I just can't see how you win a kinetic war against the most heavily armed opponent in history though.
Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq seemed to manage it.
It would be incredibly, prohibitively expensive to go after everyone that does not participate in their system
They print currency out of thin air. Cost means nothing to them. Release a media report saying we’re all terrorists and their supporters will line up to kill us for free. They’re literally on the verge of doing this already.
especially if there is no direct interference with their plans
Their plan is literally to exterminate every white person from the face of the earth. Us being alive is direct interference.
As long as a parallel system has a complete enough economy to mostly survive without needing to depend on the mainstream, then it would mostly be safe.
Tell that to every nation that tried to exit the IMF system. Oh wait, you can’t; they invaded, killed the government, bombed the infrastructure to rubble and replaced them with puppets…
Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq are roughly the models I'm advocating. None of those initiated a full on direct kinetic war, they moved out of the cities and defended what was rightfully theirs, and largely outlasted and maintained their ways of life to varying degrees. Asymmetric warfare.
And it kind of proves my point, they didn't go through every mountain rooting out opposition, because that is not economically viable. They mostly went after figureheads and those that were directly causing problems.
Same with "nations that tried to exit the IMF"...I'm not talking about creating a nation state, I'm talking about creating a parallel society that exists alongside the mainstream system but does not directly compete. Live on the outskirts of the system, interacting at the edges and the black markets within, and wait for its eventual collapse (comparable to the US eventually leaving Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq).
I agree, though, they do seem intent on exterminating us, but as far as saving our nation states, I don't think there is any coming back from where we're at. In that sense they've already won. Move to the outskirts and wait for it to collapse.
If things were to swing back hard the other way, I'd be afraid it was a setup like Germany after Weimar. That may have seemed great for a decade, but how did it end?
Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq seemed to manage it.
They print currency out of thin air. Cost means nothing to them. Release a media report saying we’re all terrorists and their supporters will line up to kill us for free. They’re literally on the verge of doing this already.
Their plan is literally to exterminate every white person from the face of the earth. Us being alive is direct interference.
Tell that to every nation that tried to exit the IMF system. Oh wait, you can’t; they invaded, killed the government, bombed the infrastructure to rubble and replaced them with puppets…
Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq are roughly the models I'm advocating. None of those initiated a full on direct kinetic war, they moved out of the cities and defended what was rightfully theirs, and largely outlasted and maintained their ways of life to varying degrees. Asymmetric warfare.
And it kind of proves my point, they didn't go through every mountain rooting out opposition, because that is not economically viable. They mostly went after figureheads and those that were directly causing problems.
Same with "nations that tried to exit the IMF"...I'm not talking about creating a nation state, I'm talking about creating a parallel society that exists alongside the mainstream system but does not directly compete. Live on the outskirts of the system, interacting at the edges and the black markets within, and wait for its eventual collapse (comparable to the US eventually leaving Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq).
I agree, though, they do seem intent on exterminating us, but as far as saving our nation states, I don't think there is any coming back from where we're at. In that sense they've already won. Move to the outskirts and wait for it to collapse.
If things were to swing back hard the other way, I'd be afraid it was a setup like Germany after Weimar. That may have seemed great for a decade, but how did it end?