What I've basically come to believe is that terrorism, specifically acts upon civilians, is going to be a growing part of world events. When I started this post, I used the most extreme example of overwhelming force and resolve I could recall, without consideration of whether it was morally correct.
Throughout history before mutually assured destruction, peace existed only when there was supremacy of force owned by the leading power of the time. When the superpower of the age began to lose its ability to inflict its will upon its enemies, usually through a loss of resolve among the factions existing within the superpower, they became vulnerable to "terrorist" attacks, then larger assaults, and culminating in eventual defeat through the growing strength and ability of the opposition.
World history from an empire perspective is pretty simple. It is analogous to the life cycle of the dominant buck. The dominant buck was once dominated in his youth. But as he grew stronger, he challenged his predecessor occasionally, then more often, learning each time more information about the weaknesses of the king he wished to overthrow. Eventually, he could smell the scent of his enevitable victory and waged the final battle, winner take all, and the new bull of the woods was coronated.
Such as it will be with the US. We, as a few have correctly stated, have a totally corrupt government with unbridaled control over our lives. We have enemies that smell the blood of a bloated, inbebted, and uneducated populous, ...................and are waiting for their opportunity.
Short of a true, fall on our knees, revival, we might be seeing the beginning of the end of our great Nation, and the Manifest Destiny that was ours.
The great news, though, is that Christ has already paid the price for our sin, and through His gift, God and sinners are forever reconciled.
See, it doesn't really matter what happens here, IMHO, we are aliens upon this Earth, sent for a single purpose, and will soon be in paradise.
Blessings of Christmas to all, and I hope that our discussion isn't a downer, though it is understandably sobering.