Predictive History - The Story of "Civilization", "Secret History", "Game Theory" and more - Game Theory #22 -Twilight Of The Nation-State

Episode Date: April 29, 2026

Game Theory #22 -Twilight Of The Nation-State ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 There is a ceasefire now between Iran and the United States, but most analysts expect that this war will resume in a week, two weeks a month, but it will resume because it is impossible for the United States and Iran to come to a mutually beneficial and satisfying arrangement. So today I want to look at how this war will evolve. And my arguing to you today is that this U.S.-Iran war, it's really the first war of the 21st century. And so I want to explain to you how warfare has evolved these past few hundred years. So the simplest way to fight a war is you would destroy a state's capacity to fight by killing as many soldiers as possible, right? You would arrange to fight the enemy on a battlefield. whoever wins this battle would win the war. And that was how traditionally wars were fought for hundreds and hundreds of years.
Starting point is 00:01:02 When in the sort of century, something happened, which is that the state, the nation state, developed the capacity to have a lot of people, millions of people. And so the state could always replenish its forces on the battlefield. And so now what you had to do was you had to destroy the state's capacity to to produce, to manufacture. And this is really, and so the point is to kill as many civilians as possible, before you want to kill as many soldiers as possible,
Starting point is 00:01:34 but in the 20th century war, mainly war II, you're trying to kill as many civilians as possible. But in the 21st century, it's different because we have nuclear weapons now, and there are too many people. So it is impossible for you to kill everyone, and if you use nuclear weapons, then others will use nuclear weapons on you, okay?
Starting point is 00:01:53 So now, in the 21st century, our goal is to use the population against the state, to turn the civilians against the government by showing as much discord and descent as possible within society. And you do that through economic sabotage, for economic strangulation. So that's the argument I will make to you today. The first thing I want to look at is why is it that we have. 8 billion people. 8 billion people are living on this planet. And for most of us, we think this is a tremendous achievement. But if you think about it, it's not that nice because there aren't that many resources to share. There's not that much space. In fact, if it were not for fertilizers, we would only be able to support 1 to 2 billion people. So how did we get to
Starting point is 00:02:49 a stage where 8 billion people in this world? And most of us are not. are not very happy with the state of affairs. And scientists will tell you it's because of the standard revolution. It's because of this revolution in technology and understanding that's allowed us to progress. That's not true, okay? The real reason is because of the nation state. And the nation state, it is a revolution in politics that came to us because of the French revolution.
Starting point is 00:03:23 All right, so the main architect of the French Revolution, his name is Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He was not French, he was actually Swiss. But he's important because he dealt the theory that underpin the French Revolution, called Social Contract Theory. Amazon presents Jeff versus Taco Truck Salsa, whether it's Verde, Roja, or the orange one. For Jeff, trying any salsa is like playing Russian roulette with a flamethrower. Luckily, Jeff saved with Amazon and stocked up on antacids, ginger tea, and milk. Habaniero, more like habanier yes. Save the everyday with Amazon.
Starting point is 00:04:18 Before, we didn't really think about what the individual's relationship with the state was. Basically, you're born into community and you just did what tradition and custom and family asked you to do. But John George Rousseau was the first to say, no, we are born free because God gave us freedom. So why do we choose to surrender our freedom in order to join a community? And so his theory is that we join society to become more free. So by ourselves, we together, all of us together, we have something called a common will. And think of this as democracy.
Starting point is 00:05:12 Democracy is basically an idea that to make a decision, we just vote. And then whatever comes, whichever is the majority wins. So for example, we might debate whether we go to McDonald's or Pizza Hut, okay? three of us, if two of you say, let's go to Pizza Hut, we go to Pizza Hut, because that's a democracy. For Jean-Douz-Rouz-So, this is not a good system, because we should strive to be higher than we are. We should strive for total freedom. And that's the idea of the general will. Okay? The common will is who we are. The general will is who we could be if we came together as a people. Okay? And the best way to understand the general will,
Starting point is 00:05:55 is through Kant's theory of the categorical imperative, okay? Which is for him the highest moral law. So as human beings, what makes us truly human? What allows us to achieve our ideal state? Our three principles, okay? The first principle is the principle of universality. So imagine that all your actions
Starting point is 00:06:23 will be reflected throughout the universe. So if you smile, everyone smile, at once. If you get angry, everyone gets angry at once. And you ask yourself, what sort of society do I want to live in? Do I want to live in a society where everyone is smiling or angry? Right? And then that's the way you should behave. The law of universality. Secondly, it's the idea of free will. No one can compel you to smile. You must smile out of your own free choice. Even though smiling makes you feel happy, like make you smile that goes against the good of humanity, okay?
Starting point is 00:07:01 The third is the idea of human as an ends. So I can never sacrifice another human being in order to achieve a better society because we are the ultimate end. So these together, the categor imperative is what gives us the theory of the general will. So even though we all vote to eat ice cream, we shouldn't eat ice cream because that's not how we achieve enlightenment.
Starting point is 00:07:34 That's not how we achieve the ideal state. We should think about Kant's categorical imperative. Now what happens is this. From the general will, this is a sovereign, okay? This is the highest law. This is God, basically. And from the sovereign, we achieve the state, the government. And the state makes us into citizens.
Starting point is 00:08:00 And then we have laws, culture, education. So for John de Rousseau, this is the social contract. This is the ideal state. The French Revolution started because there were many intellectuals, revolutioners, wanted to achieve the social contract. But as you can appreciate, there were many who disagreed with this theory, especially monarchs, right? Because the idea here is that the general will, the people, are the sovereign. But in a monarchy, the monarch is what's sovereign.
Starting point is 00:08:45 So the sovereign must, so it's a debate over who's sovereign. And so at this time in history, most nations, most countries, in Europe were monarchies. So they saw the French Revolution as a direct threat to them, and that's why they invaded France many, many times. But then something really weird happened. These professional armies who go into France and they're funding against these citizens, people with no military expense, who are not professional soldiers, what's happening was that they were losing to the citizen armies. And the question is, why was this happening?
Starting point is 00:09:30 And the reason why is that this theory is so powerful that makes people willing to fight to die for this, okay? So what was happening during the French Revolution, these wars, was that you had the monarchy and these were professional armies. And so these were basically mercenaries. The thing about mercenaries is they didn't want to die, right? They're collecting a paycheck.
Starting point is 00:10:08 Their point is to intimidate. The point is to scare. It's not to die. But then you have the French Revolution. And they were citizens. And they were willing to fight and die. Okay? And that's why France became,
Starting point is 00:10:26 most powerful nation in Europe at this time because they could call on their citizens to fight and to die and it was almost unlimited amount of soldiers whereas the other countries like Prussia Russia Austria Austria they had professional soldiers who were afraid to tie they all they wanted was their paycheck so over time the French were overwhelming the Europeans and this create the French Empire. All right? But once these places were conquered, they have, they dealt their own theory as to how to defeat the French.
Starting point is 00:11:08 And they recognize that we also need a theory of nationalism. We also need a theory of the nation state. But they didn't like the social contract theory. Okay? So they came up with a new theory based on nation, which was basically, language, culture, and race. And so this becomes Germany. Okay?
Starting point is 00:11:35 What we call iron and blood. So now you have these theories of nationalism come out into Europe. And now they're invisible because they can call on their citizens to fight and to die. And this is why Europe became the most powerful region of the world
Starting point is 00:11:55 starting in the 19th century. Okay, but of course the problem of nationalism, the problem with populations that want to fight and die is that They keep on fighting wars But it's not a real and so what happens is that to solve this problem all these nations focus on trying to grow the population as fast as possible as much as possible and this is what led to this massive population growth But with more population what was happening was that these wars would become a deadlier and deadlier culminating of course in World War II and by World War II Europe had exhausted itself too many people had died their civilization was
Starting point is 00:12:40 destroyed and so this allowed America to come into power okay America and America had a different theory of the nation state so the French the theory was the social contract the Germans their theory is iron and blood okay The Americans had a different theory, because America was a multicultural nation of immigrants who are trying to colonize the Western Hemisphere, North America, right? So for them, their theory is to create a game. The nation-state becomes a game. The Constitution and government are the game masters.
Starting point is 00:13:31 And what they will allow is for anyone to come to America, and get rich, as long as they work hard. And this will create the greatest nation in the world. Okay? So this becomes a game where anyone can play. In fact, the more players that you have, the wealthy America becomes, right? And then after World War II, what happened was in America spread this game throughout the world,
Starting point is 00:14:02 as much as it could, right? To Europe and to Japan. Japan, but they're still communist countries like China and Soviet Union, which they want to participate in this game. They had their own game. And so what happened was that after the collapse of the Soviet Union, this game conquered the world, right? You had globalization.
Starting point is 00:14:28 The problem is this. Once this game keeps on going, eventually what happens is that only a few players achieve all the wealth, right? You have massive inequality. And everyone else becomes falls into debt. Okay, and that's the world that we live in today. America create this game, it was very successful in creating tremendous wealth and they're trying to have as many players as possible. That's why you have the population boom. But now only a few people have all the wealth and everyone else is in debt. In other words, these people are useless. and therefore we need to reset the game.
Starting point is 00:15:14 And the way that reset the game, of course, is to destroy the game in the first place. Therefore, I have World War III, burn everything down, and start the game over again. Okay? And that's why we are in the situation we are in today. Okay, so now what I'm going to do is go over some of the major ideas
Starting point is 00:15:37 that allowed for this system to come into being, okay? So first I want to look at the social contract by Jean-Jacques Rousseau. So Ivery, could you be a favor and read the first passage? Okay. So let me progress in context. This is from his book called the social contract. And Jacques Rousseau is arguing in slavery. And before it was understood that slavery is a good system because the master is nice to the slave.
Starting point is 00:16:06 As long as the master is nice to the slave, the slave should be happy. And Jean-Jar Rousseau says, no. that cannot be true. In no circumstance can a slave ever be happy, okay? And he explains why. So, Iver, can you read, please? To renounce your liberty is to renounce your status as a man, your rights
Starting point is 00:16:23 as a human being, and even your duties as a human being. There can be any way of compensating someone who gives up everything. Such a renunciation is incompatible with a man's nature. To remove all freedom from his will is to remove all morality from his actions.
Starting point is 00:16:39 Finally, an agreement to absolute authority on one side and unlimited obedience on the other. What an empty and contradictory agreement that would have to be? Isn't it clear that if we are entitled to take anything and everything from a person, we can't be under any obligation to him? And isn't that fact alone, the fact that there is no equivalence, nothing to be exchanged between the two sides, enough to nullify the agreement? What right can my slave have against me?
Starting point is 00:17:08 Everything that he has is mine, his right is mine, and it doesn't make sense to speak my right against myself. Okay, so the argument is this. Our freedom is given to us by God. Our freedom is what connects us to God. So our freedom cannot be surrendered. If we surrender our freedom, if someone takes our freedom away from us,
Starting point is 00:17:28 that is surrendering our humanity, that is breaking our connection to God. Therefore, it is better to die than be a slave. And that was their thinking during the French Revolution, right? Yeah, all these citizens, They have actually no experience with firearms, but they were running into cannon fire against professional soldiers because they were like, give me liberty or give me death. Because while my liberty, I am nothing.
Starting point is 00:17:55 So this is a really important concept. And then you can read this below. I'm continually astonished that such a simple sign of good government isn't recognized, or perhaps men do recognize it but aren't honest enough. to say so. What is the purpose of any political association, the preservation and prosperity of its members? And what is a surest sign of their preservation and prosperity? Their number and their population growth? That's the sign you're looking for. Other things being equal, the unquestionably best government, is the one under which the population increases most without external help from
Starting point is 00:18:34 naturalizing foreigners or establishing colonies. The government under which the population shrinks is the worst. Over to you, calculators, count, measure, compare. Okay, this is really important idea. Okay, so first is, um, liberty is the most important value. And the second idea is a good government, a good society should focus on population growth, on having as many people as possible because that's the best sign that you're, you're thriving as a society, okay? So because of these two, two ideas, okay? Population growth, and then liberty, the French will become the greatest empire in Europe at this time. So this is France in the dark green and they will colonize and conquer everything in the green.
Starting point is 00:19:30 You can see how vast it is. So this shows you the power of the nation state based on two ideas. The first idea is liberty is all that matters. Second idea is grow the population as fast as possible. Okay. So of course, what happens, as I mentioned, is that the Germans who are being conquered by the French, they get upset, and their intellectuals come up a new theory of nationalism. This is Johann Feté, who is considered the father of German nationalism.
Starting point is 00:20:05 This argument is that it is language. that binds us as humans. Okay? So for Zardot Rousseau, it's liberty that we should strive for. It's liberty that gives us value as human beings. But for Johann Fichti, it's no, it's language. It's language that binds us to the past. It's language that binds us together.
Starting point is 00:20:27 It's language that's worth fighting for. It's race, nation, blood. Okay? And this becomes the philosophy of the church German state. At this time in history, Germany was divided into many hundreds of different kingdoms. It is Bismarck, Ottoman Bismarck, of pressure, will unify the German people into one Germany, okay? Often called the second right. And so, can you read, I agree? This is a speech, or his famous iron and blood speech. This episode is brought to you by an espresso. Hear that, that's your next obsession.
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Starting point is 00:21:26 Like actually effortless. Simply press, brew and explore. Nispresso. What else? Keep exploring at nespresso.com. The position of pressure in Germany will not be determined by its liberator. but by its power. Pressure must concentrate its strength and hold it for the favorable moment, which has already come and gone several times. Since the treaties of Vienna, our frontiers
Starting point is 00:21:50 have been ill-designed for a healthy body politic. Not through speeches and majority decisions will the great questions of the day be decided. That was the great mistake of 1848 and 1849, but by iron and blood. Okay, all right. So the day here is that, listen, we're a German nation. Okay? And as a nation state, as a people, we must protect our freedom by going to war. Okay, it's only by for war that we can survive and thrive as a people. But how do you fight wars? Well, you fight wars, and it's really important, by making sure your population is sitting care of, okay? So can you read, um, I agree? The real grievance of the worker is the insecurity of his existence. He's not sure.
Starting point is 00:22:39 that he will always have work, he is not sure that if he will always be healthy, and he foresees that he will one day be old and unfit to work. If he falls into poverty, even if only through a prolonged illness, he is then completely helpless, left to his own devices, and society does not currently recognize any real obligation toward him beyond their usual help for the poor, even if he has been working all the time ever so faithfully and diligently. The usual help for the poor, however, leaves a lot to be desired, especially in large cities, where it is very much worse than in the country. So Bismarck will turn Germany into the most powerful nation of world by recognizing that
Starting point is 00:23:19 it's not just soldiers who contribute to the war effort. It's also your people as well. Because it's your people who make the machines of war, the machine guns, the artillery, the munitions and therefore you have to make sure they are healthy you don't want to send sick soldiers to the battlefield right you well you don't want sick sick workers as well that's why he passed a lot of progressive worker reforms including health insurance accidental insurance old age pension workers protection children protection okay it is because he recognizes that a nation state is first and foremost about making warriors and
Starting point is 00:24:03 And if you want to win, you have to make sure you have as many people as possible and everyone has contributed to the war effort. And to do that, you need to make sure that everyone is taking care of, including your soldiers, including your workers. Okay? And it was Mussolini who basically understood that the real purpose of a nation state is to fight wars. In fact, it is wars that give people meaning their lives. If you have a war, if you create a nation state around war,
Starting point is 00:24:39 you create a mythology around the beauty of war, then people will happily fight and die. Okay? Can you read a speech? We have created our myth. The myth is a faith, a passion. It is not necessary for it to be a reality. It is a reality in the sense that it is a stimulus, is hope, is faith, it's courage.
Starting point is 00:25:04 Our myth is the greatness of the nation. And to this myth, this greatness, which we want to translate into a total reality, we subordinate everything else. Okay, so this is the highlight or the peak of the nation state. And so during World War II, they had to fight a war to destroy the entire society. because the soldiers were not emotionally like they were in the past before. The soldiers were coming from the population themselves.
Starting point is 00:25:37 So in World War II, the Allies won, not because they were democratic or more or a superior or had better strategy. It was because they could destroy the productive capacity of their enemies, but their enemies could not destroy the protective capacity of their nation states. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:25:58 So America, their factories were fine. Soviet Union, the factories were removed into Siberia, far away from the Germans. The Germans and the Japanese could be firebomb, okay? So look at this. So from 1940, 1945, the British and Americans firebomb Germany, okay? This is Dresden. Dresden. You can see the entire city of Dresden was destroyed by the firebombing.
Starting point is 00:26:32 So in World War II, what they recognize is there's no point in killing soldiers on the battlefield because they'll just send in more soldiers with more weapons. So we need to destroy the civilian population. That's how you win the war. Okay, and that's how they defeated Germany. Japan was much worse. Look at this. At least half of Japan was destroyed by the American firebombing of Japan. That's why Japan lost the war. Otherwise, they would have kept on going. And these are huge cities. So Nagoya is a city the size of Los Angeles.
Starting point is 00:27:07 40% of it was destroyed. Tokyo is New York City. 40% of it was destroyed as well. Yokohama, 60% of it was destroyed. This is Tokyo. You can see the extent of the damage. damage. The nation state idea was so powerful that in order to win a war, you need to destroy the civilian population. Okay? So, as you can see, because of the rise of the nation state, we have to kill more and more people in order to fight wars.
Starting point is 00:27:48 So this is war II, and at least 20 to 30 men people were killed. Okay? And depending on how you calculate, probably a lot more than that died. But what's interesting is that even though World II was a calamity, even though tens of millions have died, look at the population growth.
Starting point is 00:28:14 It never stopped. So for most of the history of human history, population growth was steady. But then, starting around here, 1600, it boomed, okay? And again, science will tell you this coincided with the rise of science and technology. But we've always had science and technology. What made this different was the rise of the nation state. And the recognition that to fight wars, you need more people who want to kill themselves for the nation. And to get them to do that, you have to treat
Starting point is 00:28:53 them well as well. Okay. And that's what, and so, So the nation state wanted science and technology to grow the population. That's where we had medicine and sanitation. Okay? These innovations happen because the nation state will these things happen. All right. Now as I mentioned, after War II and after all the travesty and destruction of World War II, The world got together and said, okay, America, you're in charge now, and let's build a world
Starting point is 00:29:36 in which we don't have to fight and kill each other anymore. And so America created this game, right, called capitalism, consumer capitalism in which we live in today. And this system is unique in human history, and for most of this history was extremely successful. It grew the population from about $2 billion to about $8 billion today. It made a lot of people more wealthy. of the tremendous wealth that China has generated in the past 30, 40 years because of its participation in consumer capitalism.
Starting point is 00:30:08 But unfortunately, we've now reached a point where the system is off balance. It's unstable, it's unsustainable, so now we're going back to war. But unfortunately, because there's too many people, this means that when we go back to war, at least 50% of the world. humanity will die off in World War III. So this is a war in Ukraine. And already millions of people are dying in this war. But if you look at the war in Ukraine,
Starting point is 00:30:40 it's essentially a 19th century war, okay? It's almost like World War I. I know World War I happened in the 12th century, but it's really a 19th century war where you are trying to kill as many soldiers as possible. Okay, and that's what's happening in Ukraine. What I will show you is that Iran will be the first 21st century war. So America in round one try to use shock and all.
Starting point is 00:31:20 Shock and all is basically you decapitate the leadership. You destroy the military. and you destroy production. That's the idea of shock and all. I come in, I kill your leadership, I kill your military, I kill your war factories. And you do it as soon as possible. But this is not working against Iran
Starting point is 00:31:54 because they prepared this war for 20 years, so it's decentralized. Okay? So you've killed their leaders, but they don't care because they just have new leaders coming to place. The military is hidden. Okay? They're hidden in mountains and the factory is also hidden in mountains as well. So even though the Americans have really destroyed much of Iran's war fighting capacity, Iran is still in this fight. So what's going to happen is that in the next few months, America is gonna shift its strategy
Starting point is 00:32:33 into a 21st century war strategy, which will have three components. The first component is economic strangulation. I will destroy your economy, your entire economy. Second is ethnic tension. I will try to create as much conflict as possible between the different peoples in Iran, okay? And the third thing is destroy civilian infrastructure. Basically, I want
Starting point is 00:33:15 to destroy people's capacity to access water, electricity, and food. The basic necessities of life. Why don't want to do that? Because if people cannot access these things, they get angry, right? Then if they get angry, I can channel this anger against against the government, because it's easier for them to attack the government than it's to attack the US military, which is the ones destroying all this infrastructure. So this is what a 21st century war strategy looks like. And this is what the Americans will deploy in Iran over the next few months. Now, why haven't they done this before?
Starting point is 00:33:57 Well, because these are war crimes. There are lots of treaties, the Geneva Convention, that prohibit you from fighting these wars. But as Americans become much more desperate, as they continue to lose this war, they'll be like, screw this, I'm gonna win this war no matter what it takes, okay? So let me show you how this war will be fought.
Starting point is 00:34:21 So before, right now, they're trying to target weapons. They're trying to target military bases. That doesn't get you anywhere, okay? you need to better use your weapon systems because you don't have enough munitions to destroy the entire Iranian military. Okay, so you have to be strategic now. And so you target things that have huge impact
Starting point is 00:34:44 on the civilian population as well as the economy, right? So the most basic thing is water. Okay, look guys, these are all dams and reservoirs around Iran. Okay, I don't have to destroy all of them. them, but I strategically destroy some of them, this doesn't create a lot of pressure on the civilian population.
Starting point is 00:35:09 They'll be very angry, they might protest against the government. Okay? Also, transportation networks, right? These are roads and railways. This is important because Tehran is a city of 10 million people. And they do not grow their own food. They require food to come from the countryside, from elsewhere. So if I attack the roads leading to Tehran,
Starting point is 00:35:40 if I attack strategic hubs, then it's very hard for food to move from place to place. Okay? I don't have to destroy the entire food supply. I can't do that. I don't have weapons. But I'm being strategic about it. I'm putting strain on Tehran's capacity to feed its own
Starting point is 00:36:00 population. Power plants, okay? These are all power plants around Iran. And it's really easy to destroy these power plants. All right. So does that make sense? So the idea is war, the rules of engagement required me to only attack soldiers and only attack weapons. But eventually I'm going to run out of munitions if I keep on doing that. And it's not going to destroy Iran's capacity to fight. They won't surrender. So now I need to be more strategic with how I use my munitions, how I use my bombs. And so I want to create as much damage as possible. The best way to do that is by targeting key infrastructure, power plants, desalination plants, roads, railway networks. Okay? I can't destroy all of them, but I can create as much havoc as possible over time
Starting point is 00:36:55 so if the civilian population gets very angry. So my best weapon in this war, or not more my planes and my aircraft carriers, my best weapon is the Iranian people themselves. And that's what the 21st century war looks like. It's very slow. It's very methodical. It's pretty evil. Okay.
Starting point is 00:37:16 All right. All right. The other thing is economic strangulation. All right. So what am I trying to do here? Okay, so Iran, there are two ways for them to generate income for the finances war. The first is to sell oil, okay?
Starting point is 00:37:34 And this is Carg Island, which is their main depot, okay, oil depot. And 90% of Iranian oil goes from Carg Island elsewhere, primarily to China. 90% of Iranians oil exports goes to China, okay? So what the markets have done is they've imposed a blockade stopping oil exports. Okay, that's one way you can
Starting point is 00:38:00 stop Iran's economy. The other thing is that right now, Iran controls the cervical moves, and they collect tolls on that, okay? So I basically need to destroy Iran's control over the cervical moves. The way I do that is I use ground forces, okay? So what I can do is seize Khartan Island,
Starting point is 00:38:23 seize Karg Island, seize the coastline, and force the Iranians to respond to my attacks. I can also position forces here and here. Why? Because these areas, okay, in the northwest of Iran are home to minorities, as well as the southeast. And when I put my soldiers here, this is going to encourage local population
Starting point is 00:38:53 to rise up against Iranian state. And now what's going to happen is that the Iranian Iran will now disson forces to respond to all these ethnic insurgencies around Iran. Okay? So before, Iran could just focus its resources on control and the threat for moves. Like, screw that, I'm going to expend a battlefield so that Iran is forced to deal with multiple threats. At the same time, I'm going to collapse their economy. all right okay so this is what the 21st century war looks like it's slow you're
Starting point is 00:39:36 you focus on triangulation as opposed to a knockout punch all right so um once one way to understand what's happening is that the americans have been doing this for a long time but more subtly all right so um in twenty twenty the Iranian president named Ahmad Dijad, he accused the Americans of conducting weather warfare against Iran, mainly by creating droughts in Iran. And how do you do that? Well, it's cloud seeding, right?
Starting point is 00:40:25 It's cloud seeding. So the idea of clouds eating is that you shoot up a chemical called silver iodide into clouds, forcing it to rain. When you do that, well, the clouds dissipate the rain elsewhere and they don't go to Iran, okay? So in 2019, there's a real fear that Iran would suffer from long-term drought.
Starting point is 00:40:50 And regions like Dubai, which the rains claim to be the source of this weather warfare, they experienced droughts. Sorry, sorry, floods. Okay? All right. So, again, I don't know how the science works, and this is all rumors,
Starting point is 00:41:10 but it does make sense where the Americans would use weather warfare against Iran, forcing rain to come down in Dubai to deny rain to the Iranians. There's a conspiracy theory that these world governments are conducting weather warfare using something called harp. Now, harp was originally designed in order to study the atmosphere but some conspiracy theorists claim that harp can be used to create extreme
Starting point is 00:41:44 weather including hurricanes, cyclones, flooding, droughts, I don't know, okay? I'm just pointing this out there. What we do know is that in 19662, Lyndon Johnson, who became President of the United States, he had a very famous quote at a speech. And he basically said, he who controls the weather will control the world. Okay? The future warfare is not about weapons.
Starting point is 00:42:12 It's about weather. So it's not about how many weapons you make. It's about how well you can control the weather. Because you think about it, if you can create a drought in a country, that country will be destroyed. Okay? And they put a lot of,
Starting point is 00:42:28 resources into developing weather warfare and we know that from 1967 and 1972 the Americans create something called Operation Popeye. Okay, so this during the Vietnam War and what the Americans did was they see the clouds so that the Monsu season would be a lot longer in Vietnam. Why do that? Because then it's harder for the Vietnamese to resupply themselves. It makes it harder for them to fight Because the Vietnamese are living in tunnels, right?
Starting point is 00:43:05 Whereas Americans are attacking from the air All right? So this is pretty well known. Operation Popeye is something that Americans did do in Vietnam And they do have weather manipulation technology The question is, the debate is, how effective the technology is And how powerful is it And how scalable is it, okay?
Starting point is 00:43:26 Okay, that's a debate. We're already seeing elements of 21st century warfare being implemented around the world. Okay, so look at Cuba. There's now an oil embargo on Cuba, and so they're blackouts. All right? So again, the intention is not to kill civilians. The intention is not to fight a war. The intention is to extraangle a nation so that eventually the population wants to overthrow the government.
Starting point is 00:43:56 And already what we're seeing is these past few months, lots of accidents around the world that's destroying the world's oil supply. Okay? But there's only, but there's one region of world that doesn't really care about the loss of refineries, the loss of oil supply, and that's North America. Because North America is extremely wealthy. And so when the rest of the world is very, facing energy scarcity and food scarcity,
Starting point is 00:44:30 it's gonna have to beg North America, the United States, Canada, Mexico, for resources. And this allows the Americans to better control the world. Okay? Again, this is what 21st century warfare looks like. All right, the last, another thing that I'll point out is that the Americans are very good at overflowing governments, okay?
Starting point is 00:44:55 There's something called the color revolution Playbook, Color Revolution Playbook. And so what the Americans do is they basically invite young people from different nations to come to America, to learn about democracy, and to learn about how to organize protest movement, how to overthrow the government in order to promote democracy. The Americans will also finance NGOs in different countries in order to create young movements in the world. also control social media in order to governize a population and foment unrest. We saw this play out most recently in 20,
Starting point is 00:45:38 sorry last year, Nepal, when young people overfrew the government. Now guys, okay, here's the thing. In Nepal, most people don't speak English. They don't read English. So why are these young people holding up signs. Ok boomer times up, okay? That's in English. Who's it for?
Starting point is 00:46:03 Also, Ok, Boomer is an American phrase. Okay? It's an American phrase, not an Apoli's phrase. So in other words, they're doing this not to have impact locally in the power, they're doing this because someone's paying them to do this. You understand? It's being funded by Washington.
Starting point is 00:46:29 And Washington's like, okay, well, I'll pay this amount of money if you give me a slogan, if you're a slogan, so I can show my boss that this protest is working. Also guys, here's another sign. We pay you flex enough, okay? Another English sign. So again, why are they doing this? When the local population don't even speak English.
Starting point is 00:46:53 They're doing it for Washington. They're not doing for their own country. They're doing it for their masters in Washington. Does that make sense? And this is very common in the world today where these protests are being orchestrated by Washington for Washington, as opposed to being organic.
Starting point is 00:47:15 In 2010, 2012, you have these Arab Spring protests happen all around the Middle East. Do they stabilize the governments in the Middle East? and we know that social media, basically Twitter and Facebook, were instrumental in organizing people and promoting unrest in these places.
Starting point is 00:47:38 All right? So these are all called color revolution or the color revolution playbook. So not only does America have the capacity to strangle a nation's economy and force the population to beg for mercy, Washington, the Americans also have strategies on how to overflow the government using the local population. Basically by controlling social media, by organizing young people, paying
Starting point is 00:48:09 them to protest, and bribing security services to not intervene. Okay? It's a very successful people. They've tried many times and it's worked many times before. All right. So America can use this playbook against every country that opposes it, okay? So the main reason again is because America controls the world's choke points, including Sri Lanka, Panama Canal, Jabalter, these are major choke points. Even though the Iranians control the Surrogh moves, the Americans can have aircraft carriers in the Indian Ocean and blockade the Iranians. Okay?
Starting point is 00:48:59 This is important because a lot of people believe that what America really wants to do is destroy China. And unfortunately right now, a lot of the Chinese economy depends on exports, meaning trade. If you can't export, your economy can suffer a great deal. When your economy suffers a great deal, you lose GDP, your unemployment,
Starting point is 00:49:24 and it's possible that your... protests happening in China because of the collapse of the economy. Okay? So that is what the 21st century war looks like. Okay, you don't send troops, you don't destroy what you do is you strangle a people to death and force the people to rise up against the nation state. Okay. And so the concluding message is this. Ultimately, to fight, a 21st century warfare, okay? It's really about population management. What I mean by that is your enemy is
Starting point is 00:50:14 trying to provoke your population into unrest to destroy you. So you have to respond by managing your population better, okay? And that can often mean calling your population. Calling a population just means killing them. Killing them can mean you deny them food. You create famine.
Starting point is 00:50:39 Okay? It could mean you spread diseases. It could mean you actually do go and shoot them. Okay? And this forces you to use artificial intelligence, AI surveillance state. Because the best way to control your population The magic population is with an AI civilian state.
Starting point is 00:51:05 All right? So that's a future we're looking at what the 21st century war looks like. And there's no way around it. It is just the inability of history. We have too many people. We want to fight wars. And so a lot of people have to die in these wars. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:51:26 All right. Any questions, guys? Any questions? Yeah. Yeah, Alan. Sorry, can you give the microphone to it, Gallic? I just have one small question about the 20-century war. Like, if a country has been attacked by the strategy, how can it respond?
Starting point is 00:51:53 Like, how can Iran respond to American strategy right now? Okay, that's a great question. Okay, look, the reality is that when the Americans do this, okay? When they do three things, right? They destroy your economy. When they strangle, sorry, when they destroy your infrastructure, and when they divide and conquer, according to the game theory, there's only one response.
Starting point is 00:52:37 Okay? There's only one proper response to this, and this idea of eschatology. In communities across Canada, hourly Amazon employees earn an average of over $24.50 an hour. Employees also have the opportunity to grow their skills and their paycheck by enrolling in free skills training programs for in-demand fields like software development and information technology. Learn more at aboutamazon.ca. Okay, and the idea here is this.
Starting point is 00:53:24 You need to create fanaticism among your people, right? Because your people are suffering. They don't have enough to eat. They don't have any hope in the future. So what you say to them is, it's all part of God's plan. We're meant to suffer. Because when we suffer,
Starting point is 00:53:46 God will make us invincible. For our suffering, we'll find the courage to commit martyrdom. When we do martyrdom, we go to heaven. The problem with this is that
Starting point is 00:54:05 most people don't want to do this, okay? They're like, no, I don't want to do this. want to kill myself. I don't want to die for God. I just want to live a normal life. Okay? But unfortunately, what history tells us is that you really don't need that many people to commit to eschatology to win a war. Maybe at most 10 to 20 percent. If 10 to 20 percent of your
Starting point is 00:54:33 population commit to this eschatology, then you will survive. Okay. We have an example of this. We have a example of this is the U.S., sorry, the Iran-Iraq War, which is what happened in the 1980s. Okay, an eight-year war between Iran and Iraq. Right. And, guys, it was a crazy war. These Iraqis were supported by both the Americans and the Soviet Union. They had tanks. They had helicopters.
Starting point is 00:55:04 They had a professional army. The Iranians in 1980s didn't have an army. They didn't have tanks. They didn't have helicopters. So what they said to any people is the greatest glory is to be a martyr. The greatest glory is to die for your nation and for God. So these young people went into the battle
Starting point is 00:55:30 with just a rifle. Okay? Guy, like imagine this, okay? You have this young guy 16 years old. He's running into battle. against a tank in a helicopter and he's screaming at them, I will kill you! And most of them got blown up, but some of them got through,
Starting point is 00:55:52 and they threw a grenade into the tank. Okay? Now you think of, you think about this, you're like, oh my God, that's crazy. But first of all, it galvanized Iranian population into resisting. And eventually, they turned the title of war so that they were actually winning the war. And it was only because Americans were, because Americans start to use chemical weapons against them that the Iranians had to were forced back, okay? But if left alone the Iranians would have to defeat the Iraqis.
Starting point is 00:56:18 So think about that, how it governs the population into resistance. The other thing is that it's scared dealing hell out of the Iraqis, okay? You are, you have a tank, right? The guy's coming at you with a rifle and a grenade. He's not afraid of you. His fearlessness makes you afraid. Okay? So even though yes, in 21st century warfare, okay, it seems invincible, but eschatology is the counter to this approach. And that's why we should see over the next few years a huge surge in eschatology and religious extremism throughout the world. Because it's really the only counter to this type of warfare. Does that make sense? Okay, great question. Any more questions, guys? Okay, great.
Starting point is 00:57:16 So there's no class on Thursday and next Tuesday, but we'll come back next Thursday and we'll continue this, okay? All right, thank you.

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