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Veronica's avatar

Aurelien, you have again (indeed, as always) eloquantly expressed what has been hidden in plain sight- that our "leaders" stumble about among the detritus of their unexamined assumptions as much as the rest of us. That politics is no more rational than the actors in a play - they speak their lines from a composite script whose familiarity is taken for truth. I wonder if perhaps that's why modern empires tend not to last so long as in the past. The ever deeper layers of sediment emitting ever less coherent bubbles of decaying assumptions, thicken the noxious mental fog we seem to be stuck in. Simple answers are an illusion, but in the press of life, we grab onto them. What a ruddy miracle it is that we've survived so long as it is!

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Dingusansich's avatar

Proverbially, on traces and sediments: It's less what you don't know that's a problem than what you know for certain—or pretend to—that's plain wrong.

Recall what catbird-seated Karl Rove (allegedly) told journalist Ron Suskind: “We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality." What happens when narrative über alles comes into kinetic contact with a renascent superpower on its border? We're seeing it, and it is a sorry and disturbing sight, like Titicut Follies in pricey suits and stylish scarves.

Are the Atlanticist institutions madness factories or finishing schools? Answer: trick question.

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