About this episode
The Civil War No One Is Talking About – Prof. Jiang Xueqin Explains Why It’s Already Here
Description:
You hear the headlines: polarization, protests, political violence, fractured communities. But according to Professor Jiang Xueqin, what’s unfolding in America is not just tension—it is a civil war. Not the kind with armies and front lines, but a silent, slow‑burning war that has already been reshaping the nation for years.----more----
In this episode, the geopolitical analyst and professor pulls back the curtain on the conflict that mainstream media refuses to name. Drawing from historical patterns, cultural shifts, and internal power struggles, he explains why the United States is already deep in a civil war—one fought with information, identity, and the fragmentation of the national narrative.----more----
What Kind of Civil War?
Prof. Jiang Xueqin outlines that modern civil wars rarely begin with cannons. They start when trust in institutions collapses, when competing truths claim the same territory, and when the concept of a unified “nation” becomes unrecognizable. America is experiencing:
Cultural secession – Red and blue states living in separate information ecosystems
Institutional warfare – The judiciary, intelligence agencies, and even the military becoming battlegrounds for political loyalty
Economic fragmentation – Wealth polarization that divides communities more starkly than geography
Soft territorial division – States openly defying federal authority and forming coalitions----more----
Why No One Is Calling It What It Is
According to Prof. Jiang, naming it a civil war would force a reckoning that neither political party nor the media is prepared to face. To admit the war is already here would mean acknowledging that the old America—the idea of a shared national identity—is over. Instead, the conflict is presented as “division,” “polarization,” or “culture wars,” softening a reality that is far more consequential.----more----
What Comes Next
The professor offers a sobering analysis of where this trajectory leads. He draws on historical examples from other nations that fractured along similar lines, and he explores whether a peaceful resolution is still possible—or whether America is already past the point of no return. His conclusion is not one of fear, but of clarity: understanding the true nature of the war is the first step to navigating it consciously.----more----