

By John Helmer, Moscow
@bears_with
The Russians and Americans – think tankers, military bloggers, podcasters — now calling for President Vladimir Putin to decide on Oreshnik missile and tactical nuclear warhead strikes on NATO targets, outside the Ukraine, are hopeful that the NATO response would be deterrence, not escalation. But they don’t know.
They also do not know what the impact would be inside Russia, after nuclear war starts, on the management of the domestic economy for manpower mobilization, civil defence, militarization of the country’s resources, state takeover of the banking system and allocation of capital. They are hoping the oligarch base of the Russian economy, reinforced by the Central Bank, the state budget, and Putin’s personal promises, would be preserved intact.
In short, business as usual during nuclear war across Europe, with a discount, offset or write-off of as many casualties in a day or week as the Ukrainian and Russian armies have already suffered in four years of the Special Military Operation.
Hoping for this outcome isn’t predicting it, estimating the probability, or knowing with confidence. It’s hopium.
This is a psychological state which can be bought and paid for, like state propaganda, product advertising, or information warfare. It’s also an outcome of decision-making on which money can be wagered, like stockmarket pump and dumping, vitrification of corpses, and Viagra.
Scientifically speaking, hopium is a pathology. That’s to say, abnormal, irrational, negative for life expectancy. This is how scientists try to detect and measure it: “Hope is a complex cognitive-emotional-motivational state that attunes individuals to the possibility of desirable future outcomes (Ortony et al., 1990; Peterson and Seligman, 2004). The emotional components of hope reflect an anticipatory state often experienced as positively valenced (i.e., a pleasant state). Hope is also commonly conceptualized in terms of its cognitive and motivational components that tend to accompany the emotional experiences of hope (Malle, 2004; Peterson and Seligman, 2004; Geiger et al., 2019a). Some scholars have defined and measured hope in terms of a cognitive-motivational axis rather than an emotional experience (Snyder, 2002), while others argue that the motivational components central to Snyder’s definition of hope are not properly part of the experience of hope and better fit under the distinct concept of efficacy (Van Zomeren et al., 2019). Despite differences, all definitions share a common focus on hope as a future-oriented state that orients people toward imagining positive futures (Fernando et al., 2018; Kantenbacher et al., 2022).”
Apply that science and let’s discuss with Dimitri Lascaris what the warfighting options are right now, and the antidote to the pleasant poison that’s hopium. Click to listen or view: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mcF0umhHxU






















