Generational Dynamics World View News

Post a reply


This question is a means of preventing automated form submissions by spambots.
Smilies
:D :) ;) :( :o :shock: :? 8-) :lol: :x :P :oops: :cry: :evil: :twisted: :roll: :!: :?: :idea: :arrow: :| :mrgreen: :geek: :ugeek:

BBCode is ON
[img] is ON
[url] is ON
Smilies are ON

Topic review
   

Expand view Topic review: Generational Dynamics World View News

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by FullMoon » Mon Jun 30, 2025 1:07 pm

thinker wrote: Sun Jun 29, 2025 9:28 pm Hello gents, I have a question for the guys that have military experience. I have seen videos of Iran's hypersonic missiles hitting Tel Aviv, I believe both China and Russia also have hypersonic missiles in their arsenals. I believe we are working on this tech but are net yet to the point where we would be able to use it. From what I have seen these things are unstoppable, Israel doesn't have an answer for them, do we (US) have anything that could stop them?
I've seen lots of different analysis but it seems to boil down to the simple matter of quantity/quality of missiles and drones vs quantity of systems capable of stopping the missiles. It seems that there's lots more missiles/drones available to all the actors vs air defense and attrition of both doesn't favor those who rely on air defense. But we're currently in the fog of war and available information is murky. There's plenty of videos showing Israel getting pounded, they've blocked all on the ground reporting of missile strikes and that's a tell. Apparently many people believe the current ceasefire is only :) to re-equip the air defense and missile stockpile. It's probably a strategic blunder to continue using up our stockpile of limited air defense because they take a long time to manufacture.
A three theater war would be an enormous challenge in the best of times but it's well known we've actually fallen behind in some critical areas related to this. We're seeing a pushback on 2 fronts that's been showing this and it's unfortunate for our position, considering the arsenal the PRC has amassed. They're getting real time data and weapons testing of our best systems and will probably make adjustments for making them better. And they're probably just watching us attrit our arsenal with a long lag time for manufacture.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by guest » Mon Jun 30, 2025 8:36 am

Seems like they might be stoppable with a directed energy weapon, e.g., laser, etc.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by thinker » Sun Jun 29, 2025 9:28 pm

Hello gents, I have a question for the guys that have military experience. I have seen videos of Iran's hypersonic missiles hitting Tel Aviv, I believe both China and Russia also have hypersonic missiles in their arsenals. I believe we are working on this tech but are net yet to the point where we would be able to use it. From what I have seen these things are unstoppable, Israel doesn't have an answer for them, do we (US) have anything that could stop them?

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by Trevor » Sat Jun 28, 2025 5:52 am

When it comes to Russia and China being allies, it's important to remember that in the early days of the Second World War, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union collaborated with one another. Until June 22, 1941, the USSR butchered just as many people and according to some estimates, more.

The Soviets helped build the military Hitler turned on them, and I suspect Putin's making the same mistake. China's vulnerable to a blockade and their navy doesn't have the strength to challenge us, let alone adding Japan, South Korea, and others to the mix. Russia's invasion of Ukraine raises a lot of questions as to how impressive Chinese hardware really is. If it was as capable as they claimed, I suspect they'd have already launched their attack.

I fear we're going to make the same mistake as our ancestors. Even in 1939, Britain and France could have stopped Hitler without massive loss of life. When invading Poland, he left their western border almost undefended. His generals thought he'd lost his mind, but Hitler gambled that Britain and France wouldn't do anything substantial to stop him. He was right. Both nations were desperate to avoid another war, leading to far greater loss of life through their inaction. Think about today; after Afghanistan and especially Iraq, there's no attitude for more overseas adventures. Far as most people are concerned, let the world deal with its own problems.

Such an attitude is understandable, but it's shortsighted. We can't ignore the rest of the world, however tempting it might be.

China might want to have all their preparations ready, but no plan survives contact with the enemy. Since Covid, China is no longer seen as a rival: they're an enemy, to both parties. The more complicated the plan, the more that can go wrong, and while time is on their side in certain aspects, they've got massive problems of their own. The days of 10% growth are over, even taking their figures at face value.

Where I disagree with Navigator is my uncertainty about how closely these nations are collaborating. They might have a common goal, but there's a lot of bad blood between them, and their opposition to us is about the only thing they have in common. There's also India, a nation Russia has been close to historically, and China's enemy.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by Trevor » Sat Jun 28, 2025 5:43 am

Adding to Navigator's point, Iran's nuclear program has been set back. Precisely how much, we don't know, but I suspect Iran knows their position is fragile. All the stories about their formidable defenses has proven to be a load of crap. Assad has fallen, Hezbollah has been defanged, Hamas is devastated, and the Houthis are weakened. Life hasn't been kind to them over the last year, and I think it's telling that even what condemnations have existed are half-hearted. There hasn't even been much of a "rally around the flag" effect at home. Even the Iranians are sick of their leaders.

It's one of the few areas where I agree with Trump.

Their fall might seem impossible, but Assad's rule looked secure until it suddenly wasn't. He fell in three weeks, now residing in Moscow, and could be handed over if Putin decides he's outlived his usefulness.

America's always had an isolationist streak. Our role as the world's policeman has never been without controversy, even when the Truman Doctrine was first conceived. WWII ended 80 years ago, and almost no one else remembers the terrible events that led up to it, so I'm not surprised that we're returning to seeing events as "someone else's problem." While we might have won in Iraq in a military sense, the victory tastes like ashes, and it's done a lot of damage to our reputation worldwide.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by Phong Tran » Thu Jun 26, 2025 7:13 pm

Navigator wrote: Thu Jun 26, 2025 4:55 pm I am rather concerned with the Isolationist tendencies of many conservatives, esp in regards to Ukraine and Iran.
I believe that most conservatives, that have an isolationist viewpoint, narrows down their framework towards an internal nationalist argument that the United States is not a more prosperous country now than when it was in the 1950s-1960s. And thus, the questioning of whether it is worth being involved in external entanglements vs spending that money to rebuild the nation from within. To keep their logical conclusions simple, they most likely don't consider the geopolitical ramifications of if the US did take a non-involvement foreign policy.

This isn't finger pointing at conservative isolationist and blaming them for not seeing the bigger picture, it's just pointing out a blind spot in their framework that they may not be considering. I would probably consider myself a conservative isolationist, which is why I think I can somewhat speak on that behalf. The philosophical belief of "live and let live" is great, until just as (paraphrasing) Navigator said "the wolves are knocking at the door".

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by Navigator » Thu Jun 26, 2025 4:55 pm

I am rather concerned with the Isolationist tendencies of many conservatives, esp in regards to Ukraine and Iran.

I get it that the US has gotten involved in many needless conflicts, such as Vietnam trying to re-unify itself, and of course the Iraq and Afghanistan messes.

Vietnam did itself no favors by trying to unify under a communist banner, causing the US to be very suspect, given what had happened in Korea - a war that HAD to be fought. Most military experts, Eisenhower and Ridgeway specifically, knew that Vietnam was a lost cause and that we should not go in there. JFK (later LBJ) were encouraged by Maxwell Taylor. Note that Taylor was commanding general of Dick Winters of "Band of Brothers" fame. Winters never had a single nice thing to say about Taylor, who was more politician than Soldier (and who somehow missed out on being surrounded with his unit during the Battle of the Bulge.

We had to go into Afghanistan due to them providing safe haven for Osama Bin Laden and Al-Qaeda. Saddam Hussein should have been dealt with in 1990. In both cases, the plan to turn both countries into "beacons of democracy" had ZERO chance of success.

But I have started rambling.

We ARE going to go to war with China-Russia-North Korea-Iran. Just like in the 1930s when we could tell that we would be going to war with Germany-Japan-Italy. Saying that Ukraine is not our fight is the same as telling the Chinese and the Ethiopians in the 30s, and then the Poles in 1939 that their wars were none of our business. They eventually became our business, when the strength of the adversaries had become MUCH greater.

Any damage that we can do to China-Russia-North Korea-Iran now will only benefit us in the future. Peace at "any cost" is not a good plan for the long term, as it only strengthens our adversaries.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by Navigator » Thu Jun 26, 2025 4:39 pm

A lot has happened, and I feel I have to apologize for not posting as consequential things have transpired.

My wife was cleared by her doctors to travel for a while, so that is what we have been doing. Today we were in Morocco. So, given our travels, and my focus on my wife, it is rather difficult to post regularly, or shortly after something happens.

The US strikes on Iran were certainly needed. I was rather surprised (pleasantly, I would point out) that the Iranians did not escalate. I thought for sure they were going to close the Straits of Hormuz.

The decision not to do so is probably based on a combination of the following factors:
1. The Iranians are freaked out that they have been infiltrated by Israeli backed traitors, and they need time to flush them out.
2. The Iranians are so dependent on their own oil sales that they cannot, even in the short term, close the Straits.
3. The Chinese are not done with their pre-war preparations, and need to stockpile more oil (which they are buying from Iran), and they asked the Iranians to hold off for a while.
3b. The Chinese have promised significant help to the Iranians if the Iranians hold off until they are ready to go head to head with US.

While others are correct about the WMD lies prior to the Iraq invasion in 2003, that war was never really about WMDs. It was about the fact that Saddam Hussein tried to assassinate George Bush Sr while he made a visit to Kuwait in 1993. So Bush Jr was just looking for an excuse to go after Saddam after winning the presidency in 2000. So 9/11, coupled with faulty intel that came from as few as 2 sources (who were telling the CIA what they wanted to hear), gave Bush the opportunity.

It is FAR different with Iran. We know they have a serious nuclear program. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had conducted inspections on the Iranians for years, and even with the Iranians hiding a lot from them, there is a clear picture of a nuclear weapon program. Previous US administrations have been idiots in how they handled this. From "negotiations" that gave the Iranians everything they wanted, to us allowing the Germans to sell high end centrifuges to them.

My hope is that we/Israel did indeed do serious damage to their nuclear program. And if so, Trump deserves a LOT of kudos for having the guts to do it.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by Higgenbotham » Wed Jun 25, 2025 12:04 pm

FullMoon wrote: Mon Jun 23, 2025 11:47 am I was thinking Trump might be the Grey Champion. But that would mean we have a successful resolution of the crisis and start rebuilding a better future.
Trump can still be the Gray Champion. Just not the kind of Gray Champion who has appeared in America in the past. He is a Boomer. Strauss and Howe identified that as a possible problem in their book.
Higgenbotham wrote: Sun Jan 05, 2025 4:02 pm Mentioning Von Neumann reminded me that Roosevelt had his "Dollar a Year Men" and the immigrant Jewish Manhattan Project scientists, while Trump is in the process of assembling the likes of Elon Musk and the H1-B Indian "Tech Bros" around him. It's already been discussed that, while Trump fits the correct mold to be the Gray Champion (Obama did not), it's an open question as to whether he has the temperament and resources to successfully pull it off. Some quotes from Strauss and Howe were reproduced to support that notion.
Khanna, a House Democrat who represents Silicon Valley and a potential future presidential candidate, has known Musk for more than 10 years. In an interview, he called Musk an “an extraordinary entrepreneur” and said that he fits the mold of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “dollar-a-year men,” the corporate executives who were paid a symbolic salary of $1 annually to help the federal government mobilize for WWII.

Khanna said he has “exchanged texts” with Musk since Trump tapped him to head DOGE. He declined to “go into private exchanges” but said they have discussed “the places where we can collaborate.”

“We have a candid conversation. He also knows where I disagree with him,” he said. “We need to engage these technologists and builders to be part of our coalition, but without compromising our values.”
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/12/1 ... hip-000579

There are a lot of reasons to think that this is not an apt comparison. But first it would behoove me to further investigate who Roosevelt's dollar a year men were and what they accomplished. Also, Trump's recent appointments and support of the Indian "Tech Bros" and H1-B has caused a backlash from MAGA voters who feel they have been betrayed. I don't see that anybody has attempted to compare the Indian "Tech Bros" to the eminent Jewish Manhattan Project scientists, but there's still plenty of time for that. There are a lot of reasons to think that, in the event that comparison is attempted, it is not apt either.
Higgenbotham wrote: Wed Nov 06, 2024 3:13 pm
Strauss and Howe wrote:As the next Gray Champion, the Boom Generation will lead at a time of maximum danger—and opportunity. From here on, Boomers will face the unfamiliar challenge of self-restraint. Having grown up feeling that G.I.s could always step in and fix everything if trouble arose, Boomers have thus far pursued their crusades with a careless intensity. In the Fourth Turning, G.I.s will no longer be around as a backstop, and the young Millennials will follow the Gray Champion off a cliff. If Boomers make a wrong choice, history will be unforgiving.

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

by RupertGeorge » Wed Jun 25, 2025 6:18 am

tim wrote: Mon Jun 16, 2025 6:10 am
Navigator wrote: Fri Jun 13, 2025 2:14 pm Unfortunately, I see zero hope in the short term of Iran becoming an ally of the west, let alone reproachment with Israel.

First off, let me congratulate the Israeli's on what seems to be a very successful initial strike on Iran. Such action has been needed for DECADES.

The US has technically been in a state of war with Iran since the Embassy takeover in 1978. The fanatical nut jobs (first Khomeini and now his son) will NEVER give up the path that they are pursuing as per their interpretation of Shia Islam. They are doing this to the utter detriment of their population, and while the majority of Iranians have no love of their regime, they are powerless to affect any kind of change. As was seen years ago during small scale demonstrations, any dissent is brutally and bloodily crushed by the quasi-militia forces that hold substantial power over the broad population.

The Iranians were NEVER going to give up their quest for atomic weapons. This had to be done. It should have been done to the North Koreans in the late 1980s or early 1990s, but no US President had the guts to do it. And now look at the nightmare in northern Asia that resulted.

It seems to me that the Trump administration understood this, and we were playing along with the Iranians in "negotiations" while the Israelis finished their plans and preparations. Israel had already done quite a bit of damage to the Iranian infrastructure last year. They should finish that job along with taking out any kind of technological industry or wherewithal that the Iranians have.

However, when a foreign country (Israel) bombs your country (Iran), the response is generally increased support for the local regime. This means that Iranians, out of their own national pride, will, at least in the short term, most likely rally to the flag of the Ayatollahs.

The next potential nightmare is that the Ayatollahs, out of desperation, take military measures to close the Straights of Hormuz, blocking oil tanker traffic in/out of the Persian Gulf. Yes, the Iranians are very dependent on their own oil revenue, but if they feel that their "back is against the wall", they may do this. This would mean that the US would become involved militarily, and would most likely require occupation of coastal areas (to stop the launching of anti ship missiles and deployment of mines into the Gulf. This is because the Gulf is so critical to the world economy.

Such a scenario would drag the US into yet another middle east war, which obviously would be highly unpopular in the US, and even more so in Europe. And if you think the anti-ICE riots are bad, just wait for this.
Iran is in a generational awakening era.

The Iran-Iraq War in 1980 (where chemical weapons were used on civilians) was Iran's last generational crisis war. Not enough time has passed since the end of that war. It takes roughly 80 years for the cycle to reset so Iran won't be facing another Crisis War/Fourth Turning until around 2060.

The most basic teachings of Generational Dynamics contradicts what you're saying here.
In dozens of articles in the last few years, I've stated and restated the core principle of Generational Dynamics that, even in a dictatorship, major decisions are made by masses of people, by generations of people. The attitudes of politicians are irrelevant, except insofar as they represent the attitudes of the people.
Since Iraq's last Crisis War was with Iran in 1980, the same analysis can be used towards Iran.

https://www.generationaldynamics.com/pg ... 040409.htm
What Iraqi Civil War?

Early in 2003, I predicted that there would be no popular uprising against the Americans, and that there would be no civil war. After the overthrow of Saddam, I said that an Iraqi civil war was impossible. Despite the constant near-hysteria of the politicians, journalists and high-priced analysts,

I've been right so far. Here's why. (09-Apr-04)Summary

Iraq is in a generational "awakening" period, like America in the 1960s. During the 60s, we had assassinations, riots, looting, radical rhetoric, and low-level violence, but no civil war. Similarly, a popular civil war in Iraq today is impossible, despite the warnings of politicians, journalists, and high-priced analysts

Why no civil war in Iraq?

The short answer is: Because only one generation has passed since the Iran/Iraq war of the 1980s, and a popular civil war is impossible so soon after a crisis war.
Let's take a moment to compare Iran today to America in the 1960s, because the equivalence is precise.

Iraq today is one generation past its last crisis war, the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.

America in the 1960s was one generation past its last crisis war, World War II. You have to understand 1960s America if you want to understand Iraq today.

If you're reading this and you're under 65-70 years old, then you probably have no idea how horrible WW II was for most Americans. Rumors of German bombers on the east coast and Japanese bombers on the west coast abounded, and terrorized Americans formed watch groups to watch for incoming bombers. Body bags with American soldiers were coming in by the boatloads from Europe and the Pacific. Everyone was affected by the war, had lost friends and family in the war, and feared for the American way of life and even the nation's survival. If you were traumatized by 9/11, then imagine the 9/11 attacks ten times a day for a couple of years and you'll begin to understand World War II.

When WW II ended, those who survived vowed that nothing like that must ever be allowed to happen again. Society reorganized itself to fight the new menace, the Communists, who would have to be stopped before they were allowed to start World War III.

By the 1960s, kids born after WW II came of age, and that's when the American awakening began. There was a well-known "generation gap," as college kids rebelled against the austere rules imposed by those who had survived WW II.

Look what happened in America in the 60s and early 70s: President Kennedy was assassinated; Martin Luther King was assassinated; Robert Kennedy was assassinated; there was a series of "hot summers," with racial rebellions in many cities, the most well known being the Watts riots in L.A. in 1965; there were huge riots and demonstrations in Washington D.C., and in other large cities; many of these riots degenerated into violence.

In all, three different presidencies ended in ruin in one way or another: President Kennedy's by assassination, President Johnson by being forced not to run again; and President Nixon by forced resignation.

But there was NO CIVIL WAR.
This is EXACTLY what's happening in Iraq today.

The Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s was a horrific crisis war, where even poison gas was used to kill people. Those who survived that war want no part of another one.

That's the context in which you have to understand the riots and demonstrations by Shi'ite Muslim cleric Moktada al-Sadr's private militia. Al-Sadr himself is 30 years old, and his followers are in their teens and 20s. These are kids with little or no personal memory of the 1980s war. They don't really care that much one way or the other about the American-led Coalition; they're just kids, and they're rebelling against their own parents more than anything else. In most cases, they have no strong convictions except to have fun.

That's why I've been saying for over a year that a popular civil war is impossible. There's no one who wants a war like that. The older generation will do anything to prevent such a war, and the younger generation really doesn't give a f--k. There's no fuel for a civil war.

I've looked at dozens, perhaps hundreds, of crisis wars throughout history, and there's never been a popular civil war just one generation past a crisis war. It's impossible.
Iran. Iran is also in a generational awakening period. Since 1999, there have been large pro-American college student demonstrations. Some analysts, apparently including some in the Bush administration, are advocating a policy of encouraging the students to overthrow the Iranian mullahs. Such a policy would almost certainly fail: There is no more chance of a civil war in Iran than there is in Iraq.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. From a generational dynamics perspective, Iran is in an "awakening" era, similar to the U.S. in the 1960s after WWII. Like the unrest led by young voices such as Martin Luther King Jr., Iran’s current protests reflect generational shifts, not a readiness for regime collapse or war. Real change comes later, once the post-war generation passes. You can see a brief context of that era here.

Top