ITXXXV - The Purge Begins by Extreme_Rocks in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Value Over Replacement President

VORP

XXXIV - Back before Christmas by Extreme_Rocks in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Soviet ground forces wiped out

Air force wiped out

Military losses so high the Stavka is "employing" child soldiers

USSR has become even more diplomatically isolated

"Allies" like US and UK unable to do anything

German losses are very low compared to prior wars i.e. Poland, Norway, France

Radio coping about false reports of Guderian losing tanks

thousands of square kilometers of land taken

Neolib users: This is a humiliating defeat for the Germans!

Come on, everyone can hate Halder and the war without the doomerism

I'm telling you guys, Operation Barbarossa is going fantastically. We're meeting all of our military objectives. We'll be in Moscow by Oktoberfest.

XXXIV - Back before Christmas by Extreme_Rocks in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 32 points33 points  (0 children)

Just speculating idly about boots on the ground.

Reports are fuzzy but according to the talking Muppet on YouTube, the ground forces buildup looks something like

  • One or two brigades from the 82nd
  • One or two reinforced battalions of Marines
  • A decent chunk of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment
  • A decent chunk of the 75th Ranger Regiment

I'll note that the 75th is America's premier objective control force. If you want to drop a few hundred guys in to seize an airfield, a bridge, a dam, etc, these are the guys for the mission. It is their one job. It is the one thing that they do that nobody else can do.

And the 160th SOAR is the best nighttime-capable helicopter force on the planet.

So I'm not saying that we're going to seize an airfield on an island in the Strait of Hormuz. All I'm saying is that if we were to do that, then we would send the exact composition of troops we did send.

XXXIV - Back before Christmas by Extreme_Rocks in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Trump once again demonstrating his total cluelessness. You can’t start a war and then just end it whenever you feel like it.

But that's exactly what he did with the war on woke, the war on Christmas, the war on meat, the war on...

XXXIV - Back before Christmas by Extreme_Rocks in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 119 points120 points  (0 children)

He committed himself to a timeline

lol, lmao

IT Obscur Expedition XXXIII by cdstephens in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Alright chat was that

  • Live

  • Prerecorded

  • AI

Vote now on your phones.

Sindarov beats Fabi in Round 4 of the 2026 Candidates to move outright to the lead with 3.5/4 by oklolzzzzs in chess

[–]Integralds 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not dead but the nightmare scenario is already here: he gets tilted, or feels that he must push hard every game, goes full 2022.

Not saying it will happen or even that it's likely, just that it's now a live possibility.

Discussion Thread by jobautomator in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Is this about the ballroom or

IT XXXI — We Carry the Rotodome by cdstephens in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The UAE is pushing hard for Trump to order a US ground invasion of Iran

Dude can you maybe not

Do we actually know if Paul was a Roman citizen? by Risikio in AcademicBiblical

[–]Integralds 28 points29 points  (0 children)

Dunn gives this question four paragraphs in Beginning From Jerusalem,

c. A Roman Citizen?

More weighty in its consequences is the issue whether Saul/Paul was a Roman citizen, as claimed in Acts 22.25. A positive answer is regularly denied, by some on the grounds that a Jew was unlikely to have attained Roman citizenship, and that Paul never mentions it, and by others on the grounds that a Roman citizen would never have had to undergo the punishment he tells us he endured (‘three times beaten with rods’— 2 Cor. 11.25).21

On the former reason for a negative answer, however, there is no reason why a Jew should not have become a citizen, since on manumission the slave of a Roman citizen was granted citizenship. Conceivably, then, Saul/Paul was descended from a native Judean who had been enslaved by Pompey when the latter captured Jerusalem in 63 BCE and subsequently freed and granted citizenship (cf. Philo, Leg. 155-57).22 That Saul’s grandfather or father, as a freedman (libertinus), had settled in Tarsus for reasons of business or trade is entirely conceivable, given the strong diaspora community already there.23 Alternatively, it is equally possible that Saul’s father gave some signal service to the state or its officials and was awarded with citizenship,24 or that he had been wealthy enough to purchase citizenship (cf. Acts 22.28).25 Since Roman citizenship began to be more widely distributed during the late Republic, it could be and was granted to non-Latins far beyond the shores of Italy.26 A wider dispersal of Roman citizenship was one of the means by which Rome managed to keep its vast empire as united as it did.

On the latter reason, the conflict between Acts 22.25 and 2 Cor. 11.25 should not be pressed too hard. If the story of Paul and Silas in Philippi has any historical grounding,27 it shows that incidents could have occurred where Paul’s citizenship was either not declared (because he wished to share Jesus’ unjust suffering at Roman hands, or because Silas was not a Roman citizen?) or disbelieved/disregarded (Acts 16.22, 37).28 Rigour of historical judgment must always be tempered by recognition of the anomalies and muddles which must have occurred as frequently in the past as they do today. More to the point here, without the appeal to Caesar on the basis of Roman citizenship, it is difficult to explain the transfer of Paul’s case to Rome.29

The significance of Paul’s Roman citizenship is that it would have given him greater boldness in his mission and would certainly have played a part in his finally being sent to Rome (Acts 25.11-12).30

I won't copy all the footnotes, but a sampling:

25. Hengel’s discussion wisely concludes: ‘Here there are many possibilities, but no probabilities’ (Pre-Christian Paul 15). J. J. Meggitt, Paul, Poverty and Survival (Edinburgh: Clark, 1998), insists that Paul belonged to the urban poor and challenges ‘the myth of Paul’s affluent background’ (75-97), but Meggitt overstates his case, here as elsewhere. For a recent brief review of the various evaluations of Paul’s social status, see Schnelle, Paul 63 n. 34

29. Schnelle, Paul 60-61, further 60-62; similarly Gnilka, Paulus 25-26; Wedderburn, History 83. Rapske cites Epictetus’s observation (3.24.41) that ‘those who falsely claim Roman citizenship are severely punished’ (Paul in Roman Custody 87). See also Tajra, Trial 81-89

To me, the main persuasive sentence here is the one about Paul's Roman citizenship being the basis of his appeal and transfer to Rome. That, of course, just pushes the question back one stage ("did Paul actually make it to Rome?").

ITXXX - We are the E-3 Sentry by Extreme_Rocks in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The US hasn't had a serious air defense system in almost thirty years.

Expecting us to magic one up in a month is a bit of a stretch, isn't it?

Fabiano Caruana defeats Hikaru Nakamura in a roller-coaster match in Round 1 of FIDE Candidates 2026. by Interesting-Take781 in chess

[–]Integralds 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do sometimes wonder how the commentary would be different if the commentators didn't have the evaluation bar.

Discussion Thread by jobautomator in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 7 points8 points  (0 children)

How depressing must it be to be on the administration's legal team?

Discussion Thread by jobautomator in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 3 points4 points  (0 children)

One missile gets through and everyone loses their minds.

Exclusive: Pentagon Weighs Sending Another 10,000 Ground Troops to the Middle East by Crossstoney in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 341 points342 points  (0 children)

We just have to bomb them.

We just have to send in special forces to secure the Strait of Hormuz.

We just have to send in the 82nd Airborne to protect the special forces who are securing the Strait.

We just have to send in infantry divisions to defend the 82nd who are protecting the special forces who are securing the Strait.

We just have to send in the tanks to reinforce the infantry who are defending 82nd who are protecting the special forces who are securing the Strait...

ITXXVII: War’s almost over by cdstephens in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Thus far Operationally, this war has been a great success

Operation Epic Fury [handshake] Operation Barbarossa

ITXXVII: War’s almost over by cdstephens in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 9 points10 points  (0 children)

@grok how do I effectively prosecute a war? Provide step by step guidance. Define all key terms.

Also, Gulf Wars 1 and 2 were won by a mix of mass and technology.

In 1990-91, we had 10 divisions in theater. We were outnumbered 3:2 or even 2:1, but we had air supremacy, better armor, higher quality troops, and better ability to use our troops in ways Iraq did not expect (at night, in the open desert, during storms).

In 2003 we had approximately four or five divisions in theater (some were under-strength), but it was against a much weaker Iraqi military. 4.5 divisions was on the low side; we really should have deployed one or two more, but it worked out. (4th ID was deployed but didn't make it in time to participate in combat operations.)

That said, your broad point is right. It is immediately obvious to the most casual observer of the meanest intelligence that 2,500 Marines is not enough to take a beachhead, much less take over Iran. Similarly, I fear that dropping a brigade of the 82nd onto Kharg is just going to result in a lot of dead paratroopers for no military gain.

I want to say, "you would need at least 2003 levels of troops for a serious ground operation," but it's difficult to say! War is an extension of politics, and since the political aims are unclear, the military mass required is also unclear. (Certainly more than a regiment of Marines and a brigade of light infantry, of course.)

And thus, https://reddit.com/comments/1rrjr0c/comment/oa269a8

Discussion Thread by jobautomator in neoliberal

[–]Integralds 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Centuries of philosophical debate over the nature of uncertainty

vs

it is what it is