This is a clear eyed view of the our potential future.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/enemies-west-preparing-tactical-nuke-135511462.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9kcnVkZ2VyZXBvcnQuY29tLw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAMeY9lXUK8XxgM3swAhEdPBSG6WHv8VDpp3ZXNVBpl76T4Qi5SP7ny1snqmhJuk6id0nP_ujQBtvU0Yc22m4VqAdu157f_a0MvsrPkJAiZzItACSxcl5zojMU8i8XvMD16quZwnaLqJhrgXBoKsNitiSAeSvnUAqKAhhRGe95bv-
It’ll be interesting for certain but reminds me a bit of watching an auto collision in slo-mo.
People have forgotten how to play nice in their own back yards.
More hate-watching for our favorite troll:
Outstanding interview.
I loved the back and forth with Jon's points about the U.S. being total hypocrites about our stated goals and framed arguments for our actions, and David's simple response is "And so we've got to make a really hard and bad choice, which is, do we want to be the one trying to-- to fill that void with our technology and our principles, understanding that we violate them all the time? Or do we want to let an authoritarian regime go fill that space, which we know how that's going to look?"
A simple yet incredibly hard to refute response.
We are the most benevolent imperialist power. We f*ck up a lot of stuff around the world, but do you want them to fix things or us?
The other interesting point that is pretty obvious is that China will throw as much as it can into catching up to TSMC, whether it is by ingenuity or theft, and as soon as they are, Taiwan is theirs. Will the U.S. go to war over that? Dunno.
There's no going back to fix our mistakes, and competition is really heating up around the world. The next few decades are going to be very interesting.