On 3/4/25 10:15 AM, Tom Johnson wrote:
You're assuming the ongoing presence of Trump and Putin.
I don't know about Putin, but Trump is a cult leader. If something happens to him, Vance etc al. can't carry the water.

I agree, nobody able to carry Trump's nor Putin's water (as it were)...  a bit of a red=herring at that point... some wild card might appear out of nowhere and (mis)fill the void in some unexpected way (e.g. Asimov's "Mule" of "theFoundation"?)

One tiny anueurism or a dose of pollonium in the diet coke or some Ioicane Powder and the modern world diffracts  off into some strange new basin of attraction we haven't even imagined?

/Viva la punctuated equllibrium!
/


T


=======================
Tom Johnson
Inst. for Analytic Journalism
Santa Fe, New Mexico
505-577-6482
=======================

On Mon, Mar 3, 2025, 9:44 PM steve smith <sasm...@swcp.com> wrote:

    Friday afternoon the simple term "WWIII" took on a whole new
    understanding/context for me.

    Before that it was some variation on a nuclear exchange between
    any 2-3 of the major nuclear powers (US/USSR/China) which was held
    at bay mostly by variations on MAD.   Not only did the possibility
    of retaliation (before first-strike lands, or soon after) make it
    unthinkable, but so did the challenges of regional and global
    nuclear contamination and a likely nuclear winter (minimum of
    northern hemisphere, but global consequences).

    Now I see it being something more like a new European War similar
    to WWI & WWII, not involving North America directly (we don't
    pitch nor catch any)

     1. Europe sends in air and ground troops (and more equipment) to
        Ukraine to squash Putin's vestigal army. Marcus' no-fly-zone.
         1. Ukraine continues to punish Russia (e.g. destroying
            military assets inside Russia)
         2. The European coalition masses conventional forces on
            Russian borders with a "ready posture"
         3. Russia is humiliated.
         4. Putin (not Russia) in his humiliation decides to use his
            nukes...  craters half the major cities or capitols in UK/EU.
         5. France and UK have a *handful* of nukes.  I'm out of date,
            most or all are on nuclear subs which Russia may or may
            not know the location of.
         6. Moscow and a few 'grads become craters.
         7. Nuclear Winter
         8. Misery across Eurasia, the likes of which Russians are
            more accustomed
     2. Europe can't agree enough to give Ukraine decisive support (as
        in 1 above).
         1. Russia grinds Ukraine down, while using up yet more of
            it's own dwindling military and human capital.
         2. Europe and Russia rattle sabers for months or years but
            Russia is too depleted to continue a conventional war.
         3. Russia (Putin) gets impatient or arrogant and decides to
            nuke European powers.
         4. Again, the handful of non-US nukes targeted on Russia are
            enough to make a bad mess and maybe even win but only if
            used pre-emptively.
         5. (Western) Eurasia is a mess for a century.
     3. In either case MAGA (with/without Trump alive/vital/engaged)
        sits back and eats popcorn.
         1. If MAGA holds US power, they grind away at European and
            possibly Russian resources, stealing and war profiteering
            boldly.
         2. Maybe anti-MAGA backlashes MAGA out of power (probably has
            to be a strong political win followed by some minor but
            decisive bloodshed).  Maybe we help them rebuild (similar
            to post-WWII) or maybe we just sit back on our side of the
            Ocean.
     4. China waits patiently for the right moment to grab Mongolia
        for it's "raw earth" (trump SIC) and/or Taiwan.... possibly
        are both worth their effort... possibly the US uses the
        European distraction as an opportunity to treat China as our
        only overt competitor.

    I don't see the world "a better place" for any of this except in
    the extreme case of significant depopulation of both (sadly)
    third-world innocents and first-world belligerents (military,
    political, economic), and even then it isn't clear to me just
    *when* or *how* the "meek inherit the earth" but I'll be damned if
    it isn't an outcome I find myself rooting for!   Feels like if
    COVID had just been slightly more virulent, we might have gotten
    there by a vaguely more graceful route?

    GAH!


    On 3/3/25 9:10 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:

     1. NATO creates a no-fly zone over Ukraine, and destroys any
        Russian asset in Ukraine
     2. The Ukranians continue to develop their drone programs for
        targeted attacks in Russia
     3. Europe gives them long-range weapons, Storm Shadow and Taurus
        for larger targets

    Biden should have just done this, knowing that Trump would throw
    the world into chaos.

    *From:*Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com>
    <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> *On Behalf Of *Pieter Steenekamp
    *Sent:* Monday, March 3, 2025 7:50 PM
    *To:* The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
    <friam@redfish.com> <mailto:friam@redfish.com>
    *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] Back at the ranch, I'm enjoying the popcorn.


    A Case For and Against Trump in the Context of Ukraine

    The Case Against Trump
    Russia invaded Ukraine, and Ukraine has been fighting back
    heroically for three years. It is crucial to take decisive action
    against countries that invade others unprovoked. A good example
    is the First Gulf War, when Iraq invaded Kuwait, and the U.S. led
    a coalition to push Iraq out. That kind of response helps
    maintain international order.

    However, Trump now portrays Ukraine as the aggressor and openly
    aligns himself with Putin. His stance undermines the principle of
    standing against aggression and emboldens authoritarian regimes.
    His willingness to cozy up to Putin is simply wrong. Period.

    The Case For Trump
    Maintaining international order is important, but only if you
    have the power to enforce it effectively. If you can't win a war,
    engaging in it is a mistake. Consider how the U.S. aligned with
    Stalin in the later stages of World War II—not because Stalin was
    good, but because confronting him directly wasn’t a realistic
    option at the time. Putin may be an amateur compared to Stalin,
    but the logic remains: if you can’t stop him, you may have to
    find a way to work with him.

    Looking at today's reality, there is no viable path to pushing
    Russia out of Ukraine unless the U.S. commits fully—boots on the
    ground. But no one in America supports that. Given this, there’s
    a case for engaging with Russia pragmatically, much like how the
    U.S. dealt with Stalin, to bring the war to an end.

    Continuing to support Ukraine half-heartedly, without full
    military commitment, has serious downsides. The war could drag on
    indefinitely, and if Ukraine eventually wins, Russia would be
    humiliated. A humiliated nuclear-armed Russia is a dangerous
    prospect. History offers a warning—Germany’s humiliation after
    World War I directly contributed to the rise of Hitler. The
    consequences of a humiliated Russia could be similarly
    unpredictable and catastrophic.

    My Take
    In my lifetime, we had an almost perfect leader in South
    Africa—Nelson Mandela. Unfortunately, he is no longer with us.
    But surely, with today's AI, we could create a virtual Madiba,
    and he would know exactly what to do.

    On Mon, 3 Mar 2025 at 22:28, Tom Johnson <jtjohnson...@gmail.com>
    wrote:

        So as usual: Follow the Money.
        If Trump gets a deal with Ukraine on those rare earth
        minerals, upon leaving Ukraine, where does that ore go and to
        whom?  My bet is to some company(ies) that Trump et al. have
        interests in.

        TJ

        On Mon, Mar 3, 2025 at 12:33 PM Santafe <desm...@santafe.edu>
        wrote:

            It’s such an encapsulation of that part of the society
            (including t and v) to think that they could “humiliate”
            Zelenskyy.  By insisting, in a conversation with toxic
            scum, on the relevance of reality, he was about the only
            clean thing in the room that could be heard.

            There are people like Fareed Zakaria who think that trump
            can be somehow managed by a canny player.  That doesn’t
            ring correct to me, unless the player has a lot of power
            and money, and it is the power and money that are
            managing trump.  No agreement with trump is worth the
            paper it is written on.  We all understand that he will
            do anything he is not stopped from doing.  The problem
            with the american presidency is that there become fewer
            and fewer actors who can stop its occupant from doing
            things, in the era of political parties as universalizing
            corrupting bodies. If this whole train continues, they
            will eventually degrade the u.s. in wealth and power
            enough that its ability to do damage declines.  But there
            is so much accumulated right now, that they can do
            enormous harm before they undercut themselves.

            I am persuaded by those who opine that trump has no
            intention of doing anything to aid Ukraine, and that the
            point of the performance was to put up a front for not
            doing anything, for the same audience who interprets any
            of that as a humiliation of Zelenskyy.  If trump could
            extort money or resource access, and then backstab in
            return for it, I expect he would be interested in that
            opportunity.  But not more than that.

            I also think that people are living a little bit in the
            past when they comment that, with trump, it’s always
            about money.  That was before the first presidency, when
            his possibilities to exercise abusive power over other
            people in a country with some degree of rule of law was
            limited, relative to the amount of spending he could do
            (whether solvent or insolvent).  But the access to
            abusive power in the presidency, for a sociopath, is on a
            scale not available to anybody else.  If money was heroin
            for that addiction, the power of the presidency is
            fentanyl, and I don’t think trump is going back now. 
            Money: fine; but that’s now the second motive.

            (I think there are elements of this for Musk as well, but
            there is enough about him that is different that I
            wouldn’t put him in the same category, or in the same
            post here.)

            I, of course, don’t _know_ anything, and I don’t even
            have any sophistication thinking in this sphere.  But
            from my long distance from it, I can imagine that the
            calculus is roughly this at the moment:  It is still
            possible that trump won’t direct the u.s. military to
            attack Ukraine directly.  The question whether it is
            possible comes back, entirely, to what force is available
            to stop him from ordering it.  I don’t doubt for a minute
            that, if the EU starts to get scared, and if they have
            time to act constructively, enough to start to give
            Ukraine meaningful ability to hold land or push back a
            bit, the u.s. under trump would act as a saboteur of that
            effort.

            If that is the correct vantage point, I would imagine
            that Zelenskyy’s challenge is to try to orient the rest
            of the world into some structure that will hem trump and
            the trumpers in as much as possible from direct attack,
            and where possible against sabotage.  (Sabotage is
            harder, because to even find out that it is going on, you
            need somebody on the inside to report.)  If they can get
            some weapons out of the weapons contractors and the
            congressmen, sure; try to do what you can.  But any of
            that has meaning only when it is in your hands and being
            used.  Don’t put weight on anything short of that.

            (I don’t mean, in this, btw, to downplay the true problem
            that the current condition is a WWI-type trench warfare
            with drones, and the prospect of extending that to a
            point of collapse is already so bad, that it takes
            something truly awful for that not to be the worst.  I
            don’t see indication that any good-faith actor anywhere
            is denying that, though I don’t think saying it, alone,
            makes one a good-faith actor.)


            I had a conversation with a friend over the weekend who
            is a NASA program manager, and who interpreted a recent
            directive they had received, to discontinue the use of
            paper straws, and replace them with plastic straws, as a
            kickback to some petroleum company that had bribed
            trump.  Given that this is a smart person I am talking
            to, the quaintness of that interpretation took my breath
            away.  It seems clear beyond daylight, to me, that the
            images of turtles with straws in their noses, and
            seabirds dead of them, were the breakthrough that the
            environmental groups finally got with the public, to get
            some action to ban that specific plastic item as one of
            the most insidiously dangerous and cruel.  The point of
            the paper-straw ban was the point of everything with
            these people.  Most directly, it was an intent to deliver
            a “defeat” to the environmental groups, focusing on the
            image that had succeeded for them precisely because it is
            so awful to have to see more of.  But more generally,
            this is the core of meanness. It is a rage, by those who
            are defiled in their nature, against the existence of
            anything that isn’t defiled.

            This is again Hannah Arendt’s summary of the last-century
            European political actors: that they didn’t understand
            the distinction between the parties and the movements. 
            The parties wanted to control the government, whereas the
            movements wanted to destroy the government. Public
            commentary on this drives me nuts, because it seems to
            exactly repeat this error.   People talk about the
            appointments of degraded morons to agency heads as being
            about loyalty: take somebody who couldn’t earn anything
            in a world of merit, and put him on a plush perch that he
            knows he will only retain as long as he can continue to
            curry favor. But I believe that only to about a 30% level
            as the motive.  And it is an inward-facing motive; how to
            keep various functionaries on a leash.  There is an
            outward-directed motive, and I think that is about 70% of
            the drive. These people are put there, because he
            couldn’t find anybody worse. It is again the effort to
            eliminate the notion of legitimacy from the concept of
            society people will adopt and live within.

            The word I wanted to use for the latter, thinking over
            the weekend, was “vesting”. It’s a bit of a bland word,
            but it wraps up several things that otherwise I can’t
            encompass in one word.  The cognitive concept of truth;
            abstract notions such as justice; the society as an
            agreement underpinned by legitimized institutions.  What
            all these have in common is that people accept restraint
            to uphold a prior commitment to these other things as
            “higher” over the long run.  And when the mob wants to
            destroy the state — meaning, really to destroy that
            concept of society — it is this “higher” that they can
            keep their attention fixed on, as all the other
            particular targets (immigrants, academics, civil
            servants, black people, gay people, etc.) get rotated in
            and out as opportunities arise.

            So anyway: if every dealing with trump turns out to be,
            over time, a loss for Zelenskyy — the reality behind the
            literary Faustian Bargain — he may not be worse off
            having the break occur earlier.  I don’t know what it may
            buy him to have humiliated t and v, by having the dignity
            to not accept those terms of conversation, in terms of
            coalition-building with other heads of state.


            I do continue to wonder what China’s play in this will
            be.  I imagine they think they will have no trouble
            “managing” Russia into some kind of continuing
            subordinate status, when it is alone with a gigantic land
            area but a limited economy and population.  If it were
            even just Russia swallowing Ukraine, China might still
            think of that as an okay outcome. I feel pretty sure they
            want the rare earths, in view of their relations with
            Mongolia up to now, and the fact that the only thing
            protecting Taiwan is that it holds the entire world’s
            highest technology as a trust, and collapsing it would
            cause such a large global implosion that it would
            destabilize China as well, for now.  But they probably
            figure they can get those from Russian control, where
            Russia couldn’t develop them internally anyway.  An
            actual coalition of Russia with the U.S., however, could
            become more worrisome for China, even if the U.S. is
            undergoing a process of self-degradation.  So it is not
            inconceivable to me that China could want some stalemate
            to go on a while longer, which limits the coordination of
            the trumpers with other large actors as much as feasible.
            Another Faustian bargain for Zelenskyy if it is offered. 
            But maybe more predictable in the short term.

            But there, too, I don’t know anything.

            Eric



            > On Mar 3, 2025, at 11:34, steve smith
            <sasm...@swcp.com> wrote:
            >
            >
            >> It's way too generous to say "Trump has a case". Trump
            and Vance's "case" consists of "You should be grateful to
            us because we give you money". I.e. suck up to me and
            I'll deign to give you more money.
            > I don't think Trump or Vance have backed any
            significant support for Ukraine.   The US people through
            our elected representatives and tax dollars *HAVE*
            supported Ukraine (albeit a little slowly an a little
            anemically and a little timidly sometimes?).   Zelensky
            has been extravagantly and eloquently thankful to all of
            the above.  Trump and Vance were spoiling for an
            opportunity to try to humiliate Zelensky in front of the
            cameras, so they contrived it.
            >> Maybe someone makes the case you say is Trump's. But
            it's not Trump making that case. If he sporadically
            vomits words that sound like that, it's because they were
            put into his mouth by someone else. The question is Who
            put them there? Putin? Elno? Thiel?
            >
            > The "raw earth" (sic Trump) deal was extortion. 
             Whether Ukraine's mineral resources could or should be
            mortgaged to secure the financial support is one thing,
            but the idea that the point of the West supporting
            Ukraine against the hyper-aggressive Putin-led Russia is
            about economics completely misses the point.   Zelensky
            is right to avoid "doing business with" anyone who is not
            a clear staunch ally when in this situation.
            >
            > Trump & Allies are clearly "War Profiteers", a fine old
            tradition among the industrialists and financiers of the
            "free world".
            >
            >
            >>
            >> On 3/2/25 7:42 PM, Pieter Steenekamp wrote:
            >>> Just watched a new episode where two toddlers threw
            their toys out of the cot.
            >>>
            >>> Zelensky makes a strong case — Putin is unreliable,
            having broken numerous agreements in the past, so any
            peace deal would need ironclad security guarantees. But
            lecturing Trump is hardly the way to secure a favorable
            minerals trade agreement.
            >>>
            >>> Trump also has a valid case — the war is stagnating,
            there’s no realistic military path to driving Russia out
            of Ukraine, and pursuing peace makes sense. But losing
            your temper at an international press conference is not
            the way to get there.
            >>>
            >>> At the end of the day, they’re all human, and it
            makes for great real-life drama. I can't wait for the
            next episode!
            >>>
            >>
            >>
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        +1 505 577 6482
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