Never said it was easy, the assertion was that one can never win against a nuclear power. There was no mention of borders, so the supposition was flawed. In terms of continuing a war forever that you can walk to, ask the German Empire after the Ludendorff offensive in 1918.
March 3, 2025 at 4:22 PM
Never said it was easy, the assertion was that one can never win against a nuclear power. There was no mention of borders, so the supposition was flawed. In terms of continuing a war forever that you can walk to, ask the German Empire after the Ludendorff offensive in 1918.
Vietnam and Afghanistan would like to have a word. The latter outlasted 2 nuclear powers. But don't let history get in the way by all means. "These people need to step back and see how truly insane they sound because there will never be a military victory over a nuclear power."
March 3, 2025 at 2:07 PM
Vietnam and Afghanistan would like to have a word. The latter outlasted 2 nuclear powers. But don't let history get in the way by all means. "These people need to step back and see how truly insane they sound because there will never be a military victory over a nuclear power."
What's surprising to me about Australia was the large Croatian population that moved there, including members of the fascist Ustazi. Later, the Croatian Revolutionary Brotherhood ran terrorist training camps, bombed embassies, and had people ready to fight as Yugoslavia split up in the ninties.
March 3, 2025 at 1:17 AM
What's surprising to me about Australia was the large Croatian population that moved there, including members of the fascist Ustazi. Later, the Croatian Revolutionary Brotherhood ran terrorist training camps, bombed embassies, and had people ready to fight as Yugoslavia split up in the ninties.
But the statistics were so bad they showed 6 towns in Maine with a combined 1 black inhabitant, but 19 insane blacks. John Quincy Adams tried to get these discrepancies entered into the record in Congress, but was once again rebuked.
March 3, 2025 at 12:17 AM
But the statistics were so bad they showed 6 towns in Maine with a combined 1 black inhabitant, but 19 insane blacks. John Quincy Adams tried to get these discrepancies entered into the record in Congress, but was once again rebuked.