The USS George H.W. Bush is 4.5 acres of sovereign United States territory and 102,000 tons of diplomacy

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The USS George H.W. Bush is 4.5 acres of sovereign United States territory and 102,000 tons of diplomacy

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You know what, I know I reblogged that post showing examples of Covid Deniers dying of Coronavirus, and the post had the caption "please don't comment anything along the lines of "good" or "I Told you so", this is about real people dying from their bad choices."
And you know what? I changed my fucking mind.
I'm glad that people that happily attend Covid Parties are fucking dying.
Because this is not just about the people that happily denied all of the evidence in the world and attended a party to get a fucking plague
this is about all of the innocent bystanders those party attender's came into contact with after their plague party.
I'm talking about the cashiers, I'm talking about the service workers, the parents grocery shopping to feed their families, the gig workers like Uber, Lyft, Door Dash, and anyone else these Plague Partiers waltz withing 6 feet of, unmasked, and exposed to the virus because they thought it was part of their civil liberties to deny science and possibly infect and kill everyone around them.
I work in retail. I'm an """essential""" worker.
I have to deal with HUNDREDS of people (usually white, usually men) everyday who refuse to wear a mask to enter our store, and I don't fucking need to deal with the possibility that any one of these fuckers could have deliberately gone to a FUCKING PLAGUE PARTY TO "PROVE" COVID DOESNT EXIST and then get ME, all of my coworkers, and every single fucking person around them killed or hurt through their DIRECT, DELIBERATE ACTIONS.
People who attend plague parties are dying?
Good fucking riddence. I hope the survivors are held accountable for anyone they get killed, because at this point, getting yourself DELIBERATELY exposed, and then exposing other, unwitting people? That needs to be considered fucking manslaughter at least.
One person getting themselves deliberately infect can kill hundreds, if not thousands of people, because they're now a deliberate supercarrier.
And they need to be charged with murder.
The myth of Americaās invincible military
Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry, The Week, January 11, 2017
Today, with the long benefit of hindsight, Franceās stunning collapse in the face of Nazi invasion looks almost unsurprising. But at the time, it stunned the world. France was one of the preeminent superpowers of the day. It had one of the worldās biggest land armies, navies, and second-biggest colonial empire in the world. Moreover, as France had led the Allies in World War I, a war that was orders of magnitude more terrible than anything anyone had ever known, it had a reputation for military invincibility. When in 1923 Germany delayed paying back war reparations, France invaded, occupied, and easily steamrolled the Weimar Republicās puny military.
And this reputation for military invincibility was one of the things that held the world order together. There are countless causes for why the world backslid into World War II, but an underrated one was the sense that if Hitler really got out of hand, the French and the British together would crush him.
Today, global peace rests on many things, but one of them is the assumption that the United States military is invincible. We justly fill our headlines with reports of casualties in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, but what is striking in our current era is just how little conflict there is. And one reason for that is that no contemporary military can hope to match the United Statesā, so countries that might want to mess with the U.S. or its allies either donāt, or do so through comparatively much less destructive and unconventional means, like hacking.
But just like Franceās invincibility on the eve of World War II, Americaās military invincibility may just be waiting to be toppled by anyone clever and gutsy enough to give the right shove.
Here are three very worrying ways in which Americaās conventional war machine is being outclassed.
1. Supercarriers. He who rules the seas rules the world. It was true in the time of the Greeks, and itās true today. And on paper, Americaās dominance looks total. The United States has 10 aircraft carriers. Russia can barely field just one. China only just recently got one, a retrofitted old Soviet clunker. And in some way, this undersells Americaās advantage: America produces supercarriers which are on the order of twice as large as anything else on the sea, and nuclear-powered, which means they can stay at sea much longer (the only other country with a nuclear carrier is France). Carriers are the dominant means of āforce projectionā (translation: going out and kicking someoneās a--), and have been since World War II, when they and their planes proved much more destructive than the old battleships.
But hereās the thing: Just like Franceās outdated tactics were obsoleted by German Blitzkrieg, carrier strike groups, a technology and formation from the mid-20th century, are probably obsolete. As an excellent article by David W. Wise convincingly argues, aircraft carriers are probably extremely vulnerable to a number of new technologies, from asymmetric warfare to super-quiet submarines to advanced ballistic missiles. In military exercises, U.S. aircraft carriers keep getting sunk.
Up until very recently, Americaās overwhelming carrier advantage meant that any attempt, say, by China to invade Taiwan, looked like folly. Now it practically looks like an invitation: With its anti-ship ballistic missiles, China could sink half the U.S. Navy before it even got within range of the island.
It increasingly looks like the Navy of the future will mostly consist of drone- and missile-launching submarines (manned and unmanned), which hold a number of decisive advantages over carriers. But these are areas in which the Navy, despite some interesting experiments, is under-investing--partly because its budget is being eaten up by a frenzy to build and maintain ever-more expensive supercarriers.
2. Stealth fighters. Like naval power, air power is absolutely crucial in war. He who controls the skies controls the fight. Observers and historians often joke that Israelās Six-Day War should really be called the One-Day War; Israel was able to crush vastly superior enemies on two fronts at once because it destroyed their air forces in a masterful preemptive strike, making the rest of the war a formality. Every single conventional military victory by the United States since the end of the Cold War has been premised on, and enabled by, total dominance of the skies. So making sure that, in any conventional war, the United States can establish and maintain air dominance is front and center for all the strategic planners at the Pentagon.
Thankfully, they have a silver bullet: stealth! All of the United Statesā fighter jets will be stealthy. And when you canāt even show up on the enemiesā radar screens and you can shoot at them with impunity, youāre going to crush them very quickly, right? Billions and billions (and billions) were poured into projects such as the F-35 and F-22 (and crucial design tradeoffs were made) so that those planes could have āstealth technology.ā
But there are two problems. One is that Russia and China are also building their own stealth fighters. And the other is that stealth technology isnāt actually all that stealthy. In a development that will shock only those who donāt know anything about the history of warfare, Americaās competitors have come up with technologies to counter these gizmos. In fact, a number of new technologies, including active and passive radars, are pretty good at detecting so-called āstealthā planes.
The U.S. Air Forceās strategic objective is to have enough of an edge, whether technological or organizational, that it can easily crush a rivalās air force. The method for doing so since the early 1990s has been āStealth! Stealth!ā But now, we need something new.
3. Networks and satellites. Since the mid-1990s, strategic planners in the Pentagon have boasted that so-called ānetwork-centric warfareā has revolutionized military affairs. Everyone in the battlefield will be networked with everyone else, thus removing the āfog of war.ā Commanders will know instantly where everything is, and troops will be able to respond to threats much more quickly and efficiently.
Since 2003, the United States has tried a bit of network-centric warfare of its own. And while the idea of using technology to enable various elements on the battlefield to communicate more efficiently and to enable commanders to have better information is tautologically sound, it isnāt the gamechanger so many in the Pentagon seem to think it is. A network-enabled force is great--if your networks work. During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, ānetwork-centric warfareā did enable some tactical advantages, but there were also a lot of bugs. Maybe those kinks are to be expected. Or maybe this is an example of the tendency of the peacetime Pentagon contracting process to produce enormously expensive, ambitious technology that just doesnāt work. The Pentagonās fabulous war-enabling network could crash during an encounter with China over Taiwan or Russia over the Baltics at the worst possible moment.
On top of that, an information network has to route all of its data through somewhere. And for the United States, that somewhere is satellites, which makes some sense, since the U.S. has the best satellite technology in the world. Hereās the problem: Satellites are enormously vulnerable. Anti-satellite missiles are a thing. Why wouldnāt the Russians knock down the United Statesā network in the first move of an engagement, leaving its military deaf, blind, and dumb?
If Iām right about any of this, it means that the United States military is glaringly vulnerable to a devastating attack in a way disturbingly similar to the heretofore-invincible 1940 French military. And if I know this, Iām sure there are people in Moscow and Beijing who do, too.