Go Forth into the Fray, O Ye Willfully Ignorant Wretches!
Since Trump weaponized USAID I've been aware of a real tension baked into the veriest yea-lawd structure of U.S. Cold War strategy. The contradiction I'm feeling comes from trying to reconcile two different genealogies inside American foreign policy: 🔢 A Wilsonian–New Deal humanitarian tradition (aid, development, institution‑building)... 🔀 A Japanese‑imperial, empire‑management style adopted during the Cold War (client states, militarized peripheries, technocratic elites, anti‑communist containment). These two lineages coexisted inside the same state apparatus, often in the same decade, sometimes in the same foreign country. The “Imperial Japanese” style (which even overruled Hirohito) isn’t about ethnicity or culture — it’s about institutional technique. After 1945, the U.S. absorbed: 💁🏽 Japanese imperial administrative structures in Korea, Taiwan, and parts of Southeast Asia; Japanese-trained technocrats (especially in Taiwan and South Korea); Japanese-style development...