As regular readers will know, I have literally decades of experience in environments of civil unrest, terrorism, and societal conflict, ranging from more-or-less peaceful demonstrations right through to the worst terrorist acts you can imagine. I'm frequently astonished at the complacency and ignorance of people who think that "It can't happen here!" I assure you, it most certainly can.
The expatriate American living in the Philippines, blogging at Come And Make It, appears to understand the reality of our situation, from a different-but-similar perspective.
There was a noticeable lag—roughly a year—[in Iraq after the war] between the collapse of central authority and the full emergence of widespread insurgency.
I see troubling parallels in the United States today. We're in that uneasy "lag" phase: deep instability is already here, with large numbers of people armed and ideologically primed for violence, yet most still hesitate to cross the line into open, sustained conflict. Instead, we see the precursors: fireworks thrown as provocations, screaming crowds, disruptive "stupid games," and tantrum-like escalations when people don't get their way. These are the behaviors of spoiled children testing boundaries.
So far, it's mostly individuals or small groups acting out. But the pattern is clear: one or two incidents beget more, then more still, until the tipping point arrives—and suddenly we have IEDs on interstate highways, coordinated attacks, and true insurgency.
A great deal of money—funneled from foreign governments, wealthy donors, and outside interests—has been poured into inflaming divisions, arming radicals, and eroding trust in institutions. These investments are designed to create exactly this kind of volatile tinderbox.
We are now one stray footstep away from triggering an avalanche of violence that could be very difficult to stop once it starts.
There's more at the link.
I warned earlier this month that the unrest being fomented over ICE and illegal aliens is reminiscent of the artificially-whipped-up demonstrations over George Floyd's death in 2020. It seems many others agree. See, for example:
- Minneapolis ICE Shooting Shows Left Wing's Protest Industrial Complex Wants Another 'George Floyd'-Type Riot
- The horns of the ICE dilemma (recommended reading)
- Stumbling Towards A New Civil War
El Gato Malo provides this succinct assessment. Note: he eschews capitals in his articles.
the "activists" they pay to run around trying to stop ICE are just upping the ante and taking even more unreasonable actions to try to protect the original incursions.
and they are creating incredibly dangerous situations.
on purpose and as a matter of policy.
and when you play stupid games, you win stupid prizes.
this issue is being used to try to drive an irreconcilable social fracture.
it’s being managed like an insurgency in the same city that keeps spawning these (and whose governor and congressional rep (this took place in omar’s district) both look like they’re about to get indicted for massive corruption around immigrants they flooded the area with to sway voting.)
it’s more than a little curious how these folks were all so ready for this within hours.
there is coordination here.
. . .
there’s an actual insurgency being run here by the same political junta that caused the immigration mess.
but this is not going to be 2020. you can feel the national mood turning. people have had enough of being held hostage by these out of control hysteria cohorts.
and at a certain point, you stop trying to convince and realize that you’re basically just at war over a set of fully unreconcilable worldviews.
Again, more at the link.
Note the last sentence above. It's true. No reconciliation is possible between the two sides of the illegal alien debate. One side sees it as a fundamental threat to what it has always meant to be an American. The other side sees it as a wedge issue to redefine what it means to be an American.
Rudyard Kipling put it well, in a different context:
East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet
That's what we have here - and unless sanity and facts prevail over emotions and feelings, it's going to get much, much worse, more quickly than most of us can imagine.
Peter
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