriors, taking a literal approach to a seventh century legal religious code, or making temporary deals on behalf of your tribe, none of this really guarantees or institutionalizes what you and your country need to function and survive. Rather the reverse.

    So at the moment we are in the victory phase of the Taliban accession to power. It is a good time for Western embassies and their personnel to clear out, but after that comes the delivery phase where the Taliban needs to start delivering goods and services to the country, to the tribes it has made its deals with, and to the people generally. Announcing a few trade deals with the Chinese or whomever won’t begin to be the beginning of enough to run the country. And expecting food and other aid, especially long term, from the Western countries you have just run out of Afghanistan, well, good luck with that.

    And too there is the status of women. Afghanistan is not an oil state rolling in money. It can’t afford to hire armies of foreign workers to fill in the gaps. It is extremely poor. So writing off half your workers, half your brain power is to be blunt suicidal.

    I am willing to be surprised, but until I start seeing real results, I remain deeply pessimistic about Afghanistan.

  5. gnokgnoh

    Corollaries to Myanmar. I’ve been there four times in the two years before the pandemic and the coup. Their Supreme Court and trial courts were doing amazing and effective work. It’s gone, all staff have disappeared into the hills. I lost touch with some friends when they left their Northern villages being chased by the military. The trade routes through the six free trade zones along the border with China remain. China is not too bothered by the coup, as long as they get plenty of cheap labor for the factories they financed in the free trade zones. We will never fully understand the ruthlessness of the military junta in Myanmar or the ruthlessness of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Most of it we won’t see.

  6. StewartM

    Ian: Competence in fighting a war does not necessarily translate to competence in governing. A good analogy would be to notice that the skillsets needed to make babies doesn’t mean that you will do a good job of raising them.

    This is a fundamental problem with a world political system where highly competent warrior states “win” and then get to govern.

  7. Feral Finster

    vid. Ian Welsh, no matter how competent at war-fighting the Taliban may be, they just lost their biggest legit source of ready hard currency, namely the international community.

    Hell, the US held the prior regime’s treasury too, you know, for “safekeeping”.

    Admittedly, the average frustrated Afghan deal deal with a lot of privation, but the “new” Afghanistan is starting off from a bad place.

  8. Jason

    Meanwhile – back on the “homeland” – the DHS has recently announced some “Potential Terror Threats:

    1) Opposition to Covid Measures
    2) Claims of Election Fraud, Belief that Trump can be reinstated
    3) 9/11 Anniversary and Religious Holidays

    In number one we are treated to the creation of the broad and ambiguous “Opposition to Covid Measures” to be used going forward as both identifier and classifier. Anyone who falls under this rather wide umbrella is a potential terror threat, which by definition makes her a potential terrorist.

    In number two we learn that people who make “claims” and who hold “beliefs” regarding a domestic election – not, say, about beheading women – are potential terrorists.

    And in number three we are treated to a statement of the obvious followed by, “Oh, and be absolutely terrified on all the days when you stop to reflect and celebrate all the things that have a deeper, visceral meaning to you.”

    Why is the DHS, backed and funded resolutely and seemingly unquestioningly, and whose job would presumably be to help keep us safe and sound so we can live our lives with dignity on “the homeland” – why are they instead constantly terrifying, dividing, and asking us to spy on one another?

    https://www.activistpost.com/2021/08/dhs-opposing-covid-restrictions-equated-to-terrorism.html

  9. Jason

    why are they instead constantly terrifying, dividing, and asking us to spy on one another?

    I should add, most importantly: why are they labeling large swaths of the domestic United States population as potential “terrorists? Where is the possible value in that?

    This certainly isn’t an organization concerned with any semblance of internal domestic cohesion, which is desperately needed now, no matter how laughable the possibility of such may seem a this time.

  10. Ian

    Ah, Americans. If the Taliban are such incompetents, what does that make you, who just lost a war to them?

    And American bureaucrats and politicians, such wonders, overseeing the multi-generation run-down of infrastructure built by engineers and leaders long ago, whose shoes they are not fit to shine.

    And my goodness, they built such an impressive government and army in Afghanistan.

  11. Plague Species

    I expect tomorrow the Taliban, as advanced and evolved as it is, will announce they are going to space like Musk and Bezos. But when the Taliban goes, it will be to institute Sharia Law for all the Cosmos.

    America didn’t lose. It made tons of money off the Afghanistan project. Lots of money is winning.

    It wasn’t a war. It was a boondoggle and now Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and China and Russia can have their Taliban.

  12. Soredemos

    The Taliban are currently very publicly making a lot of noise that they’re not the same as they were in the 90s. Insisting they want to be (relatively) enlightened in their rule. Pardons for all former government fighters and collaborators, asking people to stay on in the new government, women should be in government, women can work, etc.

    Perhaps they’re just blatantly lying, but it should be pretty easy to verify if any of these things are happening or not. The assurance from the West, and what all those people at the airfield were fleeing in expectation of, was that the Taliban would start rounding up everyone on their lists and executing them en mass. So far there’s little sign of that happening.

    It will be darkly humorous if the Taliban genuinely run a more effective and less corrupt state.

    I have zero trust that they’ll shut down the poppy trade however. They may fulfill their promises to clamp down on domestic drug usage, but I expect the opium will still flow to the export market. That’s too much revenue to simply abandon.

  13. Ché Pasa

    Good questions all. How did the barbarians of Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia (they were called Gooks, remember?) defeat not just the French, but the God-blessed Americans as well? How could they? They’re not like us. They live in grass huts and chew betel nut. Come on. How did they do it?

    How did the savages of Afghanistan bring down one empire (the Soviet Union) and bring two others (Britain and the US) to a full stop? No passing go. No collecting $200.

    Who gave these illiterate peasants the ability to do this? How?

    How did they do it so quickly, too?

    It does make you wonder a bit about the utility of… well, other means of accomplishing political objectives.

    How can these little backwater countries and their peoples bring empires down or cause them to stop dead in their tracks?

    I’ve said the only way for empires to win in these conflicts is through all-out genocide and total destruction. An effort toward that end was made in Vietnam; it failed. It wasn’t tried in Afghanistan or any of the other countries invaded and/or bombed to smithereens after Afghanistan, but you best believe that all-out genocide and destruction were more than once on the minds of civilian and military leaders.

    Don’t think they won’t do it somewhere just to prove they can.

  14. NR

    women can work, etc.

    Do you have a source on this, Soredemos? Because it directly contradicts actions the Taliban took just last month:

    https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/afghan-women-bankers-forced-roles-taliban-takes-control-2021-08-13/

  15. Synoptocon

    Neither Hizbullah nor the Taliban are homogenous bodies (harder to see in the case of Hizbullah as they are about 20 times more brand savvy, but still true), nor are they 12 feet tall. The key takeaway is not the well-worn talking point of perceived relative competence – it’s how different the game is if you’re taking pain to keep your homeland vs. taking pain to be in someone else’s.

  16. Soredemos

    @NR

    Source is the Taliban themselves: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=JBgbLIyO_gw

  17. bruce wilder

    The Blob just lost a source of cash, too. Of course, they are discovering domestic terrorists! Bring it home, baby! And I don’t mean just PTSD. Accusing the Taliban of cowardice or corruption is surely an act of pathological projection coming from the class of folks who have driven 2+ trillion dollars of spending, the bulk of it not on Afghanistan but on their own bloody pig’s trough.

    The war went on so long because Americans are too stupid to see their own poverty and precarity in such foolish, cruel, wasteful boondoggles. You want stupid, America’s has stocked up on that commodity!

  18. NR

    Soredemos:

    Apparently the translation of that conference is incorrect. Anyway, even if they are saying they will allow women to work, that’s contradicted by the fact that just last month, they were telling them they couldn’t work. Could be different groups/factions of course.

  19. @ Plague species

    I won’t quibble with your definition of coward but if we apply it to America, America would be a coward nation. Bombing weddings, invading 3rd world nations, fighting peasants who lack even the internet, and overthrowing democracies. He’ll America has killed more women and children in the last 30 years than the Taliban.

    “Taliban, as advanced and evolved as it is, will announce they are going to space like Musk and Bezos.”

    Is that after or before the Bezos of humanity destroy the world with pollution and greed?

    @ Steward M

    The right person at the right time in the right circumstances. People good at winning a war have certain skills and attributes needed to win wars. People good at creating a rich prosperous nation will have different skills and attributes. This is partly why most revolutions won by war turn dark after. If you spent the last decade+ fighting a brutal war your mind and skill set hasn’t been selected for governing but rather killing.

  20. Mary Bennett

    It seems Gina Hospell resigned as CIA director the night before Biden’s inauguration. The new director is one Burns, I forgot the given name. He was in Israel early this month informing the Israelis that, no, the USA is not going to attack Iran for you.

    https://www.rt.com/news/531867-israel-iran-cia-deal/

    I don’t know if this has any bearing on the withdrawal in Afghanistan, but the timing does seem rather close. I think Afghanistan is “graveyard of empires” because of logistical reasons. I think there is no way any army, ancient or modern, can live off the land in Afghanistan, and maintain lengthy communications chains back to headquarters. Alexander marched through Afghanistan, did not remain there, and his Successor, Seleucus, couldn’t hang on to it. If I remember right, Chandragupta had more sense than to try, and satisfied himself with recovering the Indus Valley.

    American upper class feminists disgraced themselves by ignoring the heroic women fighters of Kurdistan–no “celebrating our sisters” for the Kurdish women soldiers, because Assad is a Baad Guy, I was told on another forum. I doubt anyone of sense even listens to them anymore when they presume to opine of foreign affairs.

    The Taliban leaders can promise wives to their followers all they want, but there is still, in a tribal patriarchal society, the need to secure parental consent, and I doubt the new govt. wants to alienate whole clans by arranging marriages without consent of fathers, grandfathers, brothers . Boko Haram found out that, sure, they could kidnap girls and maybe even have children with them, but that didn’t mean that the girl’s families were going to accept guys with no education or civilian skills as desirable sons in law.

  21. KT Chong

    In case Mr. Welsh or anyone here does not already know about Rania Khalek, she runs a YouTube channel with interviews that offer rare information and insights on Middle East that counters the mainstream narrative. She is also not bad on the eyes. She has just uploaded an interview video about the current situation Taliban:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbgfVznNB-c

  22. Soredemos

    @NR

    People can claim the translation is wrong all that want, but multiple other outlets are reporting the same thing, with their own translators essentially agreeing that this is what was said at the press conference.

    https://apnews.com/article/afghanistan-taliban-kabul-1d4b052ccef113adc8dc94f965ff23c7

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/8/17/taliban-says-will-respect-womens-rights-press-freedom

    https://www.voanews.com/south-central-asia/taliban-vow-respect-womens-rights-within-islamic-law

  23. Ché Pasa

    Now that the initial panic and hysteria has subsided some, there is at least a bare possibility that the forever warmongers will finally sit down and shut up.

  24. NR

    Soredemos:

    Well regardless, their actions so far don’t match what they’re saying now. If they change their ways, good, but it remains to be seen if they will.

  25. Plague Species

    Ché Pasa is emblematic of what has become of the “left.” It’s sad. Pathetic. Tragic. Perhaps it isn’t even a matter of becoming but was always what the “left” was and is. For him to call what the people of Afghanistan have suffered under for the past 40 years hysteria, beggars belief for its callous disregard of human suffering and the fear and loathing of the terrorized.

    Believing the words of the Taliban is as idiotic as Biden saying he believed Ghani and the ANA when they promised him they would fight the Taliban and hold the country. And I’m not saying any of this or purporting it because the American Establishment says so, I’m saying it because it’s plainly obvious fact and it matters not whether the Establishment usurps said facts for it’s own misinformational purposes.

  26. Lex

    Competent and actually fighting for something on their own land. I’m no fan and don’t see the Taliban as any sort of anti-imperial force for fundamental good because they oppose the US. They are making public claims that can be verified and checked, and other sources indicate that they’ve been in contact with Russia and China for years. So leadership may be tempered by recognition that they’ll require support. The US has already frozen all the Afghan funds it can, even though it knew and negotiated pretty much this end. It told Pakistan to release this Taliban leadership. It will be an unsavory regime in a lot of ways, but maybe the West wants to spend a hot minute looking inward and fix its own problems before deciding that exporting its problems and calling them democracy is for the best interests of other nations. 80 million Americans are all for Taliban style governance here and the others aren’t far behind.

  27. Plague Species

    That’s a false narrative — that America was trying to foist Democracy on Afghanistan and Nation Build. That was not the reason for the invasion and occupation. There was never any true justification for any of it. There is only the cover story and the cover story is a fabrication.

    Afghanistan was a projection of power coupled with a boondoggle by all those who stood to benefit from it, be it defense contractors in more revenue and profit or military leaders ascending the hierarchical ladder and the same goes for political careers.

    Afghanistan was always a prop. A foil. Used and abused for an end that never took the fate of Afghanis into account. America never gave a shit about the people of Afghanistan and neither do those who are and have been funding the Taliban and those who are now parroting Taliban propaganda.

    Who do you think is aiding the Taliban with this Propaganda Campaign? That’s right, the KSA. Get real, people. If you have any principles and morality at all, there is no side to pick in this Shit Show. The majority of the people of Afghanistan caught in the crossfire have no representation and they will continue to be persecuted and tragically suffer.

    Land Of Endless War

  28. Trinity

    “This certainly isn’t an organization concerned with any semblance of internal domestic cohesion, which is desperately needed now”.

    Don’t mean to sound sarcastic, but … this IS what they want. They are getting worried. Grumblings and rumblings are spreading.

    “And American bureaucrats and politicians, such wonders, overseeing the multi-generation run-down of infrastructure built by engineers and leaders long ago, whose shoes they are not fit to shine.”

    Well said. Although I do believe the military incompetence is a smoke screen, and provides lots of narratives to hide their actual activities. They are not incompetent at killing civilians or making money from never-ending war.

    PS, you are a hypocrite given how often you attack commenters with female screen names here, and elsewhere.

    Che, your hopefulness makes me nostalgic.

    Last night, a worker at my local waste transfer station told me the county doesn’t given them health insurance. They are always scheduled to work less than 40 hours/week. He said last year when everything shut down, they were the only entity that remained open and were given premium pay. Until they reopened the courthouse early (but not to the public) which effectively ended their premium pay. Funny how that works.

  29. Ché Pasa

    “Usavory” indeed. Not sure what PS and some others are on about, but the panic and hysteria I referred to is almost all being generated by the forever-warmongers and their media running dogs. They are in crisis, melting down in their brownstones and bunkers, and yet there are people on the ground in Kabul and especially in the countryside who are saying “Wait. Hold on. You’re not getting the full picture, and you do not even begin to understand what the last twenty years have been like for the people of Afghanistan if all you hear, see and ‘know’ comes only from the forever-warmongers, the generals, and the politicians in DC or the puppets in Kabul.”

    No, Taliban are not “savory” — they are a reactionary radical religious brotherhood who were and potentially still are intent on returning Afghanistan to the 13th century through an interpretation of Islam and Sharia that at best is anachronistic, at worst is evil in the modern world.

    Much like the Saudi regime which as we know gets away with head-chopping and hand-chopping and all the other choppings prescribed by old-line Sharia and it suppresses women and girls, husbands beat their wives and wives kill their slaves, and it gets away with murdering journalists and it is reactionary and on and on and on, committing all the horrors ascribed to the Taliban and then some, and yet… they’ve got oil, don’t they? Right? So what goes on in Saudi or under Saudi authority is their business, not ours. Right?

    I have no truck with Taliban or Saudi rule. Taliban showed themselves to be catastrophic for civil society, arts and culture, and basic human rights more than 20 years ago in Afghanistan throwing the whole concept of “progress” there into the shitter.

    Their withdrawal from governance (they did not go away though) upon the US/NATO/exiled Warlord invasion was at the time a welcome respite from their stupidity — but not from their brutality which only redoubled under occupation and rule by the warlords.

    Get out of Kabul where the Taliban are rightly feared and loathed by many. Go to the countryside where most Afghanis live, and listen to them talk about and cry over the relentless bombings, dronings, assassinations, kidnappings, night raids and on and on and on done by the so-called “government,” and by the raiders and occupiers and their many. many contracted mercenaries. Listen to them. Taliban are bad? Often yes. But you know what else? As often, maybe more often, the Taliban have been the protectors of the people in the countryside. They are, after all, the same people. They’re not strange invaders. They’re family. Often from families that have lost many loved ones to the so-called “government” of US/NATO puppets.

    And if you set aside your prejudices and watch what the Taliban are doing, listen to what they say, pay attention to how they’ve been behaving since they took over, you start to see that they’re not the way they were before 2001. This was not a military take over. Shots were not fired. Civil so-called “government” withdrew. Afghan military did not fight. Taliban moved in swiftly where they did not already control the government because they were not opposed. They made agreements, not only with local and provincial level civil and military heads but with the national “government” — and more importantly for the evacuations with the US military, whom they have not molested or fired a shot.

    They have said they will govern according to the tenets of Islam and Sharia law. Pretty typical throughout the Muslim world. They have also said they will not disturb the rights of women under Sharia. They will not govern the way they did prior to 2001. They will not try to harm civil society, the arts and culture, or the people of Afghanistan. They seek peace.

    How that will play out remains to be seen, but so far people are starting to breathe a little easier, life is resuming relatively unchanged, and the chaos at the airport is mostly under control. The Taliban have agreed to let the evacuations proceed unmolested, and at least in places civil society is returning to something like normal.

    The position of women and girls is still very much in turmoil — except in the countryside where the position of women and girls has not changed for centuries and its not good.

    Again, how it will play out remains to be seen. That there are few women on the streets at this time of crisis is hardly unusual. Go to any Muslim country and you will see few or no women on the streets when there is civil unrest, trouble, or during many kinds of protests. It’s right to be concerned and fearful of what might happen, but so far the worst hasn’t happened. Which now and then media personalities have mentioned.

  30. Willy

    The utter failure of neoconism mirrors the utter failure of neoliberalism. When it’s all about “making money” with all other considerations being irrelevant, bad shit happens.

    Now all we’ve gotta do is overcome one of the few things the neo-incompetents are actually pretty good at, manipulating the most tribal of the masses. And there’s a lot of tribal masses, far more than the skeptics we see in places like this.

  31. Plague Species

    PS, you are a hypocrite given how often you attack commenters with female screen names here, and elsewhere.

    Ha! Too funny. There is no male and female on The Net. Only bits and bytes pretending to be as much when it’s just a screen name. Go marry a Taliban member already, whether you’re male or female and yes, I mean male too since the new and improved and sophisticated and enlightened Taliban now has no problem with gay relationships and gay marriage.

  32. Steve Ruis

    Can you spell self-determination, boys and girls?

    For all of the hand wringing on the left, apparently self-determination has fallen from those folk’s vocabularies.

  33. Plague Species

    I don’t think the notion of Self-Determination jibes with the Taliban’s interpretation of Islam. In fact, it’s anathema to it. Allah’s will is your will. There’s no self-direction in that equation.

    Peace without freedom is neither peace nor freedom. It’s a big fat zero.

  34. Dan

    I’ve heard the phenomenon you describe referred to as the “Darwinian ratchet”. You see it in just about every insurgency that continues to survive against an organized state, such as the AQI/ISIS, the PKK, Mao’s guerrillas, the IRA, etc etc

  35. Soredemos

    @Plague Species

    “If you live the Taliban so much, why don’t you go marry one!”

    What are you, twelve?

    Anyway, yes, that you refuse to treat people on the internet as people is something I’ve noticed with you. Anyone who says something you don’t like is an ‘it’.

    You’ve got a lot of problems, PS, and I’m done engaging with you.

  36. Plague Species

    It’s about the issues, Soredemos, not the personalities, so yes, the personalities are “its” to me, meaning they’re irrelevant. You don’t know how much it hurts to hear you type you’re done engaging with me. How can I go on after receiving such devastating news?

  37. different clue

    @Soredemos,

    The only thing that makes poppy and its opiate-ingredients and derivatives high priced . . . is the laws “against” them making them “illegal”. The purpose of these laws is to keep the poppy high-priced enough that it can generate billions of dollars for the “crime networks” who handle the product at all its stages. The reason the establishment leaders want to keep the the poppy illegal for the crime networks to make billions of dollars from it is so that they have billions of dollars which have to be laundered through the International Money Laundry banks.

    Make the poppy legal and crash the price and then Afghan-specific poppy won’t be such a money maker. Nor will golden triangle poppy from Myanmar.

    Someone in my family was once married to someone who worked in graphical-information-presentation for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. My family-member’s wife had a friend who also worked at the Fed. I happened to be in the right-place-right-time to get invited to a “Fed folks’s party” at someone’s nice house and yard in the leafy green suburbs of Connecticut. ( The leafy-greenest green I’ve ever seen in the US).

    As I was just talking to people, I asked one person what he/she did at the Fed. He/she worked in tracking various huge money flows for various sectors around the world. I thought I would be funny and suggest that the Fed could track international illegal drug money flows, but the Fed wouldn’t dare, because the amounts involved would be so embarrassingly huge. He/she replied that, all joking aside, the Fed did not at that time ( and maybe still doesn’t) track international illegal drug money flows.
    The reason she/she guessed is that the amounts are so embarrassingly huge. There’s money in keeping drugs illegal.

  38. different clue

    I see no other idiots have volunteered, so I guess its up to me.

    The 9/11 plane crashers were not terribly brave. They made a cost/benefit analysis ratio and decided that for overcoming the fear of the instant physical death of “this” body happening so fast that they would not even feel any pain on the way, they would live in heaven for all eternity. (The issue of virgins or not being a side distraction.)

    Want an example of real bravery? The philosophical dialectical materialist soviet firemen who rushed to the scene of the Chernobyl fire to try and suppress it as best they could. They knew in their hearts that there was no heaven for them to go to and that they would spend hours or days or weeks slow-dying from ultra-painful radiation sickness on the way to dying and losing the only existence they would ever have.

    But they did it anyway.

    Now THAT’S courage. Not fast-crashing planes into buildings for instant death in exchange for eternity in heaven. Fast-crashing planes into buildings for instant death in exchange for eternity in heaven might be even braver than me, who is too afraid of instant pain-free death to even risk that. But it is not brave.

  39. different clue

    Here’s a joke I read once about courage.

    An Army General and a Marine General were arguing about who had the braver troops under his command.

    They put their respective privates through various tests and displays of courage.

    Finally, the Army General ordered one of his soldiers to ” remove your helmet, climb to the top of that cliff, jump off and land on your head.” Which the soldier did, and of course died.

    The Army General looked at the Marine General and said . . .” well?”

    The Marine General said . . . ” you call that courage? I’ll show you courage.”

    He orders one of his privates . . . ” You! Private Marine! Remove your helmet , climb to the top of that cliff, jump off and land on your head! That’s an ORDER!”

    And the Marine Private looked at the Marine General and said . . . ” Sir! Fuck You, Sir!”

    So the Marine General looked at the Army General and said . . . ” Now THAT’S courage.”

  40. Jason

    Don’t mean to sound sarcastic, but … this IS what they want. They are getting worried. Grumblings and rumblings are spreading.</i.

    Thank you Trinity. I didn't think that one through too well.

    https://www.octoberstrike.com/

  41. Trinity

    Che, if you meant me, I worded my comment poorly. It was too terse because I was in too much of a hurry.

    What I meant is that your hopefulness literally makes me nostalgic for prior days when hopefulness had a place in my life. I’m at the point where I expect the worst, full stop. I no longer hope for the best. I’m losing all hope. It was about me, not you.

    Meanwhile, somebody parked a vehicle near the Library of Congress today and claimed it was a bomb. People have had enough. We’ve all had enough, methinks.

  42. Soredemos

    @different clue

    The soviet first responders at Chernobyl had no idea what they were walking into, so they couldn’t make any kind of calculated judgement.

    As for the 9/11 hijackers, I’d say it’s mostly nonsense to try and reduce religious conviction to a cost-benefit calculation. They could very easily be both convinced of heaven and scared of dying. That’s on top of the fact that it’s not clear how convinced of their divine righteousness they were. After all, they needed extra incentives like their families being given money.

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