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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 24, 2025

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The attitude in the UK is similarly bizarre. The government, other blob parties, and supportive institutions have become foreign policy hardliners in a context where those same governments have, at every opportunity over the last 30 years, adopted policies that weaken the UK's ability to fight against a peer power. And I don't just mean in strict military budget terms here. They can increase the military budget right now and this won't improve the situation because the current circumstances make effective utilization of a larger military budget impossible. I mean policies like:

  • Outsourcing. Relying on foreign, China-centric supply chains for industry is silly.
  • Green energy. Tanks and jets don't run on batteries. Frack to Fuel Fighters.
  • Legally empowered NIMBYism. How are you going to build the factories and bases for all this?
  • Judicial power and rulings. Why build a munitions factory if you'll get sued over rare spiders? Why fight Russia if you'll get charged for shooting them?
  • Weapon Bans. Legal access to firearms would both mean more experienced citizens and a potentially stronger occupation resistance. Instead the government is floating bans for kitchen knives with pointed ends.
  • Nationalism. Nobody has found a way to make effective modern armies other than nationalism, and usually ethnic nationalism at that.
  • Lockdowns. Shrinking the economy over a cold does not win wars.
  • Immigration. This does not turn into military manpower. More British Muslims joined ISIS than are in the British Army.
  • Two-tier laws. Dispossession of the demographics most likely to serve in the military is a terrible idea.
  • Coffin dodgers subsidies. Why fund pensions or the NHS at the expense of the 20 and 30-somethings who are actually going to fight your war?

A UK that has a small military but is prepped and ready to re-arm and oppose Russia is a UK that looks very different from the UK we actually have. More importantly, it would be an image of the UK that our current government would despise. Cynically, the government isn't genuinely interested in defence, they just see sabre-rattling over this as a good way to go after domestic dissent.

That IRA court ruling is one of the most insane things I've ever seen. I'm not exactly an expert in The Troubles but... wow.

Indeed, and all the sabre rattling and criticism of what it claims is right-wing extremism by the current government must be understood in the context that this is also a government that not only funds extremism in support of it's supposed enemies, but is legally obligated to do so by it's own institutions.

Much of this is, however, just two-tier. A hypothetical opponent perceived as right-wing, like Russia, probably wouldn't be protected in this manner by our courts. But good luck defending Taiwan from Communists, to name one example.

More British Muslims joined ISIS than are in the British Army

Do you have a link for that?

The UK seems to be in a really horrible and sad spot. Personally I would leave. From banning encryption, kitchen knives, to spending the money from an outrageous tax system on bringing in Muslims who don’t care a lick about western society. The weather isn’t even pleasant!

Is this was happens in Europe though? You go from turbo hivemind cucked socialism and then going to swing aggressively right into strong ethno-nationalism and provoke WWIII? History would make that seem so

spending the money from an outrageous tax system

Taxes in the UK are higher than in some low-tax US states (although places like Texas have very high property taxes, while the UK has almost none, particularly on expensive homes), but the difference with high tax US places like NYC or SF is pretty minimal.

Texas has very high sticker property taxes, but in practice established homeowners don't pay sticker price- there are a bevy of exemptions, and only people wealthy enough for second homes and landlords(and the low functioning, but most of those don't buy homes) have to pay the full amount for more than a year or two. Texas property taxes are still high but they aren't high enough to reach blue state levels of taxation.

It does appear that UK taxes are only slightly higher than the US. The real extreme outliers are in continental Europe.

https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/global/tax-burden-on-labor-oecd-2024/

But there's a big difference. UK taxation effects lower income people. For example, in the UK, all income above about $60k is taxed at 40%. And VAT is 20%.

In the US, on the other hand, a gigantic proportion of tax revenue comes from high income individuals. About half of federal income tax is paid by people making more than $500,000/year.

The UK, having few high earners compared to the US, is forced to extract eye-watering tax rates from middle class people. The UK tax system is both less progressive than the US, and there are fewer rich people. So regular people get squeezed hard in a way they don't in the US.

I doubt that’s true when factoring in VAT.