Fugitive Wanted For London Acid Attack That Injured 12 Is Afghan Asylum-Seeker & Convicted Sex Offender

Fugitive Wanted For London Acid Attack That Injured 12 Is Afghan Asylum-Seeker & Convicted Sex Offender

Authored by Thomas Brooke via ReMix News,

The prime suspect being sought by police in connection with a horrific acid attack in London on Wednesday evening is an Afghan national who came to Britain as an asylum seeker, it has emerged.

The Metropolitan Police named 35-year-old Abdul Ezedi as the man wanted for the attack which left multiple victims, including two young children, needing hospital treatment after coming into contact with a corrosive substance.

Further details came to light regarding the incident on Thursday after CCTV was published showing Ezedi fleeing from the scene with significant facial injuries.

It is understood that the suspect accosted a 31-year-old mother who was with her two young daughters, aged 3 and 8. He is believed to have traveled down from Newcastle to London on the day of the attack and was known to the mother, suggesting it was a targeted incident.

The mother and her two children were all exposed to what police believe to be a corrosive alkaline substance. The mother and the three-year-old – who was also thrown to the ground during the attack – are understood to have life-changing injuries but are in a stable condition in the hospital.

Upon trying to flee from the scene, Ezedi attempted to drive off in a nearby car but collided with a stationary vehicle. Four bystanders – three men and a woman – who attempted to intervene during the attack were also injured with three sustaining minor burns.

Five police officers responding to the attack also needed medical treatment bringing the total number of victims to 12 from the initially reported nine.

Medical supplies were retrieved from the scene where passers-by and emergency responders had attempted to treat the burns victims and London Mayor Sadiq Khan revealed a nearby hotel had allowed the victims entry to wash their eyes following the horrific attack.

CCTV in Caledonian Road, north London, showed Ezedi entering a Tesco supermarket where he purchased a bottle of water, presumably to treat his own burn injuries. A still of this footage was released by police to the public.

The image shows Ezedi with what appears to be significant injuries to the right side of his face. This makes him distinctive. If you see Ezedi, call 999 immediately. He should not be approached,” a Metropolitan Police statement read.

Ezedi was refused asylum in Britain twice but remained in the country

MailOnline reported on Thursday evening that Ezedi entered Britain illegally in the back of a lorry back in 2016 from Afghanistan.

His asylum application was rejected twice but he remained in the country and was successfully granted refugee status on the third attempt in 2020 after persuading a priest to vouch that he had converted to Christianity and would be persecuted should he return to his homeland.

The Sun reported that Ezedi’s asylum request was approved despite being convicted of a sexual offense back in 2018 and being handed a suspended sentence with an unpaid work order.

He is understood to have been residing in Newcastle. The owner of a used car garage in the northeast English city told media he recognized Ezedi from the CCTV image and claimed he lived in a halfway house for asylum seekers in the area.

“He tried to buy a car from us,” said 37-year-old mechanic Michael Binks.

“As soon as my boss saw his picture on the news he recognized him. It’s a couple of months since we last saw him,” he added.

Police remained optimistic about the chances of locating the suspect and the Met Police confirmed they were collaborating with Northumbria Police on the assumption the suspect may attempt to return to the northeast of England.

“We will catch him, I am wholeheartedly confident,” said Supt Gabriel Cameron.

Read more here…

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/02/2024 – 07:20

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Las Vegas Super Bowl Tickets Topped A Record $9,800 A Seat

Las Vegas Super Bowl Tickets Topped A Record $9,800 A Seat

Average ticket prices for this year’s Super Bowl matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers topped as much as $9,815 earlier this week, setting a record for the highest prices ever for the event. 

Reseller TickPick said average ticket prices on Monday averaged $9,815, eclipsing the previous record of $7,046 set in 2021 at Tampa and up more than 70% compared with last year’s prices, according to Bloomberg

Source: Bloomberg 

TickPick said demand is driven mainly by the game’s location: Las Vegas. 

Sin City is a “big factor for the record-high demand,” Brett Goldberg, co-CEO of TickPick, told CNN, adding the location is “turning a three-hour game into a week full of festivities for fans attending.” 

“As predicted, the first Super Bowl in Vegas is seeing strong numbers. Sales are nearly double this time last year and early demand has far surpassed the last time Kansas City and San Francisco met in Miami,” StubHub director of partnerships and business development Adam Budelli told Yahoo Sports. 

Budelli pointed out, “The 49ers fan base has rallied early, accounting for 26% of all tickets sold.”

And we wouldn’t be surprised if some of that 49er demand were ‘Swifties.’ 

According to reseller Gametime, last-minute ticket prices:

  • Currently, the lowest-priced/get-in seats are available for $8,603 each (including fees and taxes). That is down from $9,309 each yesterday and $9,985 each on Monday.
  • The top priced seats are available for $37,962 each, down from $38,362 on Monday

However, ticket prices have declined into the latter parts of the week. The cheapest tickets on StubHub were about $6,480 to start the week. By Thursday, that figure was around $5,906. 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/02/2024 – 06:55

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Iraqi Parliament Is Calling To Ditch US Dollar For Oil Trade

Iraqi Parliament Is Calling To Ditch US Dollar For Oil Trade

Via The Cradle

The Finance Committee in the Iraqi parliament made a statement on Wednesday calling for the sale of oil in currencies other than the US dollar, aiming to counter US sanctions on the Iraqi banking system

“The US Treasury still uses the pretext of money laundering to impose sanctions on Iraqi banks. This requires a national stance to put an end to these arbitrary decisions,” the statement said. “Imposing sanctions on Iraqi banks undermines and obstructs Central Bank efforts to stabilize the dollar exchange rate and reduce the selling gap between official and parallel rates,” it added.

The Finance Committee affirmed its “rejection of these practices, due to their repercussions on the livelihoods of citizens,” and reiterated its “call on the government and the Central Bank of Iraq to take quick measures against the dominance of the dollar, by diversifying cash reserves from foreign currencies.”

Washington imposed sanctions on Iraqi Al-Huda Bank this week, under claims of laundering money for Iran. Several other banks have been hit with similar sanctions over the past year.

The statement came the same day a senior US Treasury official said Washington expects Baghdad to help identify and disrupt the funds of Iran-backed resistance factions in Iraq.

“These are, as a whole, groups that are actively using and abusing Iraq and its financial systems and structure in order to perpetuate these acts and we have to address that directly. Frankly, I think it is clearly our expectation from Treasury perspective that there is more we can do together to share information and identify exactly how these militias groups are operating here in Iraq,” the official stated. 

Three US soldiers were killed in an Iraqi resistance attack near the Syrian–Jordanian border on January 28. Near daily Iraqi attacks on US bases in Iraq and Syria have now been halted after the killing of the US soldiers, following Iraqi government pressure on resistance groups, primarily the Kataib Hezbollah faction.

The government in Baghdad has faced pushback from Washington for its attempts to diplomatically facilitate a withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, and a transition of US presence in Iraq to an “advisory role.” 

The US exercises significant control over the Iraqi financial system. Due to US sanctions, Baghdad has struggled to pay hefty energy debts owed to Iran. Additionally, Iraqi oil revenues are transferred to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Baghdad requires US permission to access these funds.

The Iraqi government recently expressed hope in moving towards de-dollarization

Iraq is set to implement several new economic measures to further strengthen the national currency against the US dollar, a government source told the Iraqi News Agency (INA) on 14 November. Last May, the Iraqi government announced a ban on the US dollar for both personal and business transactions. 

“It is clear that Iraq is economically dominated by the US, and our government does not truly control or have access to its own money … We believe that it is crucial to move away from the hegemony of the dollar, especially as it has become a tool to impose sanctions on countries. It is time for Iraq to rely on its local currency,” Iraqi MP and member of the Finance Committee, Hussein Mouanes, told The Cradle in an exclusive interview last year. 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/02/2024 – 06:30

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Review: Godzilla Minus One Rejects the Idea of a ‘Noble Death’ in War


Godzilla | <em>Godzilla Minus One</em>/Toho

The beginning of Godzilla Minus One, the latest installment in the 70-year series of kaiju flicks made by the Japanese production company Toho, upends one part of the usual formula: Tokyo is already a smoldering wasteland.

That’s not because of a monstrous mutant reptile. It’s from the relentless firebombings carried out by the American military near the end of World War II.

Before evolving into an anti-hero in later movies who protected Japan from other monsters (and the occasional alien invasion), the original Godzilla was a fantastical metaphor for the destruction rained down on Japan’s citizens during the war: terrifying, inescapable, monstrous. Minus One plumbs those same depths, and writer/director Takashi Yamazaki brings to the screen the most dreadful version of Godzilla since the franchise began.

Caught up in the horror is fighter pilot Koichi Shikishima, who returns to the bombed-out remains of Tokyo after refusing to kill himself in a kamikaze mission. Wracked by survivors’ guilt, he joins others who are rebuilding their lives brick by brick, seeking some sense of normalcy—until the inevitable arrival of Godzilla blows that away.

By its final act, Godzilla Minus One delivers something else unexpected from a monster movie: a compelling rumination about the value of a single life and the emptiness of the notion of a “noble death” in war.

The final showdown with Godzilla is led by an all-volunteer force of private citizens who have used their human capacity for reason to engineer a solution. Shikishima, once ordered by the state to throw away his life pointlessly, discovers that virtue lies not in being willing to die for an abstract cause but in choosing to live for your neighbors, friends, and community.

The post Review: <i>Godzilla Minus One</i> Rejects the Idea of a 'Noble Death' in War appeared first on Reason.com.

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Review: Netflix Delivers a Surprisingly Balanced Take on Vaping


minisbigvape | <em>Big Vape</em>/Netflix

Between 2015, when a sleek and innovative nicotine delivery device known as Juul hit the market, and 2019, when that product was falsely implicated in a rash of lung injuries, its manufacturer’s reputation and financial potential plummeted. The four-part Netflix documentary Big Vape, based on Time correspondent Jamie Ducharme’s 2021 book of the same name, is a surprisingly evenhanded and fair-minded account of how that happened.

As even their critics concede, Adam Bowen and James Monsees, the former smokers who founded Juul Labs, were sincerely determined to do well by doing good, offering a potentially lifesaving alternative to combustible cigarettes. Their harm-reducing zeal was widely shared within the company, which helps explain the internal dismay at tobacco giant Altria’s 2018 investment in Juul.

In addition to the sin of collaborating with the enemy, Juul was charged with luring underage consumers by selling a cool, convenient, discreet, and addictive product in “kid-friendly” flavors, thereby triggering a youth vaping “epidemic.” But as Big Vape makes clear, the same features that appealed to teenagers also appealed to adults, including the smokers who had the most to gain from products like Juul.

The docuseries does a commendable job of presenting contrasting perspectives on the controversy over those products. We hear from anti-vaping agitators, but we also hear from harm reduction advocates. The latter include David Abrams, a tobacco control expert at New York University, who wisely counsels against sacrificing the health interests of adults in the name of protecting children.

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Fighting the Meaning of Section Three

Five and a half months ago, in August 2023, our article on Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment, The Sweep and Force of Section Three, was accepted for publication by the University of Pennsylvania Law Review.

The article’s core thesis – that Section Three’s disqualification of insurrectionists from office is legally operative, self-executing, sweeping in scope, and likely disqualifies numerous participants in the efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election – obviously has enormous implications for our national political life today.  Among other important consequences, it means that former president Donald J. Trump, who is running for president again in 2024, is constitutionally disqualified from holding that or any other covered office, unless and until two-thirds of both houses of Congress vote to remove his disqualification.

Shortly after being accepted for publication, we posted the draft manuscript of the article on the Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN).  The article (and its thesis) immediately attracted wide interest:  For an academic article, The Sweep and Force of Section Three has provoked an unusual amount of interest and attention.  It has been widely discussed on air, in print, online, and in the academy. And it has been widely cited in the current litigation about the enforcement of Section Three. As readers surely know, the Colorado Supreme Court held that Mr. Trump is indeed disqualified by Section Three from future office as a matter of federal constitutional law; and that this renders him ineligible for inclusion on the state primary ballot for election to that office as a matter of Colorado state law.  The U.S. Supreme Court has granted certiorari to review that decision in what is sure to be one of its most important cases of the term.

For the most part, we have been content to let the analysis and arguments of The Sweep and Force of Section Three speak for themselves and have not participated in the subsequent public debate and litigation over its thesis.  The manuscript itself is quite detailed – it runs 126 pages in its pre-publication form – and frankly it anticipates many of the objections that have been raised against its legal conclusions.  Up until now, we have not elsewhere responded to these objections in print, at least not systematically.

But the occasion of the Colorado Supreme Court’s decision in Anderson v. Griswold, and the Supreme Court’s pending review of that decision in Trump v. Anderson, provides, we think, an appropriate occasion for us to address some of the arguments that have been made about Section Three.  As noted, we discuss some, even many, of these points in our original article.  The article is now in the final stages of editing with the excellent staff of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review.  In the editing process, we decided against burdening the article’s discussion with many responses to specific objections that have been made to its thesis, as those objections have arisen in public debate over the last four months, for two reasons: First, the version from last fall, as edited, largely stands on its own and has already been read by many in that form, which would makes it somewhat awkward (and perhaps irritating to some readers) to revise that text significantly to respond to assertions or critiques offered since September.  Second, and relatedly, responding on the fly in the main text to objections as they arose would have made the article something of a moving target, and perhaps further delayed publication.

We adhere to all the points we made in that manuscript and have changed little.  Nothing in the ensuing commentary, discussion, and litigation has caused us to revise our core propositions:

  • that, as a matter of the original public meaning of the text, the structure, and the history of the Constitution – our methodology for interpreting and applying the Constitution – Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment remains legally operative and in force;
  • that it directly enacts a specific and discernable set of constitutional rules of disqualification of prospective officeholders and requires no further action or legislation in order to have immediate and binding legal effect;
  • that the rules enacted by Section Three are binding on all officials of government whose duties are affected by those rules (including state and federal officials, legislatures, and state and federal courts);
  • that Section Three supersedes or qualifies (or satisfies) prior constitutional rules to the extent of any conflict between them;
  • that Section Three enacts a set of sweeping but readily ascertainable set of rules of constitutional disqualification from office, defined by the meaning of specific constitutional language that should be understood and applied in its original sense, in context;
  • that those rules apply to persons who have held or who now seek the office of President of the United States;
  • and that the operation of those rules renders Donald Trump constitutionally ineligible for the office of President or any other.

Because of the fast timetable for the Supreme Court’s consideration of Trump v. Anderson, we have chosen to address in a short series of blog post/essays a few points in response to the ongoing Section Three debate – points that we might otherwise have reserved for a later law review essay.  We will address certain discrete arguments that have been raised, elaborating where necessary on points we make in The Sweep and Force of Section Three, responding to certain discrete points of contention, clarifying points of possible confusion, and parrying objections we could not fully have anticipated but that we think badly flawed (or simply very odd – which might in part explain why we did not anticipate them).  We will also address a few general points that have arisen in connection with the U.S. Supreme Court’s consideration of the issues presented in the Trump v. Anderson case.  Finally, we will point out minor respects in which we have modified, or qualified, positions taken in our article, The Sweep and Force of Section Three, in the course of editing and consideration of further comments. We may collect and revise them into a more final form when they are complete.

Our goal is for each blog post/essay to address a single specific point or theme unburdened by extensive footnotes.   For example, we will soon discuss the objection that applying Section Three would be “undemocratic.”  Another may take on the argument, offered by some, that we should decline to enforce and apply Section Three because complying with the Constitution in this regard would be politically disruptive and perhaps dangerous.  Another may examine arguments that Section Three issues are “political questions” that courts should refuse to decide as a matter of constitutional law.  Another may look at the way “constitutional legislative history” has been used, and in some instances severely misused, in debating the meaning of Section Three.  Another may examine further the assertion (already addressed in our main article) that Section Three does not apply to Donald Trump because he was not, as President, “an officer of the United States” and because the Presidency, the office he seeks again, is not an “office under the United States.”  Another may examine the suggestion that even if Trump is constitutionally disqualified from being President of the United States, that does not mean he is constitutionally ineligible to be elected as President of the United States.  And so on.  (We make no promises at this point.)

This introductory essay reflects a broader theme to the anticipated series, reflected in the title of this post: “Fighting the Meaning of Section Three.” While we do not in any way doubt the good faith of our many critics, it seems to us that many of the objections and arguments raised against our thesis do not join issue with the legal arguments from text, history and structure. Some are political objections to complying with and carrying into effect the constitutional rules set forth in Section Three, even assuming our analysis is correct.  (Or, what is much the same thing, they use burdens of proof or presumptions to override what would otherwise be the correct understanding of Section Three, for essentially political reasons.)  Such arguments resist our claims about the meaning of Section Three, but they do not refute it.  Others have sought to develop escape hatches, or loopholes, or (in one common expression) “off ramps” to avoid the legal conclusions set forth in our article.  Still other objections wrestle forthrightly with the legal analysis of our article on conventional legal terms, but they are ultimately unavailing. Each of these classes of objections is “fighting” the meaning of Section Three in a different sense, but all of them are wrong.

As Gerard Magliocca recently observed, judges often use the phrase “the opinion won’t write,” to “describe the following situation: Their instinct is to decide a case in a particular way. But when they sit down to write the opinion, they find that they can’t logically reach that result. This forces them to reconsider their initial conclusion.” He further observes: “In a nutshell, this is what is happening with the Trump case. The instincts go one way and the law goes the other way. The more you look at the legal arguments, the less sure you are that Trump is eligible.” This, we think, is the same process we are witnessing with those who are fighting the meaning of Section Three. At some point, it is time to conclude that one is fighting for the wrong side.

Enough said for now. In the next essay, we begin with the question of whether applying Section Three’s disqualification to disqualify a presidential candidate is “undemocratic” in any constitutionally relevant sense.

The post Fighting the Meaning of Section Three appeared first on Reason.com.

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Migrants Who Beat NYPD Cops Released With No Bail, Given Free Tickets To California Under Fake Names

Migrants Who Beat NYPD Cops Released With No Bail, Given Free Tickets To California Under Fake Names

Four out of five illegal migrants who were caught on camera attacking two NYPD cops in Times Square were arrested, set free on no bail, and then given free bus tickets to California.

Following their release, a smirking Johan Boada, 22, could be seen giving a double middle finger to media covering the situation.

Jhoan Boada leaves Manhattan Criminal Court without bail on Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024 in Manhattan, New York. (Barry Williams for New York Daily News)

When asked if he should be deported, Gov. Kathy Hochul said: “I think that’s actually something that should be looked at,” adding “I mean, if someone commits a crime against a police officer in the state of New York and they’re not here legally, it’s definitely worth checking into.

“These are law enforcement officers who should never under any circumstances be subjected to physical assault,” Hochul added. “It’s wrong on all accounts and I’m looking to judges and prosecutors to do the right thing.”

Mayor Eric Adams suggested that lawmakers need to “reexamine” laws that prevent deportation.

“Those migrants who are here because they want to be part of the American dream, we say ‘Yes’ to that,” said Adams. “But those who are breaking our laws, we need to reexamine the laws that don’t allow us to deport them because they are doing violent acts. We cannot create an atmosphere where you’re going to bring violence in our city,” the NY Post reports.

Now, the NYPD is looking for the men…

…however the Post is now reporting that “Cops believe the group hopped on a bus bound for California on Wednesday after giving phony names to a church-affiliated nonprofit group that helps migrants get rides out of the city.” 

Interesting to see what it takes to motivate city officials to act…

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/02/2024 – 05:45

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Is This The World’s Most-Expensive And Most-Delayed Power-Project?

Is This The World’s Most-Expensive And Most-Delayed Power-Project?

Authored by Leonard Hyman and William Tilles via OilPrice.com,

Yes, they are still building the Hinckley Point C nuclear power station in the United Kingdom, and yes the latest estimated cost is more than the previously estimated cost and the completion date has receded another two years into the future. 

This nuclear project received its license for construction in 2012, with an estimated cost of £18 billion and completion date in 2025. The last estimate calls for 2029-2031 completion at a cost of £46 billion. To the extent that these estimates can be trusted, the plant would end up costing double the original estimate in real terms. In the same time period, solar and wind costs will decline by at least one half. We are not sure yet whether Hinckley Point will set an all-time record as the most expensive and most delayed power-related project in history, but it certainly will be a contender.

As is the case for so many climate- or security-related projects, the UK government offered significant subsidies to the builder. But in a different way.  Most governments, nowadays, offer start-up subsidies in order to bring production levels up to a point where economies of scale kick in, after which costs drop rapidly and consumers get real benefits.  The cost curves for wind, solar, and energy storage show how well this strategy works. Give the industry a kickstart and watch the action take place. Not so with nuclear, where costs seem to rise with encouragement rather than fall.

Opting for nuclear, then, seems more like an ideological rather than a technological or economic choice, especially for British Conservative politicians. “Nuclear has to be part of the package”, they seem to say. Even if the nuclear cost per kW installed is five-eight times higher than non-fossil alternatives. But, fortunately, the UK government is not directly on the hook for the added costs, the Chinese co-investor in the project has declared that it will not contribute more, and it looks as if French utility EDF will bear the increased costs if it does not get a new power contract. But if the UK decides to stick EDF with the bill, what will that decision do to discourage further nuclear construction? Given the perilous nature of that construction (namely the danger of cost inflation), who could take the risk of initiating new projects other than a government agency?

Hinkley Point might cause us to examine the premises underlying nuclear projects. Building a nuke has two purposes: to ensure national security and to reduce carbon emissions. As for reducing carbon emissions, those reductions could take place anywhere in the world and still benefit the planet. Some contractors (Russians or South Koreans?) in some countries apparently can build nuclear plants for less than contractors in Europe or the United States. So why not let them build nukes where it is economic to do so and pay the host countries for the carbon reductions? And maybe, if there still are savings, the paying countries that have natural gas supplies and wish to use that gas for national security reasons could contribute the savings to an international carbon reduction fund. In other words, the substantial nuclear savings made possible by differences in construction costs might create an opportunity for nuclear cost arbitrage. Just a thought.

Our point: Hinkley Point C could put the kibosh on new nuclear construction in the West, but it need not discourage nuclear building everywhere.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/02/2024 – 05:00

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British Zennials Panic Over Talk Of Potential Military Conscription For War With Russia

British Zennials Panic Over Talk Of Potential Military Conscription For War With Russia

Just as American Zennials took to social media a few months ago to express their outrage after rumors swirled about a possible military draft, younger Brits are also not happy after multiple government officials hinted that national conscription might be necessary in the near future to combat Russia.

Chief of the General Staff, General Sir Patrick Sanders, has suggested that British men and women could face a call-up to the army in the event of a war.  The head of the British Army said UK citizens should be “trained and equipped” to fight in a potential conflict between NATO and Vladimir Putin’s forces.  The problem that is apparently stumping British military brass and political leaders is their ever dwindling recruitment numbers.  They just can’t seem to fathom why no one wants to fight for them.

   

In an interview with Sky News, Britain’s former top NATO commander General Sir Richard Sherriff echoed Sanders’ position, suggested that involuntary conscription might be required to fill British military ranks.

“I think we need to get over many of the cultural hang-ups and assumptions, and frankly think the unthinkable…I think we need to go further and look carefully at conscription…”

The notion has been repeated by officials within the British government as well as former political leaders like Boris Johnson, who posted a rambling article to the Daily Mail promoting conscription as an opportunity for the young people of Britain.  Johnson salutes the idea of a “citizens army,” making it sound similar to an American-style militia where young people can learn weapons and tactics and defend the homeland. 

The reality, according to Sanders, is that this is not the case.  Rather, the likelihood of the drafted being shipped off to fight in countries like Ukraine would be high.  Younger Brits are not having it.

Some take a sarcastic approach to the issue (as in America, Gen Z in Britain often reverts to the claim that they are “too gay to fight”), but many present some serous insights into the zennial perception of government driven wars.  The most common refrain is “Why should we go and die in a trench in a foreign country for a bunch of rich elites?”  This is a valid argument.  

Public outcry prompted Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s spokesman, Max Blain, to make a statement denying that there are any plans for forced military service at this time.  But the fact that so many officials are willing to broach the issue so publicly suggests there may be a plan in motion.      

All the talk of conscription comes at the same time that the US will be stationing nuclear weapons within the UK after removing them 15 years ago.  It is also probably no coincidence that saber rattling in Europe is rising as American support for Ukraine is waning.  Hundreds of billions of dollars in arms and aid has been sent overseas to no avail, with Ukraine’s war prospects turning more bleak by the month and their long hyped “counter-offensive” resulting in abject failure.

The propaganda machine is exploiting the old Vietnam-era narrative of the “domino effect,” asserting that Putin intends to advance his forces on Europe after taking Ukraine.  There is absolutely no concrete evidence to support this prediction, but war hawks in both the US and the EU repeat it often.  

Dropping hints of a military draft may also be a way for officials to frighten the public into supporting even more funding and weapons for the Ukrainian government in the assumption that if the Ukrainians lose, westerners will be forced to fight in their place.      

The big question? Is the establishment really willing to escalate the proxy war in Ukraine into World War III by openly putting troops on the ground?  It sounds like they want to press the issue but don’t have a way to effectively expand the battlefield. Conscription might solve their conundrum. Ample public resistance could be the only thing standing between the planet and devastating global conflict.  As the old saying goes, “What if they gave a war and no one showed up?”  

Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/02/2024 – 04:15

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Brickbat: Royal Trouble


Close-up of the baht, Thailand's currency, with a picture of the country's king. | Sirayot Bunhlong | Dreamstime.com

An appeals court in Thailand has sentenced democracy activist Mongkol Thirakot to 50 years in prison for Facebook posts he made that were critical of the country’s monarchy. A trial court had sentenced him to 28 years, but the appellate court found him guilty on 11 more counts during his appeal and gave him a longer sentence.

The post Brickbat: Royal Trouble appeared first on Reason.com.

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