Some More News - SMN: War Is Bad
Episode Date: April 6, 2022Hi. In today's episode, we discuss Ukraine, Russia, the war between Russia and Ukraine, other wars, why war is bad, why nuclear war is worse, and maybe no more wars? We now have a... MERCH STORE! Check it out here: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/somemorenews Athletic Greens will give you an immune-supporting FREE 1 year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase if you visit http://athleticgreens.com/morenews today. When you purchase a 3-month Babbel subscription, you'll get an additional 3 months for FREE. That's 6 months, for the price of 3! Just go to http://BABBEL.com and use promo code MORENEWS. That's B-A-B-B-E-L dot com, code MORENEWS. Babbel—Language for life. Go to http://magicspoon.com/MORENEWS to grab a variety pack and try it today! And be sure to use our promo code MORENEWS at checkout to save five dollars off your order! Follow us on social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Source List: https://docs.google.com/document/d/12fO_yfI2ccJhjDY7hTlFr_XnZz9OF-v4ldjrrGdiBkk/edit?usp=sharingSupport the show!: http://patreon.com.com/somemorenewsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello!
And here's some news.
War!
The Republic is crumbling under attacks
by the ruthless Sith Lord Count Dooku.
There are heroes on both sides.
Evil is everywhere.
In a stunning move, the fiendish droid leader,
General Grievous, has swept in...
This seems...
Okay, yeah, so everything I just said was wrong.
Except for the first part.
But everything else, no.
Not sure where that other stuff came from.
There's just no way to know where that stuff came from.
All right, we're gonna try again.
War!
It's bad.
And a bummer.
But we have to talk about war today.
Not that one.
That's the Ethiopian Civil War.
No, we have to talk about the war. Yeah, one. That's the Ethiopian civil war. No, we have to talk about the war.
Yeah, that's not that one either.
Nope, that's also not it.
No, no.
I mean, that one's a given.
Christ, we did?
Like recently?
Okay, I'm sorry.
I have to put a stop to this
because we could highly unfortunately keep doing this bit.
Today, of course, we're going to be talking
about the Russian military's invasion of Ukraine.
And you know, it's gonna be grim.
If I could do an hour about Will Smith,
Cobra Striking Chris Rock, I would, but I can't.
Or more specifically, don't want to.
So the background and details behind this Russian invasion
are widely reported, but just to make sure
we're all oriented before we dig in
and bury ourselves in news,
here is the super short version.
For years, Russian President Vladimir Putin
has taken an aggressive position against Ukraine,
pretty much ever since the 2014 ouster
of then Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych,
who enraged his populace when he suddenly backed out
of a planned free trade agreement with the European Union.
After that, Putin annexed Crimea,
a peninsula in the Black Sea,
attached to Southern Ukraine,
and made frequent comments suggesting that Ukraine
should be way more influenced by Russia than by the West.
After all, Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union
for nearly 70 years,
so Putin's been generally sore for the last few decades
about his waning influence on a former republic
that appeared to be westernizing.
He was triggered by it.
Most Ukrainians have been pretty consistent
in wanting to remain an independent country
and have long been wary of Putin's intentions,
even though there are pro-Russian pockets
in the eastern portion of the country,
known as the Donbass,
which have been partially controlled
by separatists for some time.
Then in late February,
after surrounding Ukraine with Russian troops,
Putin said he was carrying out a special military operation.
Now here in the US,
we're very used to playful euphemisms
about special operations for enduring freedom,
where we send Liberty projectiles
into civilian prone areas
in order to create Patriot ignitions.
So it was immediately clear what was actually happening.
He can call it a touring puppet show if he wants,
but it's an invasion, and this invasion has been brutal.
It's involved relentless missile assaults
on heavily populated areas and resulted
in an unknown thousands of deaths
among the Ukrainian military, Russian military,
and Ukrainian civilians.
The invasion started six weeks ago,
and this is our first video about it.
And that is intentional.
Putting aside the element that what we do takes time
to research and write and shoot and edit
and pray to our blood god for a bountiful view harvest,
the immediate carnage of war is so despairing
and unnecessary and gut-wrenching
that there's often not much more to say at the outset
other than war is terrible, war is awful,
war is punishing and cruel and ruins lives and ends lives.
And there's no reasonable justification for starting one.
I don't think that's controversial to say
and we might as well make it the title of the episode.
War Bad.
That's right, war. War bad.
That's right, war...
Bad, not a fan of war. Boo, war!
Maybe we can find a more complex point to land on,
but for now, I think that's a fair statement.
Anyway, commenting on the war, trying to make sense of it,
and putting forth possible solutions
brings with it some problems.
Because Russia's invasion of Ukraine is a situation
none of us can do anything about on the individual level.
We can donate to humanitarian efforts, sure,
and we of course should, but we're otherwise stuck
hoping for whatever outcome is going to result
in the least amount of destruction, displacement, and death.
The only thing we're really left to do is comment,
release a meme, change our profile picture
to a Ukrainian flag, Twitter mute the name Sean Penn,
post a statement, say something.
And for the first time in what seemed like a while,
at the very start of the invasion,
there wasn't even a lot of fighting
among America's political parties.
The absence of a clear division
between what the left and right thought about the issue
led to some fun short-circuiting amongst several grifters who had no obvious way to
politicize the issue. For example, the up-and-coming dipshit J.D. Vance initially took this bold stance
on the issue. I don't, I gotta be honest with you, I don't really care what happens to Ukraine one
way or another. I do care about the fact that in my community right now, the leading cause of death among 18 to 45 year olds is Mexican fentanyl that's coming across the southern border.
I'm sick of Joe Biden focusing on the border of a country I don't care about while he lets the
border of his own country become a total war zone. The Republican candidate for the Senate election
in Ohio would go on to double down on this Ukraine shrew crane policy, weirdly using it as a way to talk about Mexican fentanyl
up until one of his fellow GOP opponents
played the masterful move of actually saying something
about the country and releasing a statement of support
on Twitter.
This prompted Vance to realize
that he was actually supposed to have an educated
or any opinion on foreign policy,
to which he quickly did a 180
and put out a statement of his own,
highlighting how much he totally definitely cares
about the people of Ukraine.
Much like his opponent, his statement perfectly manages
to be drenched in partisan spittle
as Vance credits the strength of Donald Trump's presidency
as I guess the reason Putin didn't invade earlier.
Donald Trump being a man
that Vance initially called reprehensible
and wrote an entire op-ed about him
being bad until furiously backpedaling
the moment he ran for Senate because JD Vance
is basically just a mid-tier succession character.
And while we're on the subject,
if you're wondering if Trump also had no fucking clue
what stance to take on Ukraine, the answer is yes.
I said, this is genius.
Putin declares a big portion of the Ukraine, of Ukraine. Putin declares it
as independent. Oh, that's wonderful. So Putin is now saying it's independent, a large section of
Ukraine. I said, how smart is that? And he's going to go in and be a peacekeeper.
That's the strongest peace force. We could use that on our southern border.
That's the strongest peace force I've ever seen.
There were more army tanks than I've ever seen.
They're going to keep peace all right.
Well, my reaction is it's so sad because this would have never happened.
If we had the Trump administration, there was no chance that this would happen.
And I know him well.
And this was not something that was going to happen at all.
Oh, Putin, you savvy genius,
doing a horrible, no good peacekeeping
that's still very bad,
but also something we should do at our own border
with our peace tanks.
That's our Trump,
the guy who had an entire impeachment
for withholding aid to Ukraine.
The guy who just last week publicly asked Putin
to use this war with America to release dirt on Biden
in order to help his party.
Just doing a little casual treason, I guess.
What an absolute treasure, no notes.
But these aren't the only two sweaty wads
that had absolutely no business weighing in on this war,
which is why within the span of like 24 hours,
we saw people suggesting that it was caused by
dark psychic forces, that everyone should just chill out
and enjoy the apocalypse vibes,
that the conflict can only be understood
in terms of Star Wars characters, or Marvel characters,
or in terms of a superhero you yourself play on TV,
or that the war was caused by US inclusion initiatives,
or trans people, or trans people,
or trans people, or that you think it was somehow caused by trans people.
It was both pretty fucking embarrassing and extremely typical for social media.
And I guess that brings us to perhaps a more honed in premise for this video that we would call
We Need to Talk About How We Talk About War.
would call,
We Need to Talk About How We Talk About War. Our society has adapted, especially online,
to favor knee-jerk reactions
that fit into our already existing discourse.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine,
setting off unknown geopolitical forces
that could shape the next several decades
of foreign policy decisions,
might, just might, not be about vibes or fandom or Mexico
or whatever bullshit culture war thing
you are trying to fight today.
Hell, a cringy poem about how Vladimir Putin
probably wasn't loved enough as a kid
is among the least of our problems,
especially with the amount of confusion and misinformation
that became rampant in the days after the invasion.
For example, this Ukrainian tank
that racked up millions of views on TikTok is from 2014.
This guy singing Endless Love is not Ukrainian president,
Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
And that Ukrainian girl confronting a Russian soldier
was actually a 12 year old Palestinian girl
confronting an Israeli soldier a decade ago.
And once that was revealed,
it magically ceased to be powerful or shareable, I guess.
Funny how that works.
And more on that later.
One of the most shared stories in the early part of the war
concerned the so-called Ghost of Kyiv,
an ace Ukrainian fighter pilot
who supposedly shot down at least half a dozen Russian planes
within a few days of the start of the invasion.
The widely shared video, however, was fake,
created in the video game digital combat simulator world.
And there's been no confirmation
that any single fighter pilot exists.
In the days that followed,
a number of other posts popped up
purporting to reveal the Ghost of Kyiv's identity,
or at least suggesting that he really did exist.
The Ukrainian military hasn't confirmed
the pilot's existence,
though they certainly haven't shied away
from using the mysterious character to promote a narrative.
What makes the Ghost of Kyiv story so interesting
is that it's not just made up out of nowhere.
Ukrainian pilots and anti-aircraft defenses
have shot down plenty of Russian jets,
and there may very well be one individual responsible
for a huge chunk of those.
Like many of the other sick memes of the war's first week,
this wasn't a nefarious piece of misinformation,
but rather emerged out of half-truths and potential truths
and then morphed into effective propaganda,
turning a disturbing situation
where people are literally shooting each other
out of the sky, war stuff,
into a simpler, more cohesive narrative
with a single hero fighting evildoers.
And of course, we want this to be true.
It's been admirable to watch the spirit
of the Ukrainian people in resisting
what Putin likely thought would be a cakewalk
through easy street just at the corner
of Child's Play Avenue.
You know the one across from the park,
which Putin thought this would be a walkthrough.
Like taking territory from a baby.
And while yes, the Russian forces are the aggressors here
and we should hope for nothing less
than their immediate retreat from a sovereign nation,
we should be wary of social media's ability
to warp the narrative into a David versus Goliath
or a David versus aliens or David versus Kevin Spacey
or David versus Kevin Spacey or a David versus aliens
or David versus humans via aliens storyline
that can vilify a huge group of people
with those classic David allegories.
Especially when a big chunk of the aggressor's military
may not want to be fighting at all.
And a huge portion of the Russian population
has been fed so much bullshit that they don't even know
what the reality of what's happening is.
But that's just what we do these days.
We take all the world's complex events
and jam them through our collective
and often Western focused good versus evil culture.
So yeah, of course the following video exists.
Yeesh.
Also, oof, plus a wowser or two.
Even an...
But I do get it.
Who doesn't want to think of Zelensky as Captain America
and Vladimir Putin as Thanos?
Probably Vladimir Putin, actually.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, certainly.
But that's kind of it.
And yet, this is an act of aggression from Russia
that is killing thousands and displacing millions.
The movie about time-traveling war gods
fighting a space cult can't possibly reflect
any reasonable opinion about it,
through no fault of its own.
It's not why they wrote that scene.
And the truth is that war is simply too complex
and life-shattering and overwhelming
to be reasonably boiled down into snappy tweets
and reactionary memes, which you can argue
is all that social media is really good for.
War isn't viral content, but that's all it can be
when reduced to Twitter's level.
So we can't look for solutions on a platform
that was in no way designed to provide them.
That's like asking a swarm of bees for stock tips.
Add to this the feeling of shared helplessness
that comes with witnessing atrocities half a planet away
in the same breath that you're seeing a viral clip
of Anne Hathaway on the Kelly Clarkson show,
and you get to an uncomfortable place
where everyone feels strongly compelled to post through it,
even though we're not the people going through it,
and the it is a fucking war. Boy, we need to keep talking about this whole war dilly, but I would be remiss if I didn't
kick it over to an awkward ad break first.
So enjoy these tonally inconsistent ads for various products, and then we'll get back
to it.
It, again, being the war.
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No funny business, just a good old transition from ads.
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What are we talking about?
Who am I?
We're talking about the mummification of war. You know, really groping the bottom of the barrel
to feel the contours of those lumpy dregs.
How far down does the barrel go?
Do you really have to ask?
Look, Russia is now being canceled, right?
It goes very far.
Yes, Russia is being canceled or de-platformed
and it's US influence canceled culture
that's responsible for major US companies like McDonald's
being triggered and suspending operations in Russia.
You know, the treatment of Vladimir Putin
really reminds me of the dunking on of Slobodan Milosevic
or the total ratioing of Bashar al-Assad.
Though it's worth inspecting what punishments
have been inflicted on Putin and Russia
and seeing if it actually counts
as what the right wing or the 20 or so op-eds a week
would consider cancellation.
Primarily, Putin, Russian banks,
and Russian billionaires have been hit with sanctions.
Many of their foreign held assets have been frozen
and some are subject to travel bans outside of Russia.
Though notably for the travel bans,
Vladimir Putin was spared.
That's right, you might run into him
at Disney World next month,
or more likely that Wizarding World park,
because we're living in just,
it's just the glitchiest simulation imaginable.
Anyway, major companies in the Russian economy
are further restricted from raising money
through the US market,
and the US is putting a hold on many tech exports to Russia
like chips and computer parts.
Of course, one could argue
that the people being canceled the most
are the Ukrainians who've been killed
or whose homes have been destroyed
and who have been forced to flee the country
or the people who used to get their wheat from Russia
or Ukraine who will now suffer
in what the UN says could be a global food crisis.
Much like a lot of cancel culture claims,
it sure seems like the person comparing themselves
to JK Rowling is the one doing all
of the actual canceling. And by canceling, I once again mean murder. But also the restrictions that
Putin has put on his population himself are certainly far more vast a cancellation than
anything a millionaire turf wizard novelist has endured. Russia has officially blocked access to
Instagram. The move is in response to Meta's decision to allow Facebook and Instagram users in some countries
to call for violence against Russian soldiers and Vladimir Putin over the invasion of Ukraine.
Social media companies have cracked down on hate speech in recent years,
but the war has put pressure on Silicon Valley to publicly condemn Russia,
but the war has put pressure on Silicon Valley to publicly condemn Russia,
ultimately creating what now some refer to
as a, quote, new digital iron curtain.
Russia blocked access to Facebook and Twitter
in late February,
and then cut off Instagram about a week later,
which is disastrous if you're trying
to get a discount on cosmetics
by following your favorite Love Island stars,
Love Island UK, of course.
Russia said it was mugging off Twitter and Facebook
because the sites had banned state sponsored media.
But it's pretty clear that the move was made
to restrict the Russian people's access to information
the government might not approve of.
And look, while we would love to celebrate the revenue hit
that Twitter and the company formerly known as Facebook
will take because of this,
social media in Russia is also among the primary conduits
by which Russians engage with the rest of the world.
Russian influencers and media personalities
in the hours before Instagram was cut off
were asking their fans to follow them
on Telegram of all places
because it's a platform that can get users
real-time unfiltered reports from Russia and Ukraine
and also an orca tank full of misinformation.
But it's hard to blame Russians
for seeking out information this way.
The same day Facebook and Twitter were cut off,
Putin signed a law allowing for 15-year prison sentences
for anyone reporting information
about the Russian armed forces
that Russia deemed to be false.
A number of news organizations pulled staff
from inside Russia over concerns
that their reporters could be imprisoned
for any reporting that makes the Russian military look bad.
And pretty much all accurate reporting is going to make the Russian military look bad. And pretty much all accurate reporting
is going to make the Russian military look bad right now,
since they invaded and are blowing up a country
of 44 million people.
And Putin himself is still using misinformation
and half-truths to his advantage,
and is even being aided by right-wing media in the US.
But I wonder who could be doing that?
In fact, the US.S. Embassy in Kiev
has acknowledged joint American and Ukrainian research
on other pathogens, such as hemorrhagic fever virus.
Apparently, there's a lot of this going on in Ukraine,
funded by the United States.
Did you know that?
Why Ukraine?
We don't know.
We can only guess.
Oh, grand.
Except that we don't have to only guess,
like Turbo Shartzen is saying.
We know that there are bio research labs in Ukraine
and around the world being funded by the US
and that many of these labs are doing research on pathogens.
And while it is fair to ask questions
about their safety and necessity,
it is flat out propaganda to suggest without any evidence
that the ones in Ukraine might be secretly developing
bio weapons to use in tandem with the US government.
When again, there are labs all over the damn world
that do this.
But look, this segment is not about trumpet balling friends.
We're not here to give him four Pinocchios
or six George Costanzas or 12 Jim Carys
in the first act of Liar Liar.
But that claim that the US and Ukraine
are working jointly on bioweapons labs
was rapidly amplified by him
after it emerged in relative obscurity.
It appears to have started
with the since suspended Twitter account WarClandestine,
who mused hours after the invasion started
that Putin was likely targeting biolabs in Ukraine
and tied this to the conspiracy theory
spread by the Russian disinformation apparatus
that the US had bioengineered the novel coronavirus
in a lab.
That musing by literally some guy
made its way around QAnon connected social media,
then to InfoWars and ultimately to Tucker Carlson.
And unfortunately, your eye holes and ear balls.
A Kremlin memo from early March
and published by Mother Jones
highlighted the bioweapons conspiracy theory
featuring the same bullshit talking points
highlighted by Tucker Carlson
and encouraged state-friendly media outlets
to frequently use segments from his show.
That's what leads to clips like this,
where Russian subtitles appear under Tucker
for broadcast on state-controlled media outlet RT.
And I don't know,
if a state-sponsored propaganda outlet,
not just from Russia, but like anywhere,
started using clips of this show to make its argument, especially if that country had just illegally invaded another country. I would take a
look at what I was saying and why I might be politically aligned with anyone and doing propaganda
for someone cluster bombing residential neighborhoods, a thing I would like to make clear
right now that I am against. It's just seems like Tucker Carlson should, if he were an actual person
with feelings, want to walk into the ocean in immense shame, is my point.
One of the big issues here is that Putin and his government
have been pretty good at using disinformation
to their advantage over the years,
often utilizing social media to craft the narrative
out of flat-out falsehoods,
but also out of half-truths or contextless truths,
a few quarter-truths in there as well, I'm sure.
Some of the propaganda is easy to spot and dismiss.
For example, there's the Russian initiated rumors
from the 1980s that the US invented AIDS,
and of course the US did not invent AIDS,
though they did the only slightly less damning thing
of ignoring it and treating it like a big joke for years.
There's also the far less successful story
that originated on a Russian troll farm
that hundreds of thousands of black children
were being kidnapped and their organs harvested.
That assertion was roundly mocked online
after appearing on Tumblr,
but Russian troll accounts were much more successful
once they realized that if you want Americans
to believe a ridiculous conspiracy theory
about Satan worshiping pedophiles,
kidnapping children and harvesting organs,
it helps to make those children white.
And to make the Satan worshiping pedophiles
an entire political party.
Then you'll get something out into the world
that 16% of Americans still believe.
So way to go, Russian trolls, you did it.
We always believed in you.
There are also Russian efforts that serve only to confuse
and make it so nobody's really sure what is real
and what is fake.
That's why Russia's Internet Research Agency
and other troll farms encourage both protesters
and counter protesters on the same issue
in Facebook groups in the US.
It's why they mock up supposed examples
of Ukraine war misinformation
and then debunk it in fake fact checks.
If you can't be sure that the trusted resource
you're reading isn't really a source
of Russian disinformation,
how can you really make a judgment?
Well, I can, of course.
I have my own fact-checking system.
I ask one fact-checker what the other fact-checker would say
if I asked him if he was telling the truth.
It's very complicated, trust me, but it's worked so far.
I've rescued like six babies this way.
And then there are things that have an inkling,
if you will, a smidge, a scooch,
a Spotify artist royalty of truth behind it.
Take Putin's argument that part of the reason
he's invading Ukraine is to de-Nazify it.
What he's referring to is likely the Azov Battalion,
a far-right neo-Nazi group that formed in Ukraine
in May, 2014, after Russia invaded
and annexed the Crimean Peninsula.
This group sucks most, if not all, of the turds.
They and other far-right extremists
have been accused of attacking migrants
and ethnic minorities in Ukraine.
And former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko
praised the group for fighting
against Russian-backed separatists,
ultimately folding them into the Ukrainian National Guard.
This is something Ukraine at the time
definitely tried to downplay,
leading to concerns that not confronting the issue
could bolster Russia's information campaign.
Though perhaps a more pressing concern
is that not confronting the issue
could bolster the number of open neo-Nazis
in your National Guard, but okay, whatever.
Congress was consistently sending aid
to the Ukrainian military since the annexation of Crimea and tried to remove funding that might make its way
to the Azov Battalion.
But they lifted this ban following pressure
from the Pentagon because the Pentagon loves arming,
you know, whoever.
So yeah, that's not great.
Nobody's argued that it's great or good, in fact.
In fact, you could call it bad.
But saying that Ukraine requires denazification
and thus justifies an invasion
that has already killed scores more people
than this fringe group ever has is a real stretch.
Especially when you got your own Nazi problem,
there's only an estimated 900 people in the group
and it doesn't hold any real influence in Ukrainian politics
or over the Ukrainian people.
Compare that to, you know,
the amount of white supremacists in the US,
many of which are members of our own military
and police force, perhaps even our actual government.
We're stupid with Nazis over here.
It's, dare I say, not good.
But imagine if one day Mexico or Canada
decided to invade the US
and claim it's because of the Oath Keepers
or some shit like that,
that would be whack and or bogus.
But that little kernel of reality
that there are neo-Nazis in Ukraine
and those guys have fought against Russia in the past
has been used as part of its information campaign.
Now ironically successful on right-leaning social media
to argue that it justifies the unjustifiable.
But to be fair and balanced,
maybe it's all true and justifiable
and the reason for the invasion.
Let's check on the peace talks
during which Russia dropped their denazification request.
Oh, weird.
All right, anyway, given how awful all of this is,
the fact that I'm going to ask you to sit quietly
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Did those compelling ads make you forget about the war for a minute?
That's good.
I'm happy for you.
But unfortunately, we need to keep talking about war.
Spoilers, that's pretty much this entire episode.
There's not going to be a puppet flopping around in this one.
I'm sorry and or you are welcome.
And while it's sadly typical to take another country's struggles and use them to talk about
America, which we will be getting to later, for the moment, that's exactly what I need to do.
Because we're going to see consequences of Russia's actions everywhere. And so we should
probably discuss what we're likely to expect here in the United States in terms of a reaction,
regardless of how the war in Ukraine continues to develop. We are, after all, a global
superpower. So whatever dipshit path we stumble on is going to affect most of the world. First of all,
we're inevitably going to see a lot more defense spending because of course we are. There's
literally no timeline in which we weren't going to see that happen. The 2022 budget that Joe Biden
signed in March allocated a 5.6% increase for defense or $42 billion
when he'd only requested a 1.8% increase.
Even before Russia's invasion,
this boost was being casually referenced in the media
as an absolute necessity to fight any potential future wars
against China and Russia.
War with China and Russia being two things
the media would just hate.
Post-invasion, we sold some swanky US-made F-35 fighter jets
to Germany, which decided it had no choice
but to sharply increase its defense spending.
And we're pushing other NATO countries to do the same.
And while non-defense programs also increased
by 6.7% in the budget,
a lot of those programs are getting less funding
than initially thought.
This includes critical research projects
at the National Institutes of Health.
And you know, I guess that would make sense
if we'd fucking knocked it out of the park
when it came to public health over the last two years,
which we did not do that thing.
But at least the downtrodden folks at Raytheon
are finally getting a win.
Also, as of writing this,
the White House just announced their 2023 defense budget
of $813 billion,
another 4% increase from this 2022 increase.
Oh boy, maybe now we can afford the good drones
with the leather seats for where the pilot won't be.
We're also likely to see a lot more drilling.
This is of course, thanks to the oil hungry
drill baby drill rhetoric of the right wing
socialist hippie Joe Biden.
Even though Russia's actions are only one
of several reasons it was happening,
the early weeks of the war corresponded
with the highest gas prices seen in American history.
It doesn't matter that the price of crude oil dropped
in March and gas stations are
just gouging us by not dropping their prices.
The buck stops here, by which I mean over there on Biden's desk next to all the Prilosec,
which means that he is under increasing pressure to encourage oil companies to drill using
the permits they already have and to open up new sites for drilling, even though the
Bureau of Land Management already approved a shit ton of new permits
in the first year of his presidency.
And even though it won't do shit about gas prices
over the short term.
And like, I guess if we had also knocked it out of the park
on that whole climate change thing, this would be fine.
But it turns out we did not do that thing either.
And if this trend continues,
we'll not only have to suffer high gas prices
even when the price of oil goes down,
but at least several more months
of blazing hot takes like this.
Since the invasion, oil prices have skyrocketed.
Today, the average gas price in America
hit an all-time record high of over $4 per gallon.
Okay, that stings,
but a clean conscience is worth a buck or two.
I'm willing to pay.
It's important. It's important. I'm willing to pay $4 a gallon. Hell, I'll pay $15 a gallon
because I drive a Tesla. Get it? Because he's rich and can afford it.
But it's easy to shrug off clueless rich people.
See, watch as I shrug.
It's less easy to give a pass to an entire political party
that's asking people to sacrifice for the greater good,
but not offering any financial assistance
outside of a few state proposals.
Yes, we'll all have to drive less
if we're ever going to transition away
from fossil fuels and shucks.
Maybe better public transportation would help with that.
But high gas prices inevitably
hit low-income Americans the hardest,
who don't have the luxury of buying an electric car
and are forced to drive in America's
unfathomably sprawled out cities
for groceries, school, and work.
Not to mention our nation's struggling arsonists.
What are they gonna use now?
Gunpowder?
You know how heavy that shit is?
Pretty heavy.
Finally, in terms of American response,
we're going to be dealing with a bunch
of cultural Cold War garbage,
largely taking the form of anti-Russian sentiment
that doesn't really do anything.
Some of this is silly and largely harmless.
If your neighborhood bar wants to call a Moscow mule
a Kiev mule, okay, whatever.
That drink almost certainly originated
in the United States in the 1940s anyway,
and Bradford, your pistachio bartender,
can gleefully call it whatever he wants.
But most of these anti-Russian actions
can be damaging and potentially violent.
Not only are Russian owned
or just Russian sounding businesses being boycotted,
but some have been vandalized and their owners threatened.
Many of the vandalized businesses,
which include Russian restaurants and bakeries,
are partially staffed by Ukrainian immigrants.
Not that it would make a difference
if it was only Russian people working there,
because again, they're not living in Russia.
Living in Russia doesn't mean they deserve it either.
They're not commanding the Russian armed forces
and they did nothing to you.
You're not John Wick defending your dead dog.
You're just some dick pissing on the door
of an Armenian deli.
John Dick, perfect wordplay.
Or take the example of 20 year old Russian pianist,
Alexander Malafeev.
Orchestras across Canada canceled several
of his scheduled performances,
even after he publicly spoke out against the war.
And even though he worried that doing so
could endanger his family in Russia.
Malafeev has been a celebrated musician
since he was a child and is already at his young age,
considered one of the world's greatest pianists.
The artistic director of the Vancouver Recital Society
said she felt heartbroken by the decision to cancel the show
but worried that Malafiev might face protestors
or even violence if the performance went forward.
Seems silly and perhaps we should reserve these things
for people who have done something wrong
and not just someone who knows a guy who knows a guy
who knows a guy who starched Putin's pants in the 80s.
Also, Russian people just like Americans
and all humans have memories
and people tend to remember how they were treated
in times when sentiments
lined up against them. Except for the French. They forgot all that Freedom Fries stuff right away.
Too loopy on cognac and le fromage, am I right? Too busy watching the acclaimed work of Alain
Resnais and Francois Truffaut. Too busy with their Frenchie parental leave and universal healthcare, fucking jerks.
Anyway, to show that being against the war
need not be anti-Russian people,
I'm going to enjoy a smooth glass of Smirnoff,
even though it's distilled and bottled
in Norwalk, Connecticut.
Let's do this.
That's the stuff. Really quiets the mind pain, you know?
And like, hey, maybe all this extra defense spending
and anti-Russian stuff will be short-lived.
How long did the previous Cold War last?
Four and a half decades tops?
It'll be 2067 in no time.
Paint my insides, you sweet poison.
But what's especially wild, at least to me,
isn't the individual stories
of misguided anti-Russian events
or the sanctions we're about to talk about,
but rather that because we are a planet
dominated by a handful of trillion dollar conglomerates,
they have the power to put the screws to a country
that America only wishes it had.
PayPal, Visa, MasterCard, American Express,
Goldman Sachs, NASDAQ, and the New York Stock Exchange
have all suspended business in Russia.
Boeing, Microsoft, IBM, Starbucks,
freaking McDonald's, Coca-Cola, Pepsi,
and several others have followed suit.
Netflix pulled its Russian service.
Apple stopped selling products to Russia. And Russia-based Ikea, H& Pepsi, and several others have followed suit. Netflix pulled its Russian service.
Apple stopped selling products to Russia.
And Russia-based Ikea, H&M, and Nike locations all closed. Even Ubisoft and EA Games suspended business.
So now if you're in Russia,
you won't get to play the really fun and good.
It's still something.
Basically, in addition to the US government targeting the Bank of Russia,
virtually every financial institution in the world has just decided that Russia doesn't get
to have money anymore. And they also don't get to have Big Macs or planes or telecommunications
or mediocre video games or the internet, really. It's a devastating blow. And I guess I just need
to reflect on that for a moment and how like, isn't it wild that we can just shut down a country like it's a roller rink
where someone got mugged with a bike lock and there doesn't have to be any official legal
government decision to do it. It's just a thing that corporations can unilaterally choose to do
and could do again at any point. And while in this case, Russia is definitely the aggressor,
it's just kind of shocking to think
about how much power corporations have over governments.
And we should probably ask ourselves
if that's like ultimately a good thing,
that these mostly American-centric companies
can make sweeping global changes
to kneecap other entire countries
whose leaders don't agree with our values.
And like, I don't even have an answer for this here.
Maybe that's just the price of becoming a global community.
But it still seems really goddamn wild to think about.
And maybe we shouldn't have corporations that are so big
they can shut down a country.
Similarly, we should really re-examine sanctions in general.
In case you need a refresher,
sanctions are penalties, often economic,
that a single or collection of countries
inflict on a single government.
This is often done with embargoes or tariffs.
It's one of the benefits of being part
of a global community.
You can all come together and decide as a group
that this Putin guy doesn't get to have any more dip
for the rest of the party.
And they are a way to punish an aggressor nation
that is violating international law
without starting a war or resorting to violence.
Or at least that's how the West presents it
every time we throw sanctions at a country
that steps out of line.
But that's not really true, is it?
Sanctions are indirect acts of violence
inflicted on an entire population.
Shutting off trade with a country could starve its people.
And I'm pretty sure government enforced starvation
is somewhere
under the same paragraph of war crimes for dummies as indiscriminate drone strikes and mandatory
golden pistols for the dictator's many children. Another equally popular and equally terrible
non-violent strategy is the idea of instituting a no-fly zone. According to recent polls,
between about half and three quarters of Americans believe that the U.S. and NATO should establish a no-fly zone over Ukraine to prevent Russia from conducting any air operations, including bombardments of civilian targets.
In fact, 27 leading experts signed an open letter to the White House imploring President Biden to establish a limited no-fly zone over some areas of Ukraine. The letter states in part,
what we seek is the deployment of American and NATO aircraft,
not in search of confrontation with Russia,
but to avert and deter Russian bombardment
that would result in massive loss of Ukrainian lives.
Now, this absolutely sounds like a reasonable idea on paper.
Using US and NATO forces to patrol the skies
rather than committing to an all-out war
will prevent widespread loss of life and limit Russia to a ground invasion. A no-fly zone would
also crush the competitive juggling scene, which may be controversial, but it has needed to happen
for a while. The thing is, establishing a no-fly zone is a direct confrontation, and Putin has
made it extremely clear that he is aware of this. Now we are hearing that a no-fly zone must be established over the territory of Ukraine.
It is impossible to do so over the territory of Ukraine itself.
It is possible only from the territory of some neighboring countries.
But any move in this direction will be viewed by us as a participation in the armed conflict.
He's not wrong.
Specifically about this.
He's very wrong about a bunch of other stuff.
But how do you think a no-fly zone is maintained?
By politely asking encroaching aircraft
to land at the nearest convenient airstrip?
No, they're enforced with violence.
In order to maintain a no-fly zone over Ukraine,
US and NATO forces would have to blast Russian planes
right out of the goddamn sky
like Cuba Gooding Jr. in Pearl Harbor.
And hey, there's a segue for you.
You know why Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. And hey, there's a segue for you.
You know why Japan attacked Pearl Harbor?
Because the US had imposed sanctions
that cut off Japan's oil supply.
Japan was in the middle of an expensive war
and they needed to get their airplane fuel from somewhere.
So it was either lose World War II, a world war,
or cripple the US fleet to allow them
to seize oil rich targets in the Pacific.
Because sanctions, like no-fly zones zones are 100% an act of war.
Japan sure thought so, enough to launch
the most infamous attack in American military history.
Sanctions and no fly zones are not that different
from invading a country and laying siege to a granary.
The point is to deny vital resources
and cock up battlefield strategy.
It's like letting the air out of Lightning McQueen's tires
before a big race.
It doesn't seem like war
because he didn't even notice you doing it,
even though the tires are literally part of his body.
So I guess that would be like someone draining
all the blood out of your feet.
But while it's not directly violent,
it could cost him the race and potentially cause a crash
that will send him pinwheeling into the stands
to mangle scores of innocent bystanders
with his horrible metal corpse.
So maybe the idea of putting Russia's back to the wall
with crippling economic sanctions in a no-fly zone,
which again, can only be enforced via military action,
is an act of war too.
And again, it sure seems like Putin sees it that way.
Even more tellingly,
experts who are advocating for a no-fly zone in Ukraine
are fully aware that it is effectively an act of war
and that Russia will almost certainly view it as such.
Retired US Air Force General
and stone-faced gambler of fate, Philip Breedlove,
explained that establishing a no-fly zone
wouldn't just be about keeping planes out of the sky.
It would also include taking out any defense systems,
such as artillery, that could fire into the no-fly zone,
which would mean bombing into enemy territory.
And according to General Breedlove,
they all acknowledge that.
Cool, man.
Thank you for acknowledging.
And while Pearl Harbor was a failure
in terms of accomplishing Japan's goals,
Russia has something that 1940s Japan did not.
A mountainous buttload of nukes,
enough nukes to fill the ass of a mythological giant,
like Shrek.
Russia has several Shrek's ass loads of nukes.
Despite sounding like a relatively clean-handed,
long-distance solution to a formal declaration of war,
a no-fly zone risks pulling the US and NATO
into a direct conflict with Russia.
That would essentially start World War III,
the ET2 of wars, the sequel we've been talking about
for decades, but hasn't managed to come together yet.
Even a limited no-fly zone would seriously increase
the risk of nuclear escalation.
So are we just not aware of that?
Or do we not care?
Yup, you guessed it. It's the
second thing. And the first thing. And just like ET2, there's like a fringe group of weirdos who
are totally looking forward to World War III. And by fringe, I mean a bunch of United States
politicians. It could mean that we participate and I would not rule that out. I would not rule out American troops on the ground.
We don't, do you know, we don't rule out first use nuclear.
Last December, Mississippi Senator Roger Wicker
said the US shouldn't rule out first use nuclear strikes
and ground forces against Russia.
He said this on TV.
He went on TV and casually floated the idea
of the United States launching a preemptive
nuclear strike on Russia as though it were an equally plausible and reasonable course of action
to sending ground troops. Perennial ghoul and professional tanning bed spokesman Anthony
Scaramucci tweeted in early March that the U.S. should target Russian nuclear reactors,
arguing that it's only a matter of time before Putin starts letting the nukes fly,
so we might as well get in there early.
Like we're trying to beat Putin to the KitchenAid mixers
on Black Friday.
And the benefit of hitting a nuclear reactor means
you get to drop a nuke without actually dropping a nuke.
Clever backdoor way to commit a preemptive war crime,
you leathery scamp.
I can see why Trump liked you so much
for an extremely brief window of time.
And speaking of which, who could forget all the times
our previous commander in chief,
that wet airbrushed body pillow of Michael Douglas,
casually suggesting shooting nukes at absolutely everything,
including a literal hurricane.
Trump, like many armchair tough guys and politicians,
his age was just rock hard for nukes.
He spent his administration doubling the US's arsenal
of low yield nukes, pulling the US out of two treaties
meant to monitor and limit nuclear proliferation.
He also expanded the list of national threats
that would justify a nuclear retaliation
to include a major hacking event.
Let me hit that a little harder.
The United States officially gave itself permission to drop a fucking nuke in response to a cyber attack.
It's no surprise that this humanoid butter sculpture is now suggesting that America should commit false flag attacks against Russia by bombing them with planes disguised as Chinese aircraft. You know, just instigating a fun little war between two dictatorial superpowers
with robust nuclear arsenals so we don't have to spend any of our own money on a war with no
potential for profit. It is absolutely wild how many world-ending ideas are being loudly stated
by political leaders. We have somehow normalized this idea of collective punishment so much that
we had fairytale riddle keeper and alleged Senator Lindsey Graham publicly call for Putin's assassination on both Twitter and then national television.
I hope he'll be taken out one way or the other. I don't care how they take him out.
I don't care if we send him to the Hague and try him. I just want him to go. Yes, I'm on record.
Hey, Lindsey, stop it. Hey! Lindsay! Stop it!
Government officials can't publicly
muse about murdering world leaders.
That has a massive geopolitical ripple
effect, not the least of which being that now
both Putin and the entire world think
the U.S. might be planning on murdering Russia's
president. True, he's a dick,
and president in this context is just another
word for dictator for life, and frankly,
he absolutely should not remain in power.
But for a politician to say it aloud
without any sort of plan is, it's super irresponsible.
Like imagine if the president said something like that.
Darn, that's not good.
Like again, I don't disagree with Biden,
but people tend to get a little nervous
when the United States casually suggests
what sure sounds like a regime change.
We sort of have a history with that,
like a really, really, really, really, really,
really long history with that.
So maybe it's not good for a president to like,
say it out loud as a fucking ad lib
and then blame it on being Irish.
So why are so many people rock hard,
just paralyzingly turgid for causing a nuclear war?
In part, it's because there's a widespread belief
in America that the US would not only survive nuclear war,
but would be totally fine.
Because the US has been more or less totally fine
and free from the majority of the consequences
of even traditional warfare,
pretty much since its inception.
Back in February, Joy Behar lamented to her co-hosts
on The View that the conflict between Russia and Ukraine
was going to interrupt her plans to vacation in Italy.
"'If the nukes start flying,
"'it's going to interrupt more than a few European vacations
"'and I don't mean viewings of the film European Vacation.'"
I don't only mean that.
The point is, that's the level of consideration
some American people generally have for global conflict
and the threat of nuclear war.
At best, it doesn't seem real to us
because we never experienced the majority
of the effects of war, because the US is an island
far distant from the rest of the world's superpowers. We don't face the regular threat of invasion.
We've never fought a modern war on our own soil.
There's barely been any wars fought in America except against ourselves and the
British twice,
but Cornwallis wasn't sitting on a nest of ICBM silos at Yorktown and the
Brits didn't drop a nuke on the white house in the war of 1812.
War is long, ugly, violent chaos
that decimates the population and brings cities to ruin.
The United States has simply never experienced that
on a modern scale.
So we think things like no-fly zones and sanctions
and drone strikes and bombing raids
and casually suggesting nuclear conflict aren't a huge deal.
Or perhaps these people are daring nuclear war
because they do know what it means,
but also think that America
is somehow destined to come out on top.
It's an idea called dispensationalism,
first popularized by evangelical writer
and right-wing uber twerp, Hal Lindsey,
and it's derived from the Bible.
Basically, a nuclear war would wipe the slate clean
for the whole planet and America would emerge victorious
and in more or less the same condition,
ready to reshape the world and lead it
into a glorious future under the rule of King America.
That's batshit, like objectively guano.
If that had come out of Skeletor's mouth,
Beastman would have called an ambulance.
And yet you could argue
that the belief in a righteous Armageddon
isn't at all fringe.
And in fact, was shared by at least one modern president
of the United States.
You can probably guess which one.
So with all of that in mind,
I sure think we need to take a moment
and explain what a nuclear bomb actually does.
Are we all ready?
It's a brand new segment that we're calling
Ednucation with Cody J.
Wow, that was perfect, perfect segment title.
Okay, so here's what a nuclear bomb actually does,
because it seems like entirely too many people
need a refresher.
The immediate detonation of a nuke
creates a fireball of plasma one mile across
that is hotter than the sun.
You know the one.
Anything caught within that fireball just vaporizes.
And I'm not being cheeky or hyperbolic.
I mean, it literally actually vaporizes.
People, buildings, trees, micro buses,
bike messengers, pizza rats, groundhogs, hedgehogs, mustaches,
overdue library books, promptly returned library books.
Everything is just gone.
The explosion creates a flash of light
that generates a plasma wave that stretches out
for as far as eight miles from the blast,
which is powerful enough to ignite everything it touches.
So that means everything within about 200 square miles
is now on fire in roughly one second.
That's like an episode of Dragon Ball Z
where everyone was drunk.
Godzilla couldn't put up those numbers
and not just because he doesn't exist.
Then a shockwave of wind stronger than any hurricane
or tornado in recorded history
flattens the area in the immediate vicinity of the blast.
And although the shockwave weakens just a tiny bit
as it expands outward,
it's still strong enough to obliterate most houses and non-reinforced buildings for up to 175 square kilometers or
nearly 70 miles. The mushroom cloud, where all so rock hard to see, is a plume of dust and ash
that used to be the population of a city. And that mushroom cloud sucks in even more air and
debris like a vacuum, laying waste to anything left standing.
And the casualties of this are arguably the lucky ones.
The explosion isn't the sole point of a nuke.
And while this humble news merchant
apparently made the foolish fucking mistake
of believing that was common knowledge,
it evidently needs to be repeated for the cheap seats.
You know, the ones occupied
by literal presidents and senators.
A nuke's long game is fallout,
basically to scorch the earth
by poisoning an entire population center with radiation.
The fallout risk is greatest
during the first 48 hours after the explosion.
Roughly half of the people exposed to radiation
in the direct vicinity of the blast
will die of radiation poisoning.
Those who don't die right away can linger for days or weeks,
ultimately succumbing to either an obliterated immune system
unable to fight infections
or their digestive systems literally shutting down.
Other survivors exposed to fallout
are at an extremely high risk of developing cancer
for the rest of their lives.
According to the International Committee of the Red Cross,
more than 10,000 survivors of the nuclear attacks
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
have been treated over the past 70 years,
with most of the deaths in this group
attributed to some form of cancer.
Leukemia rates in the survivors
who were exposed to radiation
were four to five times higher than the typical levels
for the first 15 years after the bombs were dropped.
It's important to note that the fallout in Japan was local,
meaning it was confined to the blast zones.
But we have spent the past 80 years
supersizing these things like a fry cook on acid.
Modern nuclear weapons
have gotten exponentially more devastating
and launched radioactive dust into the stratosphere,
which allows for global fallout.
Then there's nuclear winter.
Just 100 of the bombs, the size of the ones the US used
to heroically murder generations of people
in Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
would lower global temperatures enough
to cause a mini ice age in which Manny, Sid,
and the charming rat beast are all drenched
with bone cancer.
The sudden extreme drop in temperature
would trigger a global famine by destroying crops
and destabilizing agriculture.
Current nuclear bombs are over 50 times more powerful
than the two dropped on Japan in 1945,
which means it would only take two of those
to plunge the entire planet into nuclear winter.
And even if the blast were smaller or less nuky,
there's still the problem of fallout
poisoning agriculture. In a 2017 interview with Live Science, provoked by the famous
fire and fury rant then-President Trump hooted out of his Malapulgian windhole,
co-director emeritus at Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation,
Michael May, said that in a place like Ukraine, which produces 10% of the world's wheat supply,
Fallout could contaminate the crops and the soil,
passing delicious cancer onto any people
or livestock who consume it,
potentially for several years after the blast.
This isn't classified information.
We made an entire series of best-selling video games
about this exact concept and literally called it Fallout.
So anyway, that's what a nuke does.
Currently, Russia has around 4,500 nuclear warheads,
along with 2,000 smaller tactical nuclear warheads.
So maybe we should keep that in mind.
Hope that helps.
This has been Ed Nucation with Cody J.
Ooh, yeah, dull it.
Killed a bad brain, sweet juice.
Okay, so to date, the United States
is the only country in history to have used nuclear weapons
and Western mass media has been doing a bang up job
of minimizing that fact for the past 80 years.
The US heavily censored images of the devastation,
so much so that the first uncensored photos
showing the true human cost of the bombings
didn't appear in Western media,
specifically in Life Magazine,
until 1952, seven years after the bombs were dropped.
If you took history in an American classroom,
you were taught the bombs were a necessary evil,
that they brought a swift end to what would have been a long and bloody war. That necessary evil justification
continues to fuel the narrative around the bombings. But the Pacific War leading up to the
bombings is rarely discussed. The U.S. was already routinely firebombing Japanese towns and cities,
including one campaign that killed over 100,000 civilians in Tokyo within 48 hours. Also,
Russia had just declared war on Japan, and there were even reports surfacing just a month before
the nukes were dropped that Japan was mulling over a surrender. Hitler and Mussolini had both
been dead for months, and Germany had surrendered back in May. The Axis had already broken up,
with no possibility of a reunion tour
with its original lineup.
The war was winding down,
no matter what any of these monsters
in the highest level of government may claim.
Then, as now, America just really wanted
to drop some fucking nukes,
and for the rest of the world to see them do it.
Framing the bombings is the key to ending World War II,
insisting that killing hundreds of
thousands of civilians was justified because it might have saved untold lives, really just means
it might have saved untold American and British lives. And we happily agreed with that version
of events. 85% of America approved of the bombings in 1945. And I mean, they kind of had to approve,
right? Otherwise, we'd have to realize that our country conducted
one of the most unnecessary massacres known to humankind.
Not to say any massacre is necessary.
Meanwhile, President Harry Truman claimed
he was following a utilitarian approach
when he decided to green light the attack.
As in, the needs of the many outweigh the needs
of anyone who isn't American.
You know, that thing Spock said.
Incidentally, Truman referred to the quote,
Japs as ruthless and fanatic savages in his personal diary,
but I'm sure that had nothing to do with his decision.
The atomic bomb dropped over Hiroshima
killed 80,000 people instantly.
The one over Nagasaki killed 40,000 people instantly.
The two cities were
chosen primarily because they were large urban centers that would maximize devastation. According
to declassified documents, Hiroshima was selected in part because it was surrounded by hills that
would focus and increase the blast damage considerably. And on the morning of August 6th,
1945, the United States flew a plane into Hiroshima
and dropped the most horrible weapon in human history
directly on top of a hospital.
That's not a joke.
There's a memorial there now and everything.
In fairness, it was supposed to hit a bridge,
but the bomb drifted by 800 feet.
So we didn't mean to nuclear bomb a hospital.
We meant a nuclear bomb immediately next to a hospital.
This whole mentality,
casually floating the idea of nuclear war
as if it won't affect everyone,
and the idea that no-fly zones and sanctions
are somehow nonviolent war alternatives,
all ties back to the modern world,
specifically mass media and American policymaking,
framing every global conflict from a Western standpoint.
The bombing of Hiroshima was justified
because it saved Western lives.
Sanctions and no-fly zones are nonviolent alternatives
to war because they save Western lives.
Lobbing a nuke at Russia or baiting Russia
into a nuclear war with China are acceptable possibilities
because they won't affect Western lives.
We don't wanna take anything off the table.
Go ahead and leave nuclear war on there.
Gotta keep our options open.
After all, the greatest freedom of all
is the freedom of a robust selection.
That's why the founding fathers invented cable, you see.
And that's the fundamental and horrifying problem
on display in the coverage
of the ongoing crisis in Ukraine.
Journalists around the world are framing the conflict entirely from a Western perspective.
But this isn't a place, with all due respect, you know, like Iraq or Afghanistan that has
seen conflict raging for decades. You know, this is a relatively civilized,
relatively European, I have to choose those words
carefully too, city where you wouldn't expect that or hope that it's going to happen. So it's
partly human nature, but they are not in denial. And this is not a developing third world nation.
This is Europe. Just to put it bluntly, these are not refugees from Syria. These are refugees from neighboring Ukraine.
I mean, that quite frankly is part of it.
These are Christians, they're white,
they're very similar to people.
They are breathlessly dedicating hundreds of hours
of coverage to Ukraine.
Coverage that has been denied from conflicts
like the decades old violence, devastation and apartheid
Israel has committed against Palestinians.
Because endless war is to be expected in the Middle East.
That's just what those brown folks do.
Nothing to be done about that.
And to be clear, I am barely exaggerating.
Also to be clear, what is happening in Ukraine is horrible.
But Palestinian civilians are regularly massacred
by Israeli troops in the Gaza Strip,
and it rarely makes international news.
Definitely nothing near the scope of the coverage of Ukraine
but the media isn't just showing obvious bias
towards Western predominantly white nations
by their lack of coverage.
Remember that video of that 12 year old Palestinian girl
confronting an Israeli soldier?
There are actually a bunch of examples
of social media users sharing videos
of the violence
and brutality in the Gaza Strip, some of it already several years old, and labeling them as footage
from Ukraine. And they're horrified by the images, like they should be, but we're showing the rest of
the world that we're incapable of caring about that violence unless it's being inflicted on
predominantly white Europeans. The fact that we seem to be debating
whether or not this is the first war with social media
really speaks to how many recent conflicts
we have completely ignored.
Because for the record, there have been several wars
in the age of social media and Netflix.
Back in 2011, real-time reporting on the ground
during the Arab Spring unfolded on social media.
The ongoing civil wars in Syria and Yemen have been unfolded on social media. The ongoing civil wars in Syria and Yemen
have been heavily covered on social media
for over a decade now.
Just because you didn't see it on your timeline
doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Those aren't TV shows you missed.
They're major geopolitical conflicts
that will shape history.
America has been at war in Iraq and Afghanistan
since 2000 and God damned three.
We're not even remembering our own wars correctly,
which to be fair, America has a habit of doing.
The needs of the many to watch Masked Singer
without feeling sad.
That, yeah, that's the one.
Thanks again, Mr. Spock.
This Western normative framing of global conflict
allows the US and other Western world powers
to continue viewing the world
as if war is something that only happens far away
in blasted prehistoric landscapes full of literal cavemen.
We are so disconnected by this viewpoint
that within the first day of Russia's invasion,
urgent reports about how the war would affect
the stock market were popping up all over the internet,
including pieces advising what investments would be smart to make during the conflict.
And not on fringe crackpot websites, these things were getting published by all the major outlets.
Within the same timeframe, those major outlets were running hand-wringing pieces about what the potential spark that ignites World War III might mean for the future of cryptocurrency.
what the potential spark that ignites World War III might mean for the future of cryptocurrency.
Outlets like Time and NBC even framed the invasion of Ukraine
as a turning point for crypto,
a chance for crypto to finally prove its worth
as more than just a money laundering service for criminals,
now it could prove its worth as a money laundering service
for desperate oligarchs looking to flip
their plummeting rubles.
The point is, Western media has been programmed to immediately contextualize war according to the parameters of how much money can be lost or gained, or because that's the only consequence
of war most Americans have ever experienced. It's literally a game to us. That's why we have
jaunty emerald tycoons like Elon Musk challenging Vladimir Putin to a
one-on-one fight on Twitter for the fate of Ukraine. It's embarrassing, and it's sad,
and disappointing, and really, really dangerous for the entire planet, because it's yet another
reason we think nukes are just another game piece on the board to defend Western lives,
because those are the most important lives
on the globe, you see.
This Western normative perspective
allows people to sanitize their entire worldview
from the realities of war.
Wars never happen here, therefore they are not that bad.
And if war happened here,
my life would continue more or less as normal,
is a catastrophic lie to believe.
But the US has used its considerable power and influence
to nurture this lie for damn near a hundred years.
So you can't say these sacks of hammers
we keep allowing on television
didn't come by their terrible opinions, honestly.
It's easy to swallow a lie
that gets quietly reinforced every single day
by the biggest media conglomerates
in the history of the world.
And it's made even easier when you were taught the lie in school.
We need critical war theory now.
There are so, so many wars and armed conflicts going on right now,
like right now at the same time as the invasion of Ukraine.
The United States is involved in a few of them too.
But the West has historically minimized war so much,
thanks to our unique and privileged position,
that we act like it's not even a big deal.
It's just the cost of doing business as America.
The needs of the many Americans
outweigh the needs of literally whoever.
It sounded so much better when Spock said it.
Am I getting it right?
I'm not saying the solution to the war in Ukraine
is a reckoning with America's disturbing
and destructive history of downplaying its role
in global conflicts.
I'm not only saying that,
but maybe we need to start treating every war
the way we're treating Ukraine.
All wars are bad, all of them, every single one.
We need to dispense with the necessary evil way of thinking
because it's created several generations
of ghoulish monsters who are more than happy to starve
and nuke millions of people if it keeps the Bitcoin running
on time.
And these people are now effectively making decisions
for the entire world.
So I guess that's the actual overall premise of the video.
Just that war is bad.
Can we run that original title again?
War bad.
Right, war bad.
And like, what if we were anti-war?
What if that was the focus
of the immediate wave of reporting
instead of pearl clutching over the stock market
and how the victims of this crisis have Netflix and Twitter
and look just like us.
What if we taught that in schools,
that instead of a necessary evil,
war was just evil and perpetuates evil on both sides?
What if the news reinforced that idea every single night,
not quietly, but loudly?
What if they were concerned
about our $9 trillion military budget over 10 years
or pointed out how all of our military bases
in not our country can easily be perceived
as perpetual acts of aggression?
What if we all agreed like nuking people is off the table?
What if we transferred our grotesque defense budget
over to things like health and rescue,
you know, actual defense.
What if Elon Musk really did defeat Putin in a fight?
Wouldn't that be fucking wild?
Get him in a gleaming emerald mech
to do battle with Putin's Zangief Voltron?
I would pay good crypto to see that.
Anyway, that is our war episode.
Sorry there wasn't like a puppet in it,
but didn't seem appropriate.
What's that?
Some zany new plot twist.
No, nothing.
Just a straightforward episode about war.
Cool.
Well, see ya. Hey, you listening here, you, okay?
You like it and you subscribe to it.
And you say, ah, comments are good and we got
patreon.com slash some more news and we got uh podcast going to be more news and we got this
this is a podcast if you want and we got warm bow merch warm! We got your merch! Store!
And... Um...
War's bad.
So, okay.