Keep US Out of War
A key problem with collective security is the fact that when gangs of states wade into a conflict, they inexorably widen it.
A key problem with collective security is the fact that when gangs of states wade into a conflict, they inexorably widen it.
The idea that an athlete—in this case, Eileen Gu—somehow "betrays" her country by playing sports for a foreign team is the worst kind of jingoism.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's heavy-handed crackdown on the protesting truckers and their supporters has exposed a larger agenda of illiberalism by Western governments.
The Ukrainian regime thinks it knows better than husbands and fathers when it comes to caring for their families. But no bureaucrat ought to be allowed to make such a decision.
The success of Japan after WWII was due entirely to low taxes, an appreciating currency, and a very high personal savings rate. That all changed when the bubble was born in the late 1980s.
Canada is now freezing the assets of people who dare to protest government power. When the government controls the money and the financial system, human rights mean very little.
Some of the government authoritarians in Ottawa and DC may think they have the upper hand at the moment. As usual, government authoritarians are very shortsighted.
Sticking to Cold War–era assumptions is a recipe for a suboptimal foreign policy, which could increase the probability of the US stumbling into a disastrous war of choice.
The United States is not now—and has never been—in any position to lecture other countries about the moral evils of aggressive foreign policy.
Russia and China may share an interest in countering US hegemony, but the two states also must deal with many sources of conflict, from trade blocs to border wars.