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ST's avatar

Glad you're digging into this, Daniel. I've spent the past two weeks going down the Ukraine-Russia-US-NATO rabbit hole as well. While I've also been lax in tracking the history of geopolitical conflicts in this region, what I'm learning accords with my views on the postwar (problematic term!) world writ large. Studying books like Gregg Grandin's "Empire's Workshop" and overloading on anti-imperialist media/podcasts (e.g., Blowback, Moderate Rebels, TrueAnon, Chris Hedges 'On Contact') over the past 8 or so years has made me deeply cynical about the US/Western liberal democratic project. Whatever estimable values and tangible improvements to life and liberty the US-led world order can profess are so rife with grotesque hypocrisy and terror masquerading as nobility, it is difficult to take the moral temperature in the end.

Like Greenwald, Hedges, and other critics of western hegemony speaking out right now, I am struggling to square my disgust at the hypocrisy/culpability of liberal governments with my horror and condemnation of Putin (and other autocratic regimes). They both feel equally vile and depressing, in different ways. What bothers me most as an American is the sense that the promise of liberalism was horribly squandered and corrupted, straight out of the gates, following WW2 and the rise of US hegemony. With the formation of the CIA and the military-intelligence complex, liberalism and democracy became a flimsy rhetorical veil for warmongers and transnational corporations to hide behind while ruthlessly consolidating power. I tried watching some John Mearshmier lectures to understand the "realism vs liberalism" political science debate and found it seriously lacking in this context. Liberalism has now been fully taken over by corporate interests (Sheldon Wolin called this "inverted totalitarianism"), subverting democracy and eroding liberal values at every step. I find this duplicity particularly insidious and revolting. It's unsurprising to me that it has resulted in an existential showdown against more naked forms of authoritarianism. Feels like an inevitable conclusion in a long cycle of violence.

I agree with you about the toxic masculinity at the source of this mess. It really feels like a spiritual crisis reaching its apex in our time. The Algonquin "wetiko" archetype and the Demiurge concept feels very apt. I'm still hoping for a deus ex machina of some sort... 100th Monkey enlightenment, or maybe the aliens will finally make their appearance?...

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Michael Brownstein's avatar

Without finding a way to transcend/get rid of/abandon patriarchy, capitalism will stay with us until the world collapses of its own insane obesity. The embarrassing half-measures from a profit motive culture meant to address the climate crisis are a case in point. So how do we get rid of patriarchy? Putin and Trump (and millions of other men in all realms) will not simply roll over and play soft, they will not play nice and make room for women at the helm. There has to be no helm. We must learn from our deep shamanic past, our indigenous ancestors, where endless egoic competition hardly existed. Otherwise all the books and thoughts about Ukraine or anywhere else will -- to use a masculine metaphor -- amount to no more than pissing in the wind.

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