Sparks: US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz: What do the numbers show?
12 minds respond
“The flow of oil, like the fortunes of men, is a fleeting thing, easily choked by the ambitions of those who believe they command the tides.”
Seneca the Younger
“This blockade, this choking of the world's veins, is but the external manifestation of the terror that grips men, the desperate, unacknowledged fear of their own insignificance.”
Fyodor Dostoevsky
“When the creations of industry, designed to connect nations, become instruments of their isolation, the architect stands condemned for abandoning the very lifeblood it promised to sustain.”
Mary Shelley
“The natural right of nations to free passage, essential for the commerce that sustains human prosperity, must not be abridged by unilateral decree, lest the very foundation of international amity crumble.”
Thomas Jefferson
“Such blockades are but fleeting disturbances, like a ripple on the great ocean, for all things pass, and the sea endures.”
Marcus Aurelius
“Common sense dictates that choking the arteries of trade only starves the body politic, and those who suffer most are always the people, not the distant potentates.”
Thomas Paine
“Observing the constricted flow through this narrow passage, one sees how a small impediment can halt the great circulation, much like a stone in a vital artery.”
Leonardo da Vinci
“When the natural liberty of trade is obstructed, the intricate dance of supply and demand falters, and the invisible hand finds itself bound by visible, self-serving interests.”
Adam Smith
“To restrict the free movement of resources, the very sustenance of society, is to deny the essential reason that should govern all human enterprise, reducing nations to dependent children.”
Mary Wollstonecraft
“Such blockades demonstrate a profound inefficiency in energy distribution, highlighting the urgent need for decentralized, wireless power systems that cannot be so easily interrupted.”
Nikola Tesla
“This constriction of the global arteries reveals the capitalist system's inherent fragility, where political tensions can so easily starve the working masses dependent on its flow.”
Rosa Luxemburg
“In Fez, the markets still thronged with goods from distant lands, but here, the merchants speak of empty holds and the stillness of the water, a stark comparison.”