What Bullshit Have We Gotten Ourselves Into
The AI video isn’t the threat—the global perception it reflects is
One Vengeance for All
There’s a video moving around—AI-polished, emotionally loaded, strategically dishonest—pushing a single idea: one vengeance for all.
Not subtle. Not nuanced. Not meant to be.
It’s attributed to Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, and whether you treat it as official messaging or digital theater doesn’t matter. The structure is what matters. The message is simple: the United States is no longer just a country—it’s a target container.
And the uncomfortable part is this: the video only works because the world is already primed to believe it.
The Myth of “Everyone vs. the United States”
There is no unified block of countries forming a clean anti-U.S. alliance.
That narrative is convenient. It is also false.
What does exist is fragmentation:
Russia deepening strategic ties with China
North Korea aligning tactically with Russia
Countries like Vietnam balancing relationships with both the U.S. and China simultaneously
This is not a unified front. It is a multipolar world recalibrating in real time.
No single “enemy circle.” Just shifting leverage.
NATO Is Not Abandoning the United States
NATO still exists as a military alliance built around collective defense. The United States remains its central pillar.
What has changed is tone.
European members are:
Investing more in their own defense
Questioning automatic alignment
Hedging against U.S. political volatility
That is not abandonment. That is risk management.
When leadership signals unpredictability, allies don’t disappear—they diversify.
The Oil Narrative: Power, But Not Immunity
Donald Trump has repeatedly emphasized that the U.S. is a top oil producer.
That part is accurate.
The United States is one of the world’s largest producers of oil and natural gas.
But production does not equal control.
Oil markets are global
Prices are influenced by groups like OPEC
Supply chains remain interdependent
Energy dominance is leverage. It is not isolation.
Why the Video Lands Anyway
The AI video doesn’t need facts. It needs timing.
It drops into a moment where:
The U.S. is seen as internally divided
Foreign policy feels inconsistent
Global audiences are already skeptical
So when it says “one vengeance for all,” it doesn’t feel like fiction.
It feels like commentary.
Escaping the L’Orange Era (In Real Time)
Here’s where it stops being geopolitical and gets personal.
Travel used to feel like expansion. Now it feels like exposure.
Not because every country is hostile—but because perception travels faster than passports.
You are no longer just a visitor. You are a projection.
Of policy you didn’t write
Of leadership you didn’t choose (or did)
Of a country that is increasingly discussed before it is understood
And the video exploits that gap.
The Real Mechanism
The video shows something impossible.
The world recognizes something plausible.
That gap—between impossible visuals and plausible belief—is where influence lives now.
AI didn’t create that gap.
It just industrialized it.
Final Line
“One vengeance for all” is not a declaration of war.
It’s a reflection of perception.
And perception, right now, is doing more global damage than policy ever could.
©️Aūna

