Ryan Thunder wrote:Only if you entertain the notion that all superpowers are equally legitimate no matter what they do.
That depends on what you mean by "legitimate," as Siege said.
If by "legitimate" you mean "I like what they do," then yes, it's absurd to say that all superpowers are equally "legitimate" in
anyone's eyes. But that's a stupid definition. If by "legitimate" you mean what everyone else means, then yes, all the superpowers that exist have "legitimate" governments (recognized by the international community, operating according to a set of well defined rules). A government does not have to be democratic to be legitimate, nor does it have to sign any particular UN treaty, nor does it have to do only things I approve of, even if I'd like all those things to be true about the country.
My point was; how can we trust them to not to fuck us over the instant it becomes both possible and convenient if they abuse their own citizens to the degree that they do?
Why are they under an obligation to be trustworthy in the eyes of foreigners? If they feel they can't trust
us, does that give them veto power over our actions too?
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Anyway. In general:
What I will say for the US (look, I
live here, OK?) is that at least
some of the incarnations of our country have been a relatively decent major power to have to live with. The Bush years have completely obscured this in the eyes of the global public, naturally, but I seem to recall us behaving fairly well during the '90s. Not perfectly, but not horribly.
Of course, quite a few other nations can say the same; I'm not maintaining otherwise. There may well be countries with a history as major powers that can say better, though I cannot think of an obvious example off the top of my head. I get the feeling, though, that many could
not say better; sometimes it seems to be in the nature of all large nations, in every time or place, that they will take a cavalier attitude to the rights of weaker ones. The US isn't really all that exceptional as far as that goes, I think.
AniThyng wrote:People tend to point out that when China did have the capacity for overseas expansion under the Mings, they did not actually indulge in the sort of Imperialism the British, Spanish and Portugese did...
Of course, they didn't really have
time to do so; by the time they got their network built up to the point where they could act imperialist the palace eunuchs had already effectively brought an end to the overseas expansion program for largely unrelated reasons.
Since China no longer has a policy of ignoring all foreigners as irrelevant barbarians, its behavior back in the days when it did so doesn't prove much to me.
Shroom Man 777 wrote:Okay, I'll level with you. I'm using bullshit American rhetoric and "logic" used to justify "American foreign interests", except in this case I'm having the Non-Americans use it on the Americans.
I don't really believe in any of the shit I've just spouted, but I posted what I posted so that guys like Ryan can get a "taste of their own medicine". For years and years America has talked and acted like this towards the rest of the world
without giving a fuck about how the rest of the world feels about it.
So, this is an interesting reversal. What would America feel like if the rest of the world
acted like America towards America?
It would set up a sort of resonance, a standing wave of bullshit that would cause the entire North American continent to slide into the sea like Atlantis before it. And before you say "Good riddance!" remember that Canada is on the same plate we are; you'd be sinking them with us.
What, you didn't know that's what happened to Atlantis?
Seriously, though...
They supported the tie-chewer that went into South Ossetia. They wanted to put him in friggin NATO! I'll defer to Stas for more on the matter.
While we definitely supported the guy, I do not remember whether we actually wanted him in NATO or not. I can think of good reasons
not to want him in, even if we support him, because it's always risky to incorporate a loose cannon into your mutual defense pact. Especially if he's on the shit list of a nuclear power.
It's like how placing an ABM in frickin' Poland will protect against nukes from Iran or North Korea. Which is diddlysquat, I know. Besides, replace ABM with any other strong action or military-geopolitical maneuver and the USA's Ryans will still be up in arms.
To be fair, Poland is more or less on a direct path between Iran and Europe, so it's a
reasonable place to put ABM batteries designed to intercept missiles fired from Iran. Sort of. Greece or Austria might have been smarter choices, for a number of reasons; I don't know and am not privy to the math. Maybe I just suck at spherical geometry.
Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Well, the Philippines runs to the US when they need a spine, with respect to the Spratlys. ASEAN can't be counted on to act collectively for the most part.
The Spratlys is a common issue for many many nations in the region, except Singapore, and maybe Indonesia, which probably spends more time counting missing islands than anything else.
I can see it now:
"What, you're having an argument over the ownership of some islands and you want us to join in? Nah, we just found about 600 new islands rummaging around under the sofa cushions; we're good."