Friday, October 17, 2025

Wars and Rumors of Wars


Wars and Rumors of Wars
By J.B. Shurk


The older I get, the more suspiciously I look at the causes of war.  This is natural.  Young people — especially young men — are incapable of properly evaluating risk.  Though they are rebellious, they also follow orders from authority figures.  There is a reason why eighteen-year-olds are sent over embankments to cross open fields on the frontlines: They can be convinced to pursue success and ignore mortality.  Courageous young men look right past danger.  Only years later do they ask themselves, “Why the hell did I do that?”

There is no question that we are being psychologically prepped for a great and terrible war.  Whether you are a civilian, veteran, or active service member, you surely have heard over the last ten years at least one commanding officer describe publicly the likelihood of a U.S.-China war or wider WWIII in the near future.

European politicians have been instructing their citizens to prepare for a full-on military conflict with Russian forces since the current war in Ukraine began.  Such civilian war preparations have not been limited to the Baltic states, Finland, or Poland.  France and the United Kingdom have spent the last several years conditioning citizens to expect bloodshed with the Russian Federation.

During the half-century Cold War, violence operated mainly in the shadows and through “proxies” so that the United States and the Soviet Union could at least pretend they were not directly fighting one another.  Such was the shared fear of nuclear weapons — and of mutually assured destruction — that even bitter enemies did what they could to limit runaway escalation.  The Moscow-Washington hotline — or what Hollywood mythologized as the doom-averting “red phone” — was established because both sides understood the stakes of WWIII.

Cold War warriors generally took to heart a quote attributed to Albert Einstein: “I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.”  With this warning lingering in the minds of men who could unleash global annihilation with the pressing of a few buttons, humanity has somehow avoided destroying itself in the eighty years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

In my estimation, the mood has radically changed over the last fifteen years.  A more cavalier attitude toward the use of nuclear weapons has replaced decades-long angst and circumspection.  Senators, generals, and even diplomats publicly make the case for the use of terrible weapons that could easily lead to mass slaughter on a scale never before witnessed.  Gone are the days of worrying about the end of life as we know it.  In their place, a new generation of military and political leaders seem to be not so quietly echoing a spine-chilling refrain: How will nuclear weapons deter our enemies if we are habitually afraid to use them?

As distasteful as it sounds, the military considers civilian minds part of the overall battlespace during war.  Before every conflict begins, the social consciousness is shaped to accept, expect, and engage in battle.  It feels as if we are being directed toward global war today.

Such an assertion might appear strange coming in the same week that President Trump is brokering peace in the Middle East.  Even casual students of war would expect that region of the world to be fully enflamed during any true global conflict.  Yet there are over fifty other conflicts raging around the world today, and over ninety countries are involved in battles beyond their territorial borders.  Although some Western societies can be hypnotized into believing that the world is enjoying relative peace, war is spreading faster today than it has since WWII.  Even with so much bloodshed, though, we have seen nothing that approaches the level of violence that will unfold should the Russia-Ukraine war transform into a U.S.-Russia war or simmering tensions between China and Taiwan transform into a direct showdown between the U.S. and China.

For the last decade, military academics have been predicting a global war by 2030.  Suspiciously, that is the date that the World Economic Forum, United Nations, and other globalist institutions have been highlighting as a universal “pivot” for humanity.

Artificial intelligence is evolving quickly.  Plans for mandatory digital identifications are taking hold across Europe.  Central banks are designing government-controlled digital currencies.  The European Union wants access to all private communications.  As president, Joe Biden constructed a “disinformation board” to filter public information and censor dissent.  The walls of a grand surveillance prison are being built all around us, while the same powers that be are preparing the public for economic hardship and prolonged war.


1 comment:

  1. I volunteered and served 6 years in the US Navy (18-24) and I served well and honorably. Looking back from my present age I wonder why I did that. Six prime years wasted looking at gauges, taking logs, catching pneumonia, losing my hearing and cleaning up other people's poop. What the hell was I doing?

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