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Thoughts On a Different Kind of War

Odin Halvorson
2 min readFeb 28, 2022

Some might say that war never changes, but that’s not quite true. The intrinsic elements: the horror, fear, and horrific loss of life remain the same, that much is true. But the nature of war is altered fundamentally by our ability to perceive the whole entity rather than an individuated part.

Photo by David Clode on Unsplash

It’s been a long time since one country invaded another on mainland Europe. There have been some fraught internal conflicts to be certain, but an all-out invasion of the kind forced by President Putin of Russia is a different matter. But therein lies the key: this is Putin’s war, and the war of a minority global oligarchy hell-bent on a type of class-separated domination the likes of which not even the grandest royalty of old could imagine.

As I’ve been watching events in Ukraine unfold during the last week, I’ve seen bravery from Ukrainians defending their homes, and I’ve seen bravery from Russians who, at home, are defying an authoritarian State by protesting on the streets. I saw a Russian soldier dead in the snow, already half-buried in a sheath of white, a burned-out tank in the background hulking like the bones of a demon from some Ghibli film.

In these poignant snapshots of this horrific conflict, I’m reminded of the famous picture taken by Huynh Cong “Nick” Ut during the Vietnam War. That image, others like it, and video coverage of…

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Odin Halvorson
Odin Halvorson

Written by Odin Halvorson

A futurist/socialist/fantasist writer, editor, and scholar. MFA/MLIS. Free access to my articles at OdinHalvorson.substack.com | More over at OdinHalvorson.com.

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