I generally eschew foreign policy and current events but I'm making an exception.
Japan's history with the U.S. in the late 1930s and early 1940s bears striking similarities to that between Russia and the U.S. today. Both Japan and Russia were involved in their own "near abroad." The U.S. expressed it's disapproval through economic sanctions. Japan, of course, decided to strike rather than cower.
I suppose Russian leadership must be making the same risk/reward calculations -- I suppose every adversary of the U.S. must be -- that's what national leadership should be doing.
You may not want war -- but war wants you. You will enjoy this.
Fritz Berggren, PhD
8 August 2020
The Fraud of Modern Democracy
Imposters
The Sermons After Pentecost
Dirty Names
On Jews
What Makes A Nation?
Line In the Sand
Hunting Season
White And Christian Nations
American Ragnorak
The Revolution Is Upon Us
The Apostasy
Words Stronger Than Steel
Civil War 2 and Resisting Antichrist
Totalitarian Societies
Satan, Who Deceives The Whole World
Just One Mind
By Their Rules
Preachers as the Unused Weapon In This War
The Beast, The Antichrist and 666
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Life After Ministry
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