John Ʌ Konrad V

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John Ʌ Konrad V

John Ʌ Konrad V

@johnkonrad

CEO @gCaptain | US Merchant Marine | Ship Captain | Pentagon Press | Author: Fire on the Horizon | Shipbuilder | Blacklisted by Wikipedia | K5HIP 🇺🇸

Great Barrington, MA Katılım Mayıs 2007
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
This is why Americans are the deadliest fighters on earth. I met a priest yesterday who just got accepted to chaplain school in Newport. I asked him the obvious question: Marines or Navy? Navy, he said. His face fell a little. He told me he could never be a Marine because every Marine is a rifleman, and as a priest he can’t carry a weapon. He’s hoping to get assigned to a Marine unit anyway. All chaplains are Navy officers, so that’s the only door in. I laughed. I feel a little bad about that. Then I explained to him what “Devil Doc” means. The Marine Corps doesn’t have medics. They use Navy Corpsmen. I told him: when you get out to the fleet, find a Marine sergeant with a couple of Purple Hearts and tell him Devil Docs “aren’t real Marines.” Be prepared to duck. Marines are violently particular about who gets to wear their uniform. Navy Corpsmen and Navy chaplains who have eaten dirt alongside them in combat qualify. Full stop. My dad was Air Force. Not even Navy. I remember going to VFW halls with him as a kid. Someone would ask him what service, he’d say Air Force, and the room would chuckle a little. Then they’d find out he was a medic, and the air in the room changed. Something close to reverence. Dad hated being honored. He had one line he used to deflect it: “I didn’t do much. Save your praise for my cousin the PJ.” That always broke the ice. PJs are the Air Force special operators who go into hell to pull downed pilots out. They will take casualties and are prepared to die to rescue a single pilot or crewman. The math doesn’t math out. Why would any combat force take multiple casualties to rescue one air force jet jockey? What the padre is about to learn is that the military has a hierarchy that has nothing to do with rank, and nothing to do with the service stitched on your chest. Have you deployed? Have you seen combat? In every firefight there are men who move toward the guns and men who hang back. And when the guy at the tip of the spear is pinned down, bleeding, with rounds cracking past his head, there is exactly one word he screams into the radio. “Medic.” Here is the catch, and it is the whole reason America fights the way America fights. That Marine is willing to push forward into fire BECAUSE he knows the Corpsman is coming. He knows the medevac birds will land in the hot LZ. He knows the Devil Doc will drag him out by his plate carrier if it comes to that. And, if the medic can’t help, if he has what Dad called “injuries incompatible with life,” he knows that chaplain will crawl on his belly to administer last rights and deliver him to heaven. The F-15 pilot punching out over enemy territory knows the same thing. He knows the PJs will move heaven and earth to reach him, and turn whatever is shooting at him into a smoking crater of hell on earth on the way in. This is the quiet math underneath American violence. Our warriors are the fiercest on earth not because they are more aggressive, not just because they are better trained, or better equipped, though they are all of those things. They are the fiercest because they know, in their bones, that when they key the mic and call for help, help is coming in hot. Take that away, and you don’t have the U.S. military anymore. You have a security force.
The White House@WhiteHouse

🚨“WE GOT HIM! My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History, for one of our incredible Crew Office Members, who also happens to be a highly respected Colonel, and who I am thrilled to let you know is SAFE and SOUND!” - President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸

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sue_edwards72
sue_edwards72@Edwards72Sue·
@johnkonrad NATO Derangement Syndrome. Lots of Americans suffer from it. They forget that they are the only NATO country to call for help under Article 5 after 9/11 & Europeans answered the call & died for the USA.
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
NATO is in far bigger danger than anyone realizes. And the reason has nothing to do with defense budgets. The real danger is psychological. It’s cultural. Europeans didn’t just free-ride on American security for 80 years. They built an entire identity around the idea that they evolved past the Americans protecting them. That identity is now the single biggest obstacle to Western survival. And the darkest irony is: we helped build it. After World War II, Europe wasn’t just economically shattered. Its culture was in ruins. The cities, the universities, the concert halls, the museums. Rubble. The Marshall Plan rebuilt the economy. But culture wasn’t a priority. Not at first. Then the Iron Curtain dropped. And suddenly culture became a weapon. American diplomats, academics, artists & scholars flooded Western Europe. We funded their universities. Supported their orchestras. Rebuilt their museums. Promoted their intellectual life. Not because European culture needed saving for its own sake. Because Eastern Europeans were struggling for Maslow’s mist basic needs. We needed the view from the other side of that Wall to be intoxicating. So America built Western Europe into a showcase of self-actualization. Art. Philosophy. Cafe culture. Long vacations. Universities where people studied literature instead of surviving. We were manufacturing jealousy. And it worked. The Wall came down. But here’s what no one accounted for. When you give a society self-actualization on someone else’s tab long enough, they forget it was a gift. They start believing it was organically theirs. And when they look at the country that funded it all, a country busy building aircraft carriers and semiconductor fabs and shale fields instead of reaching the Maslow’s pinnacle. An overweight American in a ball cap who can’t tell Monet from Pissarro. Who eats fast food. Who drives a truck. Who builds strip malls instead of piazzas. And to a culture trained in aesthetics but stripped of strategic awareness, that American looks uncivilized. So the arrogance takes root. And once a culture decides another is beneath them, they stop listening. Americans say wars are sometimes necessary: crude. Oil is the backbone of prosperity: unsophisticated. Kids build companies in garages that reshape the planet: crass. Wall Street finances the global economy: vulgar. Europe has no world-class technology sector. No military capable of strong defense. No energy independence. No AI capacity. What Europe has is culture. The culture we paid for at the expense of us reaching Maslow’s pinnacle. For decades that was fine. We funded the museums, protected the sea lanes, and tolerated the sneering because the arrangement worked. Then Europeans stopped keeping the contempt private. They started saying it to our faces. In their media. In their parliaments. At every international forum. “Americans are stupid. Americans are violent. Americans are a threat to democracy.” We could have moved the Louvre to NY. We could have built a Venice here. We could have stolen your best artists, designers, philosophers and more… like your conquering armies did for centuries. Instead we funded them. And all we asked for in return was to let us visit. You don’t have the military to defend your borders. You don’t have the technology to compete. You don’t have the energy to heat your homes without begging dictators. What you have is an 80-year superiority complex FUNDED BY AMERICANS, protected by American soldiers, and built on the false belief that self-actualization is civilization. It isn’t. Civilization is the ability to sustain itself. By that measure, Europe isn’t a civilization at all. It’s a dependency with better wine. That’s not a threat. It’s a weather report. Build a Navy. Or don’t. But stop lecturing the people who made you “better than us” Our “crudeness” our “stunted liberal education” our “ugly strip malls” are because we sacrificed our culture to support yours.
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John Ʌ Konrad V retweetledi
InfantryDort
InfantryDort@infantrydort·
That’s a lot of words to give credit for the rescue to anyone but the executive. You don’t get to say “this took decades” when it goes right and then pretend no one is responsible when it goes wrong. That’s not how this works. Yeah, the force is built over time. Everyone knows that. SOCOM, CSAR, joint integration. None of that showed up overnight. Thousands of people built it. Fine. But that’s not what wins or loses operations. Because we just watched the same force run Afghanistan. And it didn’t look like some clean, inevitable success story. It collapsed faster than expected. We gave up Bagram early. We waited too long to move on NEO. Everything got funneled into one airfield in a collapsing capital. And 13 Americans died at Abbey Gate. So what changed? Not the force. The decisions. That’s the part people like you seem to blur out because it’s uncomfortable. There’s a difference between having capability and knowing how to use it. You can build the best force on earth and still screw it up if you drag timelines, ignore indicators, restrict options, or wait too long to act. And you can take that same force and succeed when decisions are actually aligned with reality. That difference doesn’t come from “decades.” It comes from leadership. The President sets the boundaries. The Secretary drives how it gets executed. Risk, timing, sequencing, that all lives up at their level. They don’t build the force. But they absolutely decide how it’s used. So you can’t have it both ways Greer. You can’t say “this success belongs to decades of effort” and then turn around and act like “failures just… happen” No. Same force. Different decisions. Different outcomes. That’s the truth. And pretending otherwise isn’t some noble, unifying take, it’s just avoiding who owns the result.
The Operational Alchemist@jameskgreer77

1/11 Thoughts on the successful rescue of the two downed airman in Iran:  First, so incredibly thankful that the mission was accomplished without American loss of life. Second, couldn’t care less about the loss of aircraft on the ground. Military equipment and systems are expected to be lost at some point. But the US military is built around people and saving the lives of the people is worth any amount of equipment.

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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
AB isn’t wrong. My post about NATO being in more trouble than people realize was condescending and arrogant… by design. Why write it that way? Mirroring. You can’t explain the rupture without refleo the mindset causing it. Let me explain… Might have to rewrite my article on liberal anger. I talked about how they assume intent. I talked about why they hate long posts. I talked about bursting their reality bubble. Should have included another thing that sets people on edge: mirroring. AB is right. My post is arrogant. It’s condescending. It was written after a long meditation on the source of European anti-American sentiment and how to hold a mirror up to their contempt. Mirroring is a well-documented psychological behavior where individuals, consciously or not, mimic the gestures, language, tone, or attitudes of others. In therapy and negotiation, it builds rapport. I once worked for a week with Chris Voss, the FBI’s former lead hostage negotiator, he calls it one of the most effective tools for disarming people, not because it creates agreement, but because it forces the other person to hear themselves. That’s exactly what I was doing in the post that set AB off. My article on anger discusses empathy at length. Most people assume empathy is inherently virtuous. Usually it is. But in its rawest form, empathy is simply understanding the perspective of another person. It is cognitive, not emotional. Conversely, sympathy is “feeling for” someone. Empathy is seeing through their eyes without necessarily sharing the feeling. That neutrality is what makes it powerful, and what makes it dangerous. Con artists use empathy. Interrogators use empathy. Great diplomats use empathy. The tool itself has no morality. Only application does. So I took an empathetic approach. I asked myself: what happens if I take the arrogant, condescending psyche behind European anti-Americanism and flip the polarity? What if I reflect their own rhetoric back at them, word for word in tone and structure, but aimed in the opposite direction? Psychologists call this the “mirror confrontation” effect. When people encounter their own behavior reflected back, it triggers discomfort far out of proportion to the content itself. The content hasn’t changed. Only the target has. If the rhetoric feels unbearable when reversed, that tells you something about the rhetoric itself. So yes, AB, you’re correct. My post is arrogant. It’s condescending. It is very European, by design. Empathy is a powerful tool, AB. Try it sometime. Not sympathy. Not pity. Not assuming you already understand. Actually sit with the American perspective long enough to feel the friction. You might find that the arrogance you’re reacting to is your own, sent back with a return address. There is anger on both sides of the Atlantic. Anger is part two of the five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. My hope is that Europeans see the anger in themselves so we can move to stage three in their grief over European decline, irrelevance and, thanks to rampant migration, cultural decay. Here is my full article on liberal anger for those who missed it: x.com/johnkonrad/sta…
AB eu/acc@AlexBeaurepaire

@johnkonrad @french_report78 At no point my text was arrogant. Yours is, from start to finish. The only people in denial are the degenerates MAGA Americans believing Europe should be their bitch and crying when it shows a minimum of sovereignty and self-governance.

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Kelly Kilfeather
Kelly Kilfeather@KellyKilfeather·
@johnkonrad American fan fiction written by someone who clearly knows nothing about Europe. This a very cringey read… I couldn’t make it to the end…
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Hai-lev
Hai-lev@lev_hai69728·
@donicc @AlexBeaurepaire @johnkonrad @french_report78 Then fucking do it, stop talking every day about how you are leaving like fuckin kids. Just do it right now. We are so tired of your stupid country. You don't event realise all benefits you got from NATO, from weapons seling,.... you destroy your own empire ? good fuck off then
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
@Koros_Meicum @McSwayne2000 Obviously we don’t need them. I don’t “need” to borrow a cup of sugar from my neighbor either, I can walk to the store. It’s just rather inconvenient.
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Meicum
Meicum@Koros_Meicum·
@johnkonrad @McSwayne2000 Why do you need European bases for your international deployments if you can do it all on your own?
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
Euros big angry in comments Says I is uneducated dumb American Big agnry Euros prove Johns point 😜
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad

NATO is in far bigger danger than anyone realizes. And the reason has nothing to do with defense budgets. The real danger is psychological. It’s cultural. Europeans didn’t just free-ride on American security for 80 years. They built an entire identity around the idea that they evolved past the Americans protecting them. That identity is now the single biggest obstacle to Western survival. And the darkest irony is: we helped build it. After World War II, Europe wasn’t just economically shattered. Its culture was in ruins. The cities, the universities, the concert halls, the museums. Rubble. The Marshall Plan rebuilt the economy. But culture wasn’t a priority. Not at first. Then the Iron Curtain dropped. And suddenly culture became a weapon. American diplomats, academics, artists & scholars flooded Western Europe. We funded their universities. Supported their orchestras. Rebuilt their museums. Promoted their intellectual life. Not because European culture needed saving for its own sake. Because Eastern Europeans were struggling for Maslow’s mist basic needs. We needed the view from the other side of that Wall to be intoxicating. So America built Western Europe into a showcase of self-actualization. Art. Philosophy. Cafe culture. Long vacations. Universities where people studied literature instead of surviving. We were manufacturing jealousy. And it worked. The Wall came down. But here’s what no one accounted for. When you give a society self-actualization on someone else’s tab long enough, they forget it was a gift. They start believing it was organically theirs. And when they look at the country that funded it all, a country busy building aircraft carriers and semiconductor fabs and shale fields instead of reaching the Maslow’s pinnacle. An overweight American in a ball cap who can’t tell Monet from Pissarro. Who eats fast food. Who drives a truck. Who builds strip malls instead of piazzas. And to a culture trained in aesthetics but stripped of strategic awareness, that American looks uncivilized. So the arrogance takes root. And once a culture decides another is beneath them, they stop listening. Americans say wars are sometimes necessary: crude. Oil is the backbone of prosperity: unsophisticated. Kids build companies in garages that reshape the planet: crass. Wall Street finances the global economy: vulgar. Europe has no world-class technology sector. No military capable of strong defense. No energy independence. No AI capacity. What Europe has is culture. The culture we paid for at the expense of us reaching Maslow’s pinnacle. For decades that was fine. We funded the museums, protected the sea lanes, and tolerated the sneering because the arrangement worked. Then Europeans stopped keeping the contempt private. They started saying it to our faces. In their media. In their parliaments. At every international forum. “Americans are stupid. Americans are violent. Americans are a threat to democracy.” We could have moved the Louvre to NY. We could have built a Venice here. We could have stolen your best artists, designers, philosophers and more… like your conquering armies did for centuries. Instead we funded them. And all we asked for in return was to let us visit. You don’t have the military to defend your borders. You don’t have the technology to compete. You don’t have the energy to heat your homes without begging dictators. What you have is an 80-year superiority complex FUNDED BY AMERICANS, protected by American soldiers, and built on the false belief that self-actualization is civilization. It isn’t. Civilization is the ability to sustain itself. By that measure, Europe isn’t a civilization at all. It’s a dependency with better wine. That’s not a threat. It’s a weather report. Build a Navy. Or don’t. But stop lecturing the people who made you “better than us” Our “crudeness” our “stunted liberal education” our “ugly strip malls” are because we sacrificed our culture to support yours.

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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
@AdameMedia If you think massive airstrikes turning the earth around a downed American pilot into a hellscape is just some “folksy tale,” I can’t help you Adam.
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ADAM
ADAM@AdameMedia·
@johnkonrad Wild how terrorism is romanticised. That pilot was bombing civilians. A million folksy tales won’t change that.
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
This is why Americans are the deadliest fighters on earth. I met a priest yesterday who just got accepted to chaplain school in Newport. I asked him the obvious question: Marines or Navy? Navy, he said. His face fell a little. He told me he could never be a Marine because every Marine is a rifleman, and as a priest he can’t carry a weapon. He’s hoping to get assigned to a Marine unit anyway. All chaplains are Navy officers, so that’s the only door in. I laughed. I feel a little bad about that. Then I explained to him what “Devil Doc” means. The Marine Corps doesn’t have medics. They use Navy Corpsmen. I told him: when you get out to the fleet, find a Marine sergeant with a couple of Purple Hearts and tell him Devil Docs “aren’t real Marines.” Be prepared to duck. Marines are violently particular about who gets to wear their uniform. Navy Corpsmen and Navy chaplains who have eaten dirt alongside them in combat qualify. Full stop. My dad was Air Force. Not even Navy. I remember going to VFW halls with him as a kid. Someone would ask him what service, he’d say Air Force, and the room would chuckle a little. Then they’d find out he was a medic, and the air in the room changed. Something close to reverence. Dad hated being honored. He had one line he used to deflect it: “I didn’t do much. Save your praise for my cousin the PJ.” That always broke the ice. PJs are the Air Force special operators who go into hell to pull downed pilots out. They will take casualties and are prepared to die to rescue a single pilot or crewman. The math doesn’t math out. Why would any combat force take multiple casualties to rescue one air force jet jockey? What the padre is about to learn is that the military has a hierarchy that has nothing to do with rank, and nothing to do with the service stitched on your chest. Have you deployed? Have you seen combat? In every firefight there are men who move toward the guns and men who hang back. And when the guy at the tip of the spear is pinned down, bleeding, with rounds cracking past his head, there is exactly one word he screams into the radio. “Medic.” Here is the catch, and it is the whole reason America fights the way America fights. That Marine is willing to push forward into fire BECAUSE he knows the Corpsman is coming. He knows the medevac birds will land in the hot LZ. He knows the Devil Doc will drag him out by his plate carrier if it comes to that. And, if the medic can’t help, if he has what Dad called “injuries incompatible with life,” he knows that chaplain will crawl on his belly to administer last rights and deliver him to heaven. The F-15 pilot punching out over enemy territory knows the same thing. He knows the PJs will move heaven and earth to reach him, and turn whatever is shooting at him into a smoking crater of hell on earth on the way in. This is the quiet math underneath American violence. Our warriors are the fiercest on earth not because they are more aggressive, not just because they are better trained, or better equipped, though they are all of those things. They are the fiercest because they know, in their bones, that when they key the mic and call for help, help is coming in hot. Take that away, and you don’t have the U.S. military anymore. You have a security force.
The White House@WhiteHouse

🚨“WE GOT HIM! My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History, for one of our incredible Crew Office Members, who also happens to be a highly respected Colonel, and who I am thrilled to let you know is SAFE and SOUND!” - President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸

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🇪🇺🇸🇪🇩🇰🇬🇱🇺🇦❌🇺🇸
@johnkonrad BS. another lie engineered to deflect from your own problems. 🇺🇸 is a grifting culture, example; U pay 2x for health and 3x for meds, bcs; U have 900 health insurance co employing 1M americans. Doing nothing more than grift. 1 of ∞ examples.
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DR PC_Angry PHD KC 🇬🇧🇮🇪🇺🇦
@johnkonrad Suez crisis - US opposed deliberately as it wanted end of British and French colonialism - cosequences were diminished Royal Navy in terms of Britain. Marshall Aid was two fold - to make Europe reliant on US goods whilst warding off Soviet expansion. China doing same now.
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DR PC_Angry PHD KC 🇬🇧🇮🇪🇺🇦
The stupid is very strong in this one.
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad

NATO is in far bigger danger than anyone realizes. And the reason has nothing to do with defense budgets. The real danger is psychological. It’s cultural. Europeans didn’t just free-ride on American security for 80 years. They built an entire identity around the idea that they evolved past the Americans protecting them. That identity is now the single biggest obstacle to Western survival. And the darkest irony is: we helped build it. After World War II, Europe wasn’t just economically shattered. Its culture was in ruins. The cities, the universities, the concert halls, the museums. Rubble. The Marshall Plan rebuilt the economy. But culture wasn’t a priority. Not at first. Then the Iron Curtain dropped. And suddenly culture became a weapon. American diplomats, academics, artists & scholars flooded Western Europe. We funded their universities. Supported their orchestras. Rebuilt their museums. Promoted their intellectual life. Not because European culture needed saving for its own sake. Because Eastern Europeans were struggling for Maslow’s mist basic needs. We needed the view from the other side of that Wall to be intoxicating. So America built Western Europe into a showcase of self-actualization. Art. Philosophy. Cafe culture. Long vacations. Universities where people studied literature instead of surviving. We were manufacturing jealousy. And it worked. The Wall came down. But here’s what no one accounted for. When you give a society self-actualization on someone else’s tab long enough, they forget it was a gift. They start believing it was organically theirs. And when they look at the country that funded it all, a country busy building aircraft carriers and semiconductor fabs and shale fields instead of reaching the Maslow’s pinnacle. An overweight American in a ball cap who can’t tell Monet from Pissarro. Who eats fast food. Who drives a truck. Who builds strip malls instead of piazzas. And to a culture trained in aesthetics but stripped of strategic awareness, that American looks uncivilized. So the arrogance takes root. And once a culture decides another is beneath them, they stop listening. Americans say wars are sometimes necessary: crude. Oil is the backbone of prosperity: unsophisticated. Kids build companies in garages that reshape the planet: crass. Wall Street finances the global economy: vulgar. Europe has no world-class technology sector. No military capable of strong defense. No energy independence. No AI capacity. What Europe has is culture. The culture we paid for at the expense of us reaching Maslow’s pinnacle. For decades that was fine. We funded the museums, protected the sea lanes, and tolerated the sneering because the arrangement worked. Then Europeans stopped keeping the contempt private. They started saying it to our faces. In their media. In their parliaments. At every international forum. “Americans are stupid. Americans are violent. Americans are a threat to democracy.” We could have moved the Louvre to NY. We could have built a Venice here. We could have stolen your best artists, designers, philosophers and more… like your conquering armies did for centuries. Instead we funded them. And all we asked for in return was to let us visit. You don’t have the military to defend your borders. You don’t have the technology to compete. You don’t have the energy to heat your homes without begging dictators. What you have is an 80-year superiority complex FUNDED BY AMERICANS, protected by American soldiers, and built on the false belief that self-actualization is civilization. It isn’t. Civilization is the ability to sustain itself. By that measure, Europe isn’t a civilization at all. It’s a dependency with better wine. That’s not a threat. It’s a weather report. Build a Navy. Or don’t. But stop lecturing the people who made you “better than us” Our “crudeness” our “stunted liberal education” our “ugly strip malls” are because we sacrificed our culture to support yours.

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ペゴパ
ペゴパ@jWG9yYPjwebllMv·
@johnkonrad あなたがNATOを罵倒する時、日本や韓国の事も罵倒していると言う事を学んで欲しい。 今全ての同盟がアメリカが湾岸同盟国をどう扱っているか、NATOに何を言っているかを見ている。 はっきり言うけど、お前達アメリカ人の一部とイスラエル人以外誰もこの戦争を支持していない。
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TheWanderer
TheWanderer@tsewanderer·
@johnkonrad What utter nonsense 😂 Americans who got support after 9/11 for 20 years are playing the blame game because they elected an self enriching orange child raper. America profited from us the same as we from you, but playing victim is so comfy when you want to avoid a look to the 🪞
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John Ʌ Konrad V retweetledi
The Republic of Saskatchewan
The Republic of Saskatchewan@RepublicOfSask·
“Europe isn’t a civilization at all. It’s a dependency with better wine” The same can be said of Canada, we’re just a dependency with better beer
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad

NATO is in far bigger danger than anyone realizes. And the reason has nothing to do with defense budgets. The real danger is psychological. It’s cultural. Europeans didn’t just free-ride on American security for 80 years. They built an entire identity around the idea that they evolved past the Americans protecting them. That identity is now the single biggest obstacle to Western survival. And the darkest irony is: we helped build it. After World War II, Europe wasn’t just economically shattered. Its culture was in ruins. The cities, the universities, the concert halls, the museums. Rubble. The Marshall Plan rebuilt the economy. But culture wasn’t a priority. Not at first. Then the Iron Curtain dropped. And suddenly culture became a weapon. American diplomats, academics, artists & scholars flooded Western Europe. We funded their universities. Supported their orchestras. Rebuilt their museums. Promoted their intellectual life. Not because European culture needed saving for its own sake. Because Eastern Europeans were struggling for Maslow’s mist basic needs. We needed the view from the other side of that Wall to be intoxicating. So America built Western Europe into a showcase of self-actualization. Art. Philosophy. Cafe culture. Long vacations. Universities where people studied literature instead of surviving. We were manufacturing jealousy. And it worked. The Wall came down. But here’s what no one accounted for. When you give a society self-actualization on someone else’s tab long enough, they forget it was a gift. They start believing it was organically theirs. And when they look at the country that funded it all, a country busy building aircraft carriers and semiconductor fabs and shale fields instead of reaching the Maslow’s pinnacle. An overweight American in a ball cap who can’t tell Monet from Pissarro. Who eats fast food. Who drives a truck. Who builds strip malls instead of piazzas. And to a culture trained in aesthetics but stripped of strategic awareness, that American looks uncivilized. So the arrogance takes root. And once a culture decides another is beneath them, they stop listening. Americans say wars are sometimes necessary: crude. Oil is the backbone of prosperity: unsophisticated. Kids build companies in garages that reshape the planet: crass. Wall Street finances the global economy: vulgar. Europe has no world-class technology sector. No military capable of strong defense. No energy independence. No AI capacity. What Europe has is culture. The culture we paid for at the expense of us reaching Maslow’s pinnacle. For decades that was fine. We funded the museums, protected the sea lanes, and tolerated the sneering because the arrangement worked. Then Europeans stopped keeping the contempt private. They started saying it to our faces. In their media. In their parliaments. At every international forum. “Americans are stupid. Americans are violent. Americans are a threat to democracy.” We could have moved the Louvre to NY. We could have built a Venice here. We could have stolen your best artists, designers, philosophers and more… like your conquering armies did for centuries. Instead we funded them. And all we asked for in return was to let us visit. You don’t have the military to defend your borders. You don’t have the technology to compete. You don’t have the energy to heat your homes without begging dictators. What you have is an 80-year superiority complex FUNDED BY AMERICANS, protected by American soldiers, and built on the false belief that self-actualization is civilization. It isn’t. Civilization is the ability to sustain itself. By that measure, Europe isn’t a civilization at all. It’s a dependency with better wine. That’s not a threat. It’s a weather report. Build a Navy. Or don’t. But stop lecturing the people who made you “better than us” Our “crudeness” our “stunted liberal education” our “ugly strip malls” are because we sacrificed our culture to support yours.

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Kenny McSwayne
Kenny McSwayne@McSwayne2000·
@johnkonrad Hahahahaha! European ‘culture’ existed before you lot were even a country, you ignorant Yankee pig!! NATO without the US is a bigger, stronger more equipped military than the US. That’s a fact. Moron.
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