Contrary to what the mass media are saying, there is nothing twisted or strange, much less incomprehensible, about the cartel´s action. René Girard analyzed it in depth in 1972.
you know a Mexican drug cartel handed five of its members over to the police and apologized profusely for the murder and kidnapping of four Americans.
Contrary to what the mass media are saying, there is nothing twisted or strange, much less incomprehensible, about the cartel´s action. René Girard analyzed it in depth in 1972.
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Dear Director Burns:
In the interest of aiding the United States, its allies and the Ukrainian Government in winning Putin´s War, I offer three suggestions. Your staff, of course, may have already thought of them, but at any rate here they are: 1. A ghost army. This device, used so effectively to fool the Germans in WWII, could be employed in Ukraine to trick Russia´s drones. Artists would create trompe-l´oeil paintings of tanks, armored vehicles, etc., to be placed on the ground to draw enemy fire and attention. With today´s copying technology, they could be reproduced by the hundreds. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Army. If the Russians figure out how to distinguish realistic artwork from the real thing, the artworks could be placed on top of tanks, vehicles, etc. Seeing the drawings, the enemy would mistakenly let them pass. 2. Is the Russian nuclear deterrent really a deterrent? The design flaw - the so-called "jack in the box" in Russian tanks which makes them easily destroyed - got me thinking. If they can´t design a tank properly, what else are they incapable of? I have in mind their decades-old nuclear missiles. There must be a way to electronically jam them, so that if Putin pushes the botton either (i) nothing happens or (ii) they blow up in their silos. The electronic manipulation would go into operation only if a substancial number of missiles - not one or two - were signalled by the Russian Government for takeoff. 3. There is much discussion about the absolute need for Western electronic components in Iranian drones and Russian missiles. Instead of trying to plug up the weasel holes in U.S. bans, take the opposite approach and aid the ban defiers by supplying them with components. Only, those components would be faulty, causing Russian armaments to not work or blow up on takeoff. Better yet, there must be a way for the components to have "Trojan horses" in their programing, which would allow Ukrainians to take control of them once airborn and turn them on the enemy. Respectfully submitted. |
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January 2024
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