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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 26, 2024

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As of now total Unfunded liabilities stand at 213 trillion dollars, $633,000 per US Citizen (Man woman, and newborn babe)

Therefore, let's wave through as many million new 'citizens' as possible to drive that number down. If it doesn't work, just keep at it. Quantity has a quality all to itself.

Things are just shittier in the future. Brazil is still a country. This is your future.

I wish. I have a buddy who is leaving the US to go back home to Brazil. Brazil is hardened and adapted to life with huge deadweight from giant indigenous/oppressed populations. Our thing is something brand new. This is the first time in recorded history a population was in/voluntarily invaded. If anyone can think of another time - please let me know.

Related but equally important: any examples of a people killing themselves to free their own slaves? Yes sometimes the slaves would fight, but are there any other examples of people "rising up" against themselves for their slaves?

What do you mean by in/voluntary invaded? Forgive me if I'm missing something but I assume that refers to immigration? But it seems to me that either way you address it it's not a voluntary invasion. If you want someone to come, it's not an invasion, since there is presumably a notion of mutual benefit. And even on the other hand, there are lots(majorities?) of people in areas that care about too-high legal and illegal immigration, they are doing something about it physically, legally, etc. So in that sense it's not a voluntary invasion either, they're doing lots to resist it. I suppose you could synthesize the ideas to the political reality that /some/ people want it, and /some/ people don't but at that point could say every time a country's ruling or military class did something in history that the majority of the middle and lower classes opposed. In that sense you could probably point to the population and cultural changes(opposed by Anglos and Saxons but not Normans?) after William the Conqueror became king of England.

I agree with the thrust of your argument.

This is the first time in recorded history a population was in/voluntarily invaded. If anyone can think of another time - please let me know.

The Roman and Byzantine empires often invited Barbarian tribes into their lands. This was almost never a positive thing in the long run, but it often did serve to meet short term goals such as higher tax revenue, military recruitment, or protection from scarier tribes further afield.

The Social War, in Republican Rome, involved tripling the number of Roman citizens.

As for your second question, the American Civil War is an obvious choice.

My bad, I should've clarified I was looking for any other example than the American Civil War