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Keyword: williamslind

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  • The Protocols of Pat Buchanan ...And the LewRockwell, Hate-America Right.

    07/21/2006 5:53:01 AM PDT · by SJackson · 124 replies · 2,706+ views
    FrontPage Magazine ^ | July 21, 2006 | FrontPage Magazine
    Since the outbreak of the Hezbollah-Israeli conflict, Pat Buchanan and other paleoconservatives have made themselves true exponents of populism: the Jew-baiting, conspiracy-driven demagoguery of 1890s agrarians. In two columns, posted at WorldNetDaily this week, Buchanan accused President Bush of being a puppet of nefarious Jewish warmongers. Outlets of the Hate America Right – especially Paul Craig Roberts and LewRockwell.com – have joined him, and then some. Nothing sets Buchanan’s imagination racing like a Bush-backed Israeli war. On Tuesday, Pat asked, “Who is whispering in his ear?” His answer: bloodthirsty Hebrews. That Tel Aviv is maneuvering us to fight its wars...
  • The Next Conservatism

    02/23/2007 4:54:50 PM PST · by paltz · 36 replies · 497+ views
    amconmag.com ^ | February 12, 2007 | by Paul M. Weyrich and William S. Lind
    The Next ConservatismBy rejecting ideology and embracing “retroculture,” the Right can recover itself and perhaps reverse America’s decline. by Paul M. Weyrich and William S. Lind The only surprise about the Republican debacle in the 2006 congressional elections was that many conservatives found it surprising. For at least a decade, the conservative movement has been on intellectual cruise control. The well of conservative ideas that so richly watered conservative political successes from the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980 through the Contract with America and the Republican capture of the House of Representatives in 1994 ran dry before the Clinton...
  • The Next Conservatism And Homeland Security

    06/20/2006 9:06:24 AM PDT · by Reagan Man · 21 replies · 496+ views
    GOPUSA.com ^ | June 20 2006 | William Lind
    One field in which the next conservatism will probably depart abruptly from current policy is homeland security. The departure will begin with foreign policy and national strategy. As previous columns have suggested, the next conservatism's foreign policy will seek to preserve a republic here at home, not build an American empire overseas. Logically, that will lead to a defensive rather than an offensive national strategy. In both cases, the next conservatism will not be innovating but returning to the policies our country followed through most of its history. It is no accident that when we eschewed empire and followed a...
  • Next Conservatism: What is Cultural Marxism

    10/24/2005 7:59:14 PM PDT · by smoothsailing · 134 replies · 3,044+ views
    GOP USA ^ | 10-25-05 | William S. Lind - Commentary
    Next Conservatism: What Is Cultural Marxism By William S. Lind October 25, 2005 In his columns on the next conservatism, Paul Weyrich has several times referred to "cultural Marxism." He asked me, as Free Congress Foundation's resident historian, to write this column explaining what cultural Marxism is and where it came from. In order to understand what something is, you have to know its history. Cultural Marxism is a branch of western Marxism, different from the Marxism-Leninism of the old Soviet Union. It is commonly known as "multiculturalism" or, less formally, Political Correctness. From its beginning, the promoters of cultural...
  • In Defense of His Majesty

    09/10/2005 10:30:16 AM PDT · by Unreconstructed Selmerite · 18 replies · 836+ views
    military.com ^ | September 7, 2005 | William S. Lind
    As regular readers in this column know, my reporting senior and lawful sovereign is His Imperial Majesty Kaiser Wilhelm II. When I finally report in to that great Oberste Heeresleitung in the sky, I expect to do so as the Kaiser’s last soldier. Why? Well, beyond Bestimmung, the unhappy fact is that Western civilization’s last chance of survival was probably a victory by the Central Powers in World War I. Their defeat let all the poisons of the French Revolution loose unchecked, which is the main reason that we now live in a moral and cultural cesspool.
  • For Future Conflicts, Bring back Militia

    08/09/2005 11:16:02 AM PDT · by kas2591 · 7 replies · 581+ views
    Soldiers for the Truth ^ | 08/03/2005 | William S. Lind
    For Future Conflicts, Bring back Militia By William S. Lind I spent last week in Pittsfield, Maine, at a symposium on modern war called by Col. Mike Wyly USMC (Ret.) Wyly was one of the heroes of the maneuver warfare movement in the Marine Corps in the 1970s and 80s, and when he suggests it's time for a new effort, people listen. My hope was that we might make some progress on Fourth Generation war theory, and while I am not sure we accomplished that, we did gain some ground on one important question: what might a state armed service...
  • The Marx-Mohammed Pact

    07/22/2005 8:28:12 AM PDT · by robowombat · 15 replies · 546+ views
    Military.com ^ | July 21, 2005 | William S Lind
    In 1939, the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact cleared the way for Hitler to start World War II. The Pact caught the world by surprise, because it was an alliance between two bitter enemies, Nazi Germany and Communist Russia. Similarly, what made possible the recent bombings in London, and the many more that will follow in Europe and the U.S., is the Marx-Mohammed Pact. Once again, two sworn enemies, Marxism -- specifically the cultural Marxism commonly known as Political Correctness -- and Islam, have made a Devil's bargain whereby each assists the other against a common enemy, the remnants of the Christian West....
  • The Sun Also Rises

    06/27/2005 6:13:14 AM PDT · by robowombat · 16 replies · 491+ views
    Military.com ^ | June 24, 2005 | William S. Lind:
    For the first time since 1942, Japan has resumed the strategic offensive. Since the beginning of the year, Japan has claimed the island of Takeshima, now occupied by South Korea; seized control of an area in the South China Sea also claimed by Beijing; and, most ominously, announced that Tokyo might intervene militarily to defend Taiwan. Taiwan was Japanese from 1895 to 1945, a fact that neither the Chinese nor the Taiwanese have forgotten; if they had to chose, many Taiwanese would rather be governed from Tokyo than from Beijing. I do not know what has motivated the Japanese government...
  • Striking Back at the Empire

    06/10/2005 5:21:00 AM PDT · by robowombat · 2 replies · 305+ views
    June 9, 2005 The recent votes in France and the Netherlands against the proposed constitution of the European Union are not merely political phenomena. They represent significant actions in the development of Fourth Generation war. Why? Because the root cause of Fourth Generation war is a crisis of legitimacy of the state, and the two referenda saw the French and Dutch people rebel against their elites' efforts to empty the state of its content. Understanding what happened in these two votes requires a counterintuitive mindset. Normally, we would think of elites as representing the state and the common people rebelling...
  • Striking Back at the Empire

    06/09/2005 4:40:27 PM PDT · by A. Pole · 415+ views
    Defense and the National Interest ^ | June 8 2005 | William S. Lind
    The recent votes in France and the Netherlands against the proposed constitution of the European Union are not merely political phenomena. They represent significant actions in the development of Fourth Generation war. Why? Because the root cause of Fourth Generation war is a crisis of legitimacy of the state, and the two referenda saw the French and Dutch people rebel against their elites’ efforts to empty the state of its content. Understanding what happened in these two votes requires a counterintuitive mindset. Normally, we would think of elites as representing the state and the common people rebelling against the state....
  • War on The Homefront - IMMIGRATION!

    12/02/2004 8:58:17 PM PST · by CHARLITE · 13 replies · 448+ views
    WASHINGTON DISPATCH.COM ^ | DECEMBER 1, 2004 | WILLIAM S. LIND
    Focused as we are on Fourth Generation (non-state) war in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is easy to forget that the phenomenon is vastly larger than any single war or opponent, even Islam. An article in a local Washington paper, The Journal, reminds us that 4GW is also being fought on American soil, by parties that have nothing to do with the armies of the Prophet.
  • The Battle That Wasn't

    04/08/2004 5:33:24 AM PDT · by Chapita · 7 replies · 147+ views
    Free Congress Research and Education ^ | April 9, 2004 | William S. Lind
    A few weeks ago, the world's attention suddenly turned to a dramatic battle in Pakistan. The Pakistani Army, we were told, had trapped a large force of al Qaeda, including a "high-value target," possibly Ayman Zawahiri. The Pakis brought in artillery and air power. The fate of the al Qaeda fighters was sealed. Then the whole thing evaporated into thin air. First, Zawahiri wasn't there. Then no other "high-value target" was there either. The Pakistani Army invited local tribal elders to mediate, declaring a cease-fire while they did so - not the sort of thing you do when you are...
  • The Battle That Wasn't

    03/29/2004 12:10:21 PM PST · by Chapita · 16 replies · 139+ views
    Free Congress Foundation ^ | March 29th, 2004 | William S. Lind
    About two weeks ago, the world's attention suddenly turned to a dramatic battle in Pakistan. The Pakistani Army, we were told, had trapped a large force of al Qaeda, including a "high-value target," possibly Ayman Zawahiri. The Pakis brought in artillery and air power. The fate of the al Qaeda fighters was sealed. Then the whole thing evaporated into thin air. First, Zawahiri wasn't there. Then no other "high-value target" was there either. The Pakistani Army invited local tribal elders to mediate, declaring a cease-fire while they did so - not the sort of thing you do when you are...
  • Iraq: The Beginning of Phase Three

    03/22/2004 2:12:57 PM PST · by Chapita · 5 replies · 144+ views
    Free Congress Foundation ^ | March 22nd, 2004 | William S. Lind
    An article in the Friday, March 29 Washington Post pointed to the long-expected opening of Phase III of America's war with Iraq. Phase I was the jousting contest, the formal "war" between America's and Iraq's armies that ended with the fall of Baghdad. Phase II was the War of National Liberation waged by the Baath Party and fought guerilla-style. Phase III, which is likely to prove the decisive phase, is true Fourth Generation war, war waged by a wide variety of non-state Iraqi and other Islamic forces for objectives and motives that reach far beyond politics. The Post article, "Iraq...
  • Reality 1, Neo-cons 0

    03/02/2004 1:37:42 PM PST · by Chapita · 128 replies · 266+ views
    Free Congress Foundation ^ | March 2, 2004 | William S. Lind
    The Marines have landed, and the situation is not well in hand, nor will it ever be. I am speaking, of course, of Haiti, that boil on the Western Hemisphere's posterior which no plaster can ever cure. In the 18th century, Haiti was so rich, thanks to the sugar trade, that it alone provided two-thirds of the value of France's overseas commerce. Today, Haiti is so poor that the average American dog probably lives better than the average Haitian. But I forget: just ten years ago, we solved all of Haiti's problems. Applying the neo-cons' prescription for the whole world,...
  • On War #56: The Discreet Charm Of The (Washington) Bourgeoisie

    02/27/2004 9:09:31 AM PST · by Chapita · 4 replies · 129+ views
    Free Congress Foundation ^ | 27 Feb 04 | William S. Lind
    Earlier this week, I enjoyed the somewhat odd experience of speaking to the Washington chapter of the Council on Foreign Relations. I say "odd" because my own views on foreign affairs are anti-Establishment, while the CFR is the holy of holies of the Establishment elite. To aspiring young Establishmentarians, membership in the CFR is a Holy Grail, the equivalent of joining the Praetorians in Imperial Rome or, among the Masons, achieving the rank of High Wingwang or perhaps even Exalted Grand Wazoo. I was there as part of a panel on Fourth Generation war. The Establishment would prefer not to...
  • Understanding Fourth Generation Warfare

    01/06/2004 4:46:55 AM PST · by Trickyguy · 14 replies · 254+ views
    Lewrockwell.com ^ | 1-6-04 | William S. Lind
    Rather than commenting on the specifics of the war with Iraq, I thought it might be a good time to lay out a framework for understanding that and other conflicts. The framework is the Four Generations of Modern War. I developed the framework of the first three generations ("generation" is shorthand for dialectically qualitative shift) in the 1980s, when I was laboring to introduce maneuver warfare to the Marine Corps. Marines kept asking, "What will the Fourth Generation be like?", and I began to think about that. The result was the article I co-authored for the Marine Corps Gazette in...
  • William S. Lind: Indicators

    11/11/2003 8:38:27 AM PST · by Boxsford · 18 replies · 152+ views
    Military.com ^ | 11/03 | William S. Lind
    William S. Lind: Indicators -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This week's tragic shooting down of an Army Chinook helicopter near Fallujah, with the loss of 16 soldiers, may or may not point to a significant new development in the Iraq war. Helicopters proved highly vulnerable in Vietnam and in the Soviet war in Afghanistan as well, and there is no shortage of SA-7 missiles in Iraq, as U.S. forces there have long known. Moreover, there is a fairly simple technique helicopters can use to minimize their vulnerability to the SA-7 and similar shoulder-fired missiles: fly high. In Afghanistan, Soviet infantry referred to their helicopter...
  • On War #41: Indicators

    11/04/2003 9:51:15 AM PST · by Chapita · 3 replies · 112+ views
    Free Congress Foundation ^ | November 4, 2003 | William S. Lind
    This week's tragic shooting down of an Army Chinook helicopter near Fallujah, with the loss of 16 soldiers, may or may not point to a significant new development in the Iraq war. Helicopters proved highly vulnerable in Vietnam and in the Soviet war in Afghanistan as well, and there is no shortage of SA-7 missiles in Iraq, as U.S. forces there have long known. Moreover, there is a fairly simple technique helicopters can use to minimize their vulnerability to the SA-7 and similar shoulder-fired missiles: fly high. In Afghanistan, Soviet infantry referred to their helicopter pilots as "the Cosmonauts" because...
  • On War #40: Curiouser And Curiouser

    10/30/2003 1:28:28 PM PST · by Chapita · 15 replies · 125+ views
    Free Congress Foundation ^ | October 30, 2003 | William S. Lind
    If there is one thing that all Washington should be able to agree on, it is that the United States does not want to fight another war in Korea. The bloodbath would be horrific, the financial cost would be ruinous, and the effects of such a war on the stability of northeast Asia would be unpredictable. Plus, we might not win. Yet when President Bush was asked during his recent Asian trip about North Korea's request for a non-aggression pact with the United States, he replied, "We will not have a treaty, if that's what you're asking. That's off the...