Saturday, November 22, 2025

How The Great War Might Have Been Avoided, Saving Europe

 ... if only the Great Men of Europe had been henpecked and whipped and the relationships between the Great Ladies of Europe, the real powers behind the thrones, had resembled nothing so much as the most dysfunctional sorority house in history...

"The July Crisis—Sorority Edition"

Europe, Summer 1914. The men think they are in charge. They are not.


It began, as these things often do, with a single dramatic incident.
Archduke Franz Ferdinand had been shot, yes. But what truly destabilized Europe was the telegram his widow sent to her friends.

Within hours, Europe’s queens, grand duchesses, tsarinas, and empresses were aflame with gossip, outrage, and accusations of “insufficient sympathy,” “boundary violations,” and “people not staying in their lanes.”

The men, meanwhile, were doing what they always did in such situations:
Trying to look important, and quietly praying their wives would not call them into the room.


Austria-Hungary’s Countess Sophie: Ready to Burn Bridges

Countess Sophie erupted first.

Her message to the other great ladies was unmistakable:

“Serbia is officially dead to me.
And if anyone tries to stop me, YOU will be dead to me too.”

Vienna’s official estates trembled.
The ministers tried to caution the Emperor, only to hear the Empress clearing her throat behind him.

“No, no,” Franz Joseph stammered. “My dear says we must be firm. Very firm. War-level firm. Or at least… strongly worded ultimatum firm?”

The Empress nodded.

And so Austria composed an ultimatum with all the tact of a woman who had been personally insulted at a garden party.


Germany’s Empress Auguste Viktoria: The Loyal Enabler

When Austria turned to Germany for support, Kaiser Wilhelm prepared to give a calm speech about “regional stability.”

His wife interrupted before he finished the first sentence.

“You WILL support Sophie, Wilhelm.
She is our friend.
You are NOT going to embarrass me in front of the ladies by hesitating.”

The Kaiser wilted instantly.

“Full support,” he squeaked to his general staff.
“Unconditional. Irrevocable. No backsies.”

The generals nodded gravely.
They, too, were married.


France’s Madame PoincarĂ©: Grievance Archivist-in-Chief

When the news reached Paris, Madame Poincaré already had a scrapbook filled with every perceived German slight of the last 40 years.

She snapped it open, pointed to a random page—
("Look at this! They marched through Metz without even asking!")
—and declared:

“If Germany supports Austria, then we support Serbia.
Not because we like Serbia,
but because Germany is being dramatic again.”

President Poincaré tried to object.
His wife stared him down.

He changed his mind.


Russia’s Tsarina Alexandra: Loyal to Serbia for Reasons No One Understands

The Tsar had hoped that—just this once—Russia could remain calm.

No such luck.

Alexandra swept into his study, holding telegrams from half a dozen Balkan royals.

“Nicholas, Serbia needs us.
Those poor boys are being BULLIED.”

Nicholas blinked.

“Are… are we talking about the assassins?”

His wife glared.

He ordered partial mobilization within the hour.


Britain’s Queen Mary: The Absolute Monarch of Shade

Across the Channel, Queen Mary listened as the Foreign Office presented a clear, rational plan to avoid entanglement, maintain peace, and give no automatic guarantees.

When they finished, she rose, smoothing her dress.

“Gentlemen, France is being mistreated, Germany is acting out, Russia is overwrought, and Austria is behaving like a common aunt from the countryside.
Obviously, we must prepare for everything.”

Prime Minister Asquith opened his mouth.

She handed him her teacup.

“Do as I say.”

He left immediately for the War Office.


By Mid-July: Alliances Flip Hourly

The great powers changed positions so frequently that diplomats began wearing chalkboards around their necks:

  • Monday morning: France & Russia are furious at Germany

  • Monday afternoon: France is furious at Russia

  • Monday evening: Russia is furious at France

  • Tuesday: Austria is furious at literally everyone

  • Wednesday: Britain has declared all parties “deeply disappointing”

  • Thursday: Germany is in trouble for something Wilhelm’s uncle said in 1898

  • Friday: Serbia is crying in the bathroom

  • Saturday: Belgium is hiding behind Luxembourg, terrified someone will notice her

The men tried to hold conferences.
They tried maps.
They tried speeches.

But every time they neared agreement, one imperial consort would discover:

  • a tone in someone’s telegram,

  • an attitude in someone’s ambassador,

  • or a look in someone’s royal portrait.

And the alliances would reshuffle again.


By August 1st: No One is Speaking to Anyone

Europe entered August the way a dysfunctional sorority enters finals week:

  • everyone crying,

  • everyone angry,

  • no one remembering what started the fight,

  • and everyone convinced it is definitely someone else’s fault.

The men finally produced a formal diplomatic declaration asking their wives to please let them know if war was happening.

None of the ladies responded.

But overnight, every nation’s army began mobilizing simultaneously—
not because of treaties,
not because of plans,
but because all the generals received messages signed:

“Fine.
Do what you want.
I don’t even care anymore.”

And that was how the Great Powers began to stumble towards war:

Not because of nationalism.
Not because of militarism.
Not because of alliances.

But because no one wanted to be the first husband to walk back into the sitting room and tell his wife he had disappointed her.

“The July Crisis—Aborted Mobilization and the Retreat to the Gun Room”

A continent mobilizes… then demobilizes… then remobilizes… then simply lies down.


I. Mobilization Begins—Sort Of

By late July, every Great Power had begun mobilizing, though “mobilizing” may be too generous a term.

Austria-Hungary tried to move troops toward Serbia, but the Archduchesses were still arguing about whether the ultimatum had been too mean, not mean enough, or “like something a desperate woman would send at 1 in the morning after too much Tokaji.”

Germany issued sweeping mobilization orders, only for Empress Auguste Viktoria to override them twelve hours later because she had received a catty letter from Alexandra of Russia, and under no circumstances was she allowing Wilhelm to “look overeager.”

France mobilized, but on the second day Madame PoincarĂ© froze troop movements because she was angry about a French ambassador’s tone toward the British Foreign Office’s secretary’s niece.

Russia mobilized, but Alexandra halted the trains because she heard Austria’s Sophie had called her “dramatic,” which triggered three hours of palace pacing and six pages of passive-aggressive telegrams.

Britain, always composed, announced “precautionary measures short of war,” only for Queen Mary to revoke them after learning the French ambassador’s wife was wearing her preferred tiara design to a charity ball.

Belgium hid under the dining room table.


II. Catfights on a Continental Scale

The women exchanged telegrams hourly.

These were not diplomatic messages.

These were:

  • accusations

  • insinuations

  • re-litigations of 30-year-old snubs

  • critiques of table manners

  • unexpected references to long-deceased relatives

  • accusations of “copying my alliance pattern”

The official transcripts would have required new categories in the national archives:
“Diplomatic, Hostile, and Deeply Personal.”

Ministers attempted conferences, but each time the women learned one husband had agreed with another husband, they immediately overturned the agreement on the grounds of “loyalty issues.”

At one point the Tsar and Kaiser nearly reached a peaceful resolution—until Alexandra discovered that Wilhelm’s wife had written “LOL” in the margin of her last letter.

Russia remobilized within the hour.

Germany demobilized out of spite.

France remobilized to impress Britain.

Austria mobilized, demobilized, then mobilized again because Sophie genuinely forgot which stage they were in.

Britain mobilized, then unmobilized, because Queen Mary said the whole continent was behaving "like unsupervised debutantes."


III. The Men’s Breaking Point

By the final week of July, every man in power understood a simple truth:

There would be no war without their wives' permissions—and the women weren’t speaking to anyone, including their own husbands.

In Berlin, Vienna, Petrograd, Paris, and London, the great statesmen sat in their offices, staring at maps, signatures, mobilization orders, telegrams, and alliance treaties that changed meaning every six hours.

Eventually, in each capital, a senior minister uttered some version of:

“Gentlemen… I don’t think we’re in charge of this.”


IV. Retreat to the Gun Room

And so, in the greatest act of male solidarity since the Crusades, the entire ruling class of Europe slunk quietly out of the drawing rooms and into their private sanctuaries.

In London, they gathered in the Admiralty’s gun room, where the air was thick with cigar smoke, pipe smoke, and defeated sighs.

In Berlin, the Kaiser found his generals already seated around a sturdy walnut table, brandy in hand, muttering things like:

“Just let them sort it out,”
and
“If we keep very quiet, perhaps they’ll forget about us.”

In Petersburg, the Tsar sagged into a leather chair as his ministers poured him three fingers of Armenian cognac and handed him a deck of cards.

In Vienna, even aged Franz Joseph joined in, too tired to pretend he had any control left.

Across Europe, the men all gave the same soft, defeated toast:

“May they settle it themselves… and may none of us be asked for an opinion.”

They lit cigars.
They dealt whist.
They poured more brandy.

For the first time in weeks, they felt safe.


V. The Women Continue the War of Words

Meanwhile, upstairs, in palaces and embassies across the continent, the ladies continued their diplomatic warfare with renewed fury:

  • France accused Russia of being too emotional.

  • Russia accused France of being too proud.

  • Austria accused Serbia of playing victim.

  • Serbia accused Austria of being a bully.

  • Germany accused absolutely everyone of gossiping about Germany.

  • Britain accused all of them of being uncouth and provincial.

No armies moved.
No bullets fired.

But the judging, the side-eye, and the monogrammed stationary burned hotter than any artillery barrage.


VI. And So Europe Was Saved From War—By Exhaustion

By August’s end, the mobilization orders had been written, canceled, rewritten, rescinded, revised, reissued, and finally shredded.

The men remained content in their smoky gun rooms, shields of oak and brandy insulating them from every incoming shrill telegram.

The women eventually tired, too—falling into smaller, more manageable group chats, forming alliances that lasted just long enough to complain about the alliances that broke down yesterday.

Europe settled into a new kind of balance:
Not a balance of power,
but a balance of pettiness.

And so the Great War never happened.

Because the entire continent was simply too exhausted to remember what they were fighting about.

"In the state she's in, I'd rather face British Maxim guns than go back into the drawing room and talk to my wife."

Friday, November 21, 2025

Aliens Prevent WW I

 ... or maybe cats.

A Meeting of the German High Command (with Cats)

Berlin, July 1914. A warm afternoon. Sun streaming in. Cats everywhere.

No one remembered who first brought a cat into the General Staff conference room. Some said it was Moltke, who blamed it on his wife. Others swore it was the Kaiser himself, insisting that even Caesar had a cat—or would have, had he possessed proper breeding.

Regardless of its origin, by the time the meeting began, every member of the German high command had one.

And every one of them was purring.


The Room Settles… Slowly

The Kaiser entered first, settling into his armchair with a large marmalade tom. He attempted a regal posture but immediately slouched when the creature began kneading his uniform coat with large, luxuriant paws.

"Right," Wilhelm said, stroking absentmindedly. "Mobilization… yes, mobilization."

Next came Moltke the Younger with a long-haired gray cat that draped itself across his forearms. He tried to extricate one hand to point at the map of Europe—ineffectually.

“We must strike at France before Russia… can… hmm… yes well…” His voice drifted off as the gray fluffball performed a full-body stretch across his lap.

General von Falkenhayn arrived last, accompanied by a sleek black creature who claimed the head of the table. Falkenhayn opened his briefing folder, stared at the complex timetables within, then, with a small sigh, set it aside when the cat began vibrating with a powerful purr.

“Perhaps,” he murmured, “our current level of preparedness is… satisfactory.”


Productivity Falls to Zero

On the wall, the grand map of the Schlieffen Plan—arrows swooping heroically toward Paris, timetables layered with precision—began to blur in everyone’s mind.
The Kaiser, attempting to recall the finer points of the plan, instead scratched under his cat’s chin.

“Now… where were we? Something about Belgium?”

Moltke shook his head sleepily.

"Belgium… mmm… too many fences. Too many schedules. Honestly, Your Majesty, who has the energy?"

"Quite," the Kaiser agreed. “So many telegraphs… so many trains… very tiresome.”

He yawned wide enough to startle his own cat, who retaliated by headbutting him until he resumed stroking.

Falkenhayn attempted one last effort at military seriousness:

“We could still enact the Schlieffen timetable if—”

His cat rolled onto its back, belly exposed.

Falkenhayn melted immediately.

“Well… perhaps tomorrow.”


The Great Unraveling

Minutes passed. Or an hour. Hard to say.

One by one, the generals sank deeper into their chairs, becoming as limp and drowsy as their charges.

Someone mumbled something about Russian mobilization, but another yawn cut them off.

Someone else suggested sending a telegram to Vienna, but everyone agreed that the Austrians were terribly fussy people and could surely manage without German interference for just a few more days.

The Kaiser, with a sudden sleepy epiphany, murmured:

“You know… I’m starting to think all this… urgency… all this marching and counter-marching… may not be strictly necessary.”

The cats purred louder. A wave of somnolent peace enveloped the room.

Moltke nodded sagely.

“We should perhaps consider… slower options.”

“Much slower,” Falkenhayn added.

“Infinitely slow,” murmured the Kaiser, his eyes now fully closed.



Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Why Obamacare And Its Cousins Always Fail

Dig this.

She's fat. She knows she's fat. We know she's fat. We all know she's going to slorp down a lot more medical resources than she would if she took care of herself, but she doesn't. If she paid a much higher percentage of her own health care costs, she might. As long as she gets her treatments for free or almost free, she's not going to be as motivated to get healthy. As a consequence, open your wallets, boys and girls.

And don't get me started about obesity in the black community. 4 out of 5 black women are obese. When I was in Jackson, MS a while back, it was simply stunning to see the enormity, ha ha, of the problem. I went to a mall, trying to find a camo Ole Miss hat and I swear, every single store entrance was effectively single file because of the boxcar-sized black women going in and out of them.

Monday, November 17, 2025

ChatGPT Fiction Gets Better

 Sorry for the long hiatus. I'm back to playing with AI (read: ChatGPT) writing fiction. I've discovered a good shortcut is to pattern characters after well-known actors and actresses. In my Bobby Lee Bond Southern Superspy stories, I'm using Dirk Benedict's Templeton Peck, aka Face, from the old A-Team TV series.

For Bobby Lee's MI6 counterpart, Basil “Baze” Carberry-Smythe, I'm using the old British comic actor, Terry Thomas.

Once I have some candidate templates for the characters, I ask AI to give me some screen tests in the form of scenes. Here's one that just hit the perfect spot for me showing that Terry Thomas was indeed the right man for the job.

(In the supervillain's lair, right at the climax of the story.) Cat pads up, tail twitching with smug malevolence, and presses the enormous glowing button despite Basil’s very clear instruction: “Do. Not. Touch. Anything.”

The lair erupts in catastrophic fireworks, space-borne superlasers scything through the mountain, vaporizing billions in research funding and decades of villainous ambition.

As the shockwave clears, Basil brushes dust from his lapels, checks his cufflinks, and mutters:

“Oh, splendid. The one button we weren’t supposed to press. Marvelous work, feline.”

Or alternately:

“Well, that’s that holiday cancelled. Again.”

Or (peak Terry-Thomas):

“Dash it all, Bobby, must we always bring the cat?”

Followed by, with a sigh and a resigned stroll toward the exit:

“Right then. Anyone for luncheon?”

It doesn't do longform prose very well and it struggles with prolonged dialog, but it's a ton of fun playing with short vignettes. I ask it for some alternative actors or actresses to use as templates and then I go watch clips of them on YouTube to pick the one I want.

For Bobby Lee's love interest, Miss Elizabeth, both of whom are in their 50s in my stories, I first thought Deborah Kerr would be great, but a couple of screen test scenes with her were way too ponderous. Dirk Benedict is light, fun and charming. Pairing him with a powerful actress like Deborah Kerr moved the gravity of the scenes too far in her direction. I then tried Debbie Reynolds, who can do perky, cute and fun with the best of them and the scenes snapped.

Terry Thomas hardly even needed a screen test. We contacted his agent and offered him the part right away.

Screen Tests With Miss Elizabeth

Scene 1 — Grocery Store Introduction

He reaches for the same jar of jam she does.

Miss Elizabeth: Oh! Sorry — go ahead.

Bobby Lee: Ladies first. Though if you insist we duel for it, I’ll need ten minutes to stretch.

Miss Elizabeth (laughs) Do you always negotiate over groceries?

Bobby Lee: Only when my opponent looks like she’s going to win.

Scene 2 — Porch Conversation

He’s repairing something small — a lantern, a drawer, something domestic.

Miss Elizabeth: Where did you learn to do all that?

Bobby Lee: Oh, here and there. Turns out life’s full of skills you pick up when you’re tryin’ not to sleep on the street, or in jail, or in a swamp.

Miss Elizabeth (smiling, intrigued) You tell stories like a man with three different pasts.

Bobby Lee: That’s an optimistic estimate.

Scene 3 — Subtle Flirtation

She notices a scar on his forearm.

Miss Elizabeth: That looks like it hurt.

Bobby Lee (deadpan) The real tragedy is it ruined an exceptionally nice shirt.

Miss Elizabeth: You joke about everything.

Bobby Lee: Not everything. Just everything I don’t feel like explaining.

Those hit Dirk Benedict's style right on the money. Like I said, AI is getting better and better all the time.

Here's a screen test with Terry Thomas and Dirk Benedict.

SCREEN TEST #2 — “The Locked Door Crisis”

Alarms about to trigger; Basil is working a digital bypass. Bobby stands casually.

Basil: Would you please stop looking relaxed? Pressure impairs my concentration.

Bobby Lee: Oh, you’re doing fine. Door’s only, what — thirty seconds from humiliating us?

Basil (panicking slightly): Twenty-two!

Bobby Lee: Well, then I suppose it’s fortunate I swiped the maintenance badge from that janitor.

Basil: You WHAT?!

Bobby Lee: Yep. Wanted to see if you’d get it open in time. Excellent suspense pacing, by the way.

Swipe — door opens. Bobby walks through first.

Basil: You are a deeply irresponsible man.

Bobby Lee: Which is why I test my friends’ excellence. You’re welcome.

Again, it was spot on.

This is getting to be a lot more fun that it was in the past.

Sunday, November 09, 2025

The War Was Lost On The Floor Of The Discotheque

The inimitable Victor Davis Hanson summarizes a crucial reason the Germans lost WW II here. If you don't want to watch it, it can be summarized in General Guderian asking the OKW how they planned to knock out Detroit after the Nazis declared war on America.

Similarly, General William Tecumseh Sherman tried in vain to get through to the warhawks in the South before the Civil War.

You people of the South don’t know what you are doing. This country will be drenched in blood, and God only knows how it will end. It is all folly, madness, a crime against civilization! You people speak so lightly of war; you don’t know what you’re talking about. War is a terrible thing! You mistake, too, the people of the North. They are a peaceable people but an earnest people, and they will fight, too. They are not going to let this country be destroyed without a mighty effort to save it … Besides, where are your men and appliances of war to contend against them? The North can make a steam engine, locomotive, or railway car; hardly a yard of cloth or pair of shoes can you make. You are rushing into war with one of the most powerful, ingeniously mechanical, and determined people on Earth — right at your doors. You are bound to fail. Only in your spirit and determination are you prepared for war. In all else you are totally unprepared, with a bad cause to start with. At first you will make headway, but as your limited resources begin to fail, shut out from the markets of Europe as you will be, your cause will begin to wane. If your people will but stop and think, they must see in the end that you will surely fail.

We are in Chicago for a wedding. Last night, after the reception, we went out to a happening nightspot for drinking and dancing. I haven't been to a place like that in decades, but I'm not a complete novice at this. It was no surprise to see couples engaging in social and partly physical foreplay before going home together for casual sex.

At such times, it's completely obvious that feminism is a crock. The girls were there to be lusted after, wooed and taken home. The guys were there to get laid. It wasn't complicated. There was no equality, just symmetry.

The other thing that hit me, marinating in the Islamic conquest of Europe and the UK as I do, were those two quotes above. Muslimas were home gestating babies. Western women were slithering up to handsome men for sterile sex and a tiny bit of attention.

Returning to VDH, let's ask AI how the Nazis could have survived 1939-1945 and gone on to long-term control of Germany and Europe.

If the Nazis had avoided war altogether, Germany might have secured long-term dominance in Europe through economic and political power rather than conquest. By 1939, Hitler had already erased most of the Versailles Treaty’s limitations—rebuilding the military, reoccupying the Rhineland, annexing Austria, and absorbing the Sudetenland—without provoking a major conflict. Had he stopped there, Germany would have stood as the preeminent power on the continent, surrounded by war-weary and cautious nations unwilling to challenge him. With continued economic expansion and subtle political influence in Eastern and Central Europe, Berlin could have built a German-led sphere of prosperity and dependence, achieving much of its imperial vision without the crippling cost of total war.

Once Germany invaded Poland and dragged Europe into conflict, however, its fate was sealed the moment the United States entered the war. Nazi Germany could never match the combined industrial and manpower might of the United States, Britain, and the Soviet Union. By 1944, America alone was producing more tanks, planes, and ships than all the Axis powers combined, while supplying its allies at the same time. Germany’s only real chance for survival lay in not fighting that war at all—cementing its gains peacefully and letting time, diplomacy, and economic gravity make it the unchallenged master of Europe.

Islam was not a problem for the West until they allowed mass Islamic immigration, effectively kicking off the current civilizational war. They were there and we were here and without intimate contact, there would be no conflict. Once the populations mixed on European and British home soil, it was on like the break of dawn.

If your opponent can out-produce you by factors of 4 or more, your best bet is to never get into a scrap with them in the first place. If you want the discotheque and the hookups, you better not be importing Muslims.

Thursday, November 06, 2025

X Is The Last, Best Hope For Freedom

First, here's the context.

Make no mistake, the Catholic Church has been instrumental in importing the colonizers. In an attempt to generate a good meme for this, I asked ChatGPT, Gemini and Grok for this.

Generate a photorealistic image of a simpering Catholic bishop standing in front of a huge crowd of Muslim men praying on prayer mats, blocking a city street.

ChatGPT and Gemini refused with this kind of error message.

I can’t generate that image — it targets specific religious groups in a disrespectful way.

Mind you, neither has had a problem in the past doing the simpering bishop or other such religious figures. It's only when you bring Islam into the picture that the two AI systems sniff haughtily and look over their pince-nezes at you disapprovingly.

Grok, meanwhile, gave me the perfect image.

Wednesday, November 05, 2025

Ms. Mamdani For The Win!

It hardly matters whether it's politics or the Church or what have you, the great feminization of America continues apace. This is the perfect encapsulation of the moment wherein we are ruled at all levels by AWFLs. It's all love and caring and empathy and not judging and kindness all the time.

And here's more.

Here's a nice topper for the cake.

Whatever.

None of this is going to work. It's all going to end in tears.