Jiang argues that Russia does not need a decisive battlefield victory because European governments are fragile, their populations do not support the war, and continued sacrifice will eventually produce rebellion against those regimes.
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Regime fragility
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Right. So I'm going to try to get into Putin's head, OK? So I'm Putin. And how do I see what's going on? Well,..."
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Key Notes
Jiang says European regimes are more fragile than they appear and lack the political mandate to impose a draft without cascading domestic crisis.
Timestamped Evidence
"Right. So I'm going to try to get into Putin's head, OK? So I'm Putin. And how do I see what's going on? Well,..."
"these regimes, these governments in Europe, Britain, Germany, France are extremely fragile and the people in Europe are don't want this war. They don't..."
"You know, you see these massive protests in France, in Britain. I mean, it's very hard for the governments there to control this sort..."
"of these regimes, you look at what's happening in Britain, you look at what's happening in Germany, in France. Right. I mean, like, if..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Canadian Prepper keeps pulling Jiang from immediate war forecasting into theology, bureaucracy, civil unrest, Canadian overmanagement, disaster culture, and Taiwan.
Danny from CapitalCosm asks the obvious question: where does the world go from here?
Related Topics
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