Anonymous ID: 7c7c2b Sept. 8, 2021, 7 p.m. No.14543811   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14543702

I think that information warfare can be more psychologically strenuous than kinetic warfare.

In a kinetic war, you know who the enemy is, you muster your courage, overcome your fear, shoot, problem over.

That leads me to think about previous wars, and the experiences of the soldiers. My grandfather fought in the trenches of Alsace-Lorraine in WWI, was gassed twice, and came back a solid, well-adjusted man. My father fought on Okinawa, killed a few Japs, cam back home and raised a family, had a good life.

I think that Vietnam, Afcrapistan, and Iraq were different because of the psyops both by the enemy, and the stupid ROE of the command. Who the enemy was, wasn't always clear, one was constantly in fear of the unknown, and there was no clear instance of winning anything. In WWII, you fought till you won the battle, then moved on; in Afcrapistan, there was no such thing as a real battle, just catching flak and fire occasionally, with no sense of winning. Just more of the same day after day.

That interminable stress is like that in information warfare - you don't physically face the enemy, it's often uncertain who he is, whether a person is friend or foe, and there's no clear sense of winning in the short term case by case. Someone may go to jail, or be suicided, but there's no sense of victory in that, nor can one say that "I did it, I killed him."

The fog of war can be mentally debilitating in information warfare, much like the fog in the paddys in Nam.

Anonymous ID: 7c7c2b Sept. 8, 2021, 7:41 p.m. No.14544027   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4033

>>14543954

Bret Roberts

Former jobs as detention officer, constable, mortgage banker? - that does not fit, then as a legislator.

Getting the hell out of Dodge (and he ain't saying where he's going) before the heatwave.

Anonymous ID: 7c7c2b Sept. 8, 2021, 7:51 p.m. No.14544097   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14544045

>https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2021/09/08/most-expensive-home-in-america-defaults-and-heads-for-sale.html

Apparently no one owned it. The developer who built it wasn't able to sell it, and so the receivership.