I disregarded the question thinking it was rhetorical.
If it were my sister on that square, I would leave the country as best as I could. I would migrate, likely to a country where my liberal values would be appreciated. Or so, I imagine.
Unfortunately, I would of course find that nearly everywhere in this world has gone "conservative", and that my colored butt will be diminished whichever skin color or religion supremacist land I go.
2. Chinese oil resilience
I gave you the information. I neither confirmed nor denied your presumption. In fact, you may have not noticed or potentially ---you might have--- discarded the article I posted by The Guardian which points to the readiness in discussion, which has always been my prior claim.
Additionally, resilience/readiness is not exactly is immortality.
China has a billion stockpile of oil, giving them resilience of about months. By then, the transition to renewable energy will have been expedited----
China had long been supplying Southeast Asian nations with e-bikes and trikes. These evs might be small, but for Southeast Asians who know how to make the most of small vehicles, combined with the geographic nearness of their urban-rural landscape, they will actually find ways to innovate and adapt faster to a world needing less oil.
The Chinese also have Iranian and Russian links, which means neither Hormuz nor the Red Sea, be that Suez Canal or El Mandab, are their only links to Iranian oil. It might be moved in smaller quantities, but their geographic linkage through the BRI solidifies their access to Iranian oil regardless of maritime blockage. By then, noting the expedited transition to ev, they would need much less.
Of course, none of that matters when the Middle East as a source itself gets decimated by missiles.
Which is why I said it somewhere else on this forum: people are so afraid of the nukes without even recognizing the equally catastrophic but much slower and completely agonizing demise of global supply chain disruption.
Hunger and immobility will be some of the key concerns, especially for a very car and truck dependent nation like the U.S.
I have said it before and I will say it again. Nobody is benfitting from this war, except the Russians and the Chinese.
3. Regime change is an archaic and a unidimensional interpretation for the motivations behind war and invasion especially in asset-rich and/or geographically strategic countries.
You speak as if this is the first and only time that the Middle East has been propositioned with so called heroic regime change. You speak like Venezuela was not also been meddled with. News flash, the regimes the US "changed" has decimated populations:
Insert meme when I find it
If you strip away all zealous rationalizations using race, religion, ideology or whatever, what you will find is one country violently invading the sovereign rights of another.
In the US, many are so enamored with property rights so to borrow the tactic of a tiktoker: that is like assasinating the father of a householed a few blocks down because you think he is abusing them, telling the household members to run, only to find the elder brother stepping up into household management. Further, you find the household members praying for the dead father than clamoring to take down the elder brother. Which leads to questions ----was the father truly abusive or does this neighbor just want something in particular? Is the household itself sitting on, say, an oil reserve perhaps?
4. To address subsequent reponses:
I emphasize: this is not just military v military ----economic hostage, natural geographic defenses have to be factored in. There are other dimensions that have to be factored in before anybody can claim who is losing or winning. LOL. To believe that this is just about military strength, is, uh, "sorry to say... stupid". (
@QuickTwist, 2026)
To wholly and solely believe in the economic and military strength of the US is exactly the kind of hubris that started all this.
This will be a long duree war. You can watch how many American bodies fall flat on the ground over time. That is up to you.
As for Iranians, they have long framed this as existential. Many of them are willing to die on this.
Are we all ready to suffer?