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Culture War Roundup for the week of August 28, 2023

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I strongly agree with this particular part of your assessment and have frequently posted at length on the topic here. That said, I don't think your conclusions necessarily follow. Russian oil will allow them to get by with a very thin haircut, and given the nature of Chinese society they can absolutely just use force and other import options to get by. I don't see how the US manages to prevent China and Russia from trading here.

So, I'm torn: a lot of commentary thinks a seaborne oil embargo will by itself shut down China and win the war, and I think that's entirely wrong, so I get where you're coming from. At the same time, Russian/Kazakh oil imports can't replace even half of those current seaborne imports. It's not production but transport that's the issue. You can increase utilization of existing pipelines to the max, and build new pipelines, and transport oil via rail and truck, which China absolutely can and will do on short notice, and that can get to an extra one or (very optimistically) two million barrels of oil a day. Civilian rationing will cut consumption by 30%. Old, currently uneconomic domestic wells could be brought back online and add another 1M/day. That still doesn't make up for the existing 10M/day that are currently imported via the sea. The only option is civilian rationing >50%, which is unheard of in history, let alone the modern world. During WW2 US rationing cut its oil consumption by 35% IIRC. China does have advantages around civilian control here, but at some point, people break. With its own SPR, China can wage a full on war for 3-6 months without too much civilian pain, but after that it gets incredibly dicey for them. (Realistically they'd frontload a lot of the pain to keep a more stable level of wartime civilian consumption.)

As for the rest: if the US handicaps itself, it will lose. It's not a war the US will be able to win with one or both hands tied behind its back. If we're dealing with energy issues and we decide that the entire war has to be fought on solar power, we'll lose. That said, call me an optimist, but I have a bit more faith in the US than that. Once we lose our first carrier, the population will rally. Mindless, blind patriotism is obnoxious a lot of the time, but you can't give full credit to China's while entirely discounting the US's.

Frankly, I worry more about the domestic politics of Japan, Taiwan, and other regional allies, because their economies will be far more shot through than the US's. Which is not at all to minimize how much pain the US will go through (biggest economic contraction in history) but more to speak to just how absolutely screwed every country in the area is going to be. If China does get a foothold in Taiwan, many of them will want to throw in the towel and adjust to the new status quo as soon as possible just to end the pain. Probably even Taiwan.

Once we lose our first carrier, the population will rally. Mindless, blind patriotism is obnoxious a lot of the time, but you can't give full credit to China's while entirely discounting the US's.

While I don't think the US can actually effectively embargo China (especially not a China working with Russia), this is by far the biggest issue I see with your position - the part where a miracle happens which neatly resolves the countless problems currently plaguing the US government, military and population. I wasn't assuming China would be patriotic - I was assuming China would brutally suppress opposition and use their totalitarian panopticon to make sure that people obey, something that the US cannot do that without immediately triggering a domestic insurrection. In my view the destruction of a carrier would represent a massive loss of legitimacy and sponsor even further civil unrest/de-dollarisation/resistance to the GAE, and the current US political system is unable to adequately respond to crisis. Why would a military defeat somehow remove all the corruption, incompetence and malice in the US government? A total war like this would absolutely necessitate cutting off the flow of aid to Israel, for instance, but how does that happen given the Israel lobby's current level of influence over the government? Multiple members of congress, and at least one member of the First Family, have deep and serious conflicts of interest with regards to China (look at how much money Hunter made off them!). Why would the loss of a carrier instantly remove all the blackmail material the Chinese government no doubt have on them? Think about how many US industries and corporations are totally reliant on trade with China, and then think about how incredibly unpopular and distrusted the US government is. Hell, even right now the military is prioritising social change and western values over actually being a functioning military that achieves real goals. How does the massive amount of corruption and graft in the US military supply chain get fixed?

There are a multitude of reasons as to why the US hasn't dealt with these deadly serious problems yet, and I see no reason to believe that a military loss would do anything at all to change them. Rather, something like that would make the currently intractable problems the nation is facing far worse. The current political situation in the US is extremely dicey as well - the leading opposition candidate is facing multiple criminal charges and could end up spending the election in prison. Do you think his supporters are going to be eager to go risk their lives to protect Joe Biden's America? And of course in the opposite scenario, where Trump actually wins, do you think that the same military that actively disregarded his orders and broke the chain of command in order to give China advance warning of his actions, would be an effective fighting force against the Chinese? Don't forget the intelligence community which violently loathes him and actively deceived him during his presidency too - how certain are you that there isn't a single neocon in the IC or military who thinks sabotaging the military in order to discredit Trump is a good idea?

I can understand how a military attack or setback can unite people, but I really don't see how that applies to the current USA.