Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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General Schatten wrote:No it's like saying someone who has lots of experience in biological research is more prepared to handle and pandemic than someone who does not have any experience with said pathogen.
Because inventing a deadly pathogen which can kill most of the world by accident, utterly collapsing your own nation through economic shocks even if you survived the pandemic itself, is in any way a "benefit"? Seriously, Shatten. Get real.

People and nations can make acts which are not beneficial to themselves. It's part of human nature. So the agreement can be all-around beneficial, except for people willing to shoot themselves in the foot.
General Schatten wrote:If we let it get out of control it threatens our position.
I'm sure that's exactly what Churchill thought about India. In essence, you're doing nothing except finding vague rationales for imperialism here. Why?
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by Illuminatus Primus »

General Mung Beans wrote:
Illuminatus Primus wrote: the Korean War,
What really annoys me is the listing the American intervention in the Korean War as "just another Imperial aggression". It only happened because of North Korean invasion of the Republic. Also while most Vietnamese didn't support the American intervention in the Vietnam War or Guatemalans support the 1954 coup most Koreans do support America intervening in the Korean War.
Okay, well while I don't have time to reply to Schatten in detail, this deserves reply. The Korean War was not some sort of knight-in-shining armor rescue mission by the do-gooder U.S. Firstly, the Korean partition really began with the end of the Pacific War in 1945, where the U.S. tried its hardest to keep collaborators or even Japanese occupation troops in place throughout the occupied territories to prevent organic and domestic forces of the leftist-to-nationalist bent, and generally anti-imperialist in character, from taking control. The U.S. instituted a military occupation government that violently suppressed the indigenous resistance movements, and harshly imposed a military dictatorship with the aim of preventing reunification, and this process killed thousands of people before the outbreak of the Korean War. The U.S. occupation authorities refused to deal with the Korean provisional government and brutally suppressed to install some anti-communist decades-long exile from the U.S. Now, if the U.S. was occupied by Mexico, and Mexico lost a war with Russia, and Russia and say, the UK jointly occupied with Russia the U.S., and the UK-friendly regime invaded the Russian-friendly one, would we really look at Russian intervention for its dictator as some principled stand against UK evil ideologicalism? No, of course not. In retrospect, we prefer the outcome that happened because the DPRK became a Stalinist shithole, but that does not reflect on the character of the decisions when they were made. One also should note that the U.S. fought the war in a manner which was deeply careless toward the Korean civilians, and was responsible for widespread bombings of civilians and civilian infrastructure, torture and summary execution, and forcible political indoctrination of the kind we blame on the enemy.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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Stas Bush wrote:Because inventing a deadly pathogen which can kill most of the world by accident, utterly collapsing your own nation through economic shocks even if you survived the pandemic itself, is in any way a "benefit"? Seriously, Shatten. Get real.
Unless they have the methods to treat the pathogen with the research they've done into it. No one said they had to be rational.
People and nations can make acts which are not beneficial to themselves. It's part of human nature. So the agreement can be all-around beneficial, except for people willing to shoot themselves in the foot.
Or it can appear beneficial and actually be detrimental.
I'm sure that's exactly what Churchill thought about India. In essence, you're doing nothing except finding vague rationales for imperialism here. Why?
Because it benefits my country and our allies and if we didn't someone else would. Other countries are welcome to benefit as well, just make yourself not a threat and align yourself with our interest. Hey maybe if we all get together long enough we can join the US, EU, and Russia into a happy bloc bent on uniting the world under one banner. :lol: Maybe you would like to explain Russia's interference into Georgia's affairs?
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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General Schatten wrote:Unless they have the methods to treat the pathogen with the research they've done into it. No one said they had to be rational.
Okay, here's a question. How is killing all other people beneficial to you? How does it constitute a benefit to the non-signatory? It decreases the life level of his population, and can quite probably cause his nation to utterly collapse. Therefore, it's a detrimental act even if you can protect yourself. At which point, the costs of possible pandemia become so great to society at large that an agreement limiting the development of pathogens is more beneficial than just letting everyone freely make them.
General Schatten wrote:Because it benefits my country and our allies and if we didn't someone else would.
"Your" country has some sort of special right to supremacy? Master race or something? How are your nation's benefits justifying anything, for fuck's sake? Are Americans 100% human and all others, what, 2/3rds of a human?
General Schatten wrote:...align yourself with our interest.
Why should other nations and peoples do your bidding as if they were slaves?
General Schatten wrote:Maybe you would like to explain Russia's interference into Georgia's affairs?
Neo-imperialism. Just like Georgia's intereference in the affairs of it's post-Civil War breakaway regions is neo-imperialism, by the way. A form of proxy war for the political influence in the Caucasus and CIS between USA/NATO and Russia. You have a better explanation? I'm all ears. How is that relevant to anything discussed here?
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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Stas Bush wrote:Okay, here's a question. How is killing all other people beneficial to you? How does it constitute a benefit to the non-signatory? It decreases the life level of his population, and can quite probably cause his nation to utterly collapse. Therefore, it's a detrimental act even if you can protect yourself. At which point, the costs of possible pandemia become so great to society at large that an agreement limiting the development of pathogens is more beneficial than just letting everyone freely make them.
You keep saying that as if irrational players don't exist or that the player can't distribute the methods of containing the outbreak to other countries it allied with.
"Your" country has some sort of special right to supremacy? Master race or something? How are your nation's benefits justifying anything, for fuck's sake? Are Americans 100% human and all others, what, 2/3rds of a human?
Again with the insinuations? I've said and will say it again, nations will and should do what is in the best interest of their nation. If someone else can benefit due to that fine, if not well then too bad, I make no judgement on whather an America has a more intrinsic value than anyone else. But they obviously do to American politician as those are their voters and it sends a message to other nations when Americans are unable or unwilling to protect it's citizens.
Why should other nations and peoples do your bidding as if they were slaves?
I said align yourself with our interest not acting like a slave, quit with the strawmen, it's getting tiresome. Aligning yourself with our interests would at the moment be helping us fight terrorism abroad.

But Russia does everything it can to be antagonistic towards us, from my point of view at least. You won't trust us to place missiles to defend against possible nuclear attacks from the middle east, one would think the unliklier a nuke would slip through the less chance of a global nuclear war and everyone would benefit. Obviously Russia considers us in competition and thus we must compete or be left behind. But yet you argue against ABMs in Poland or somesuch all the same time, or has that changed in the last two years? Further you argue that a disarmament of biological weapons would benefit everyone even if someone refuses to sign. Does this apply to other radiological and chemical weapons.
Neo-imperialism. Just like Georgia's intereference in the affairs of it's post-Civil War breakaway regions is neo-imperialism, by the way. A form of proxy war for the political influence in the Caucasus and CIS between USA/NATO and Russia. You have a better explanation? I'm all ears. How is that relevant to anything discussed here?
So you think the US was involved with South Ossetia? Interesting claim. It has everything to do with it, I wanted to make sure you weren't being a hypocrite about your own nations' actions. I on the other hand feel Russia was entirely within it's rights to deal with a situation that close to home in such a manner.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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What we have here in General Schatten is the last rotting refuse of 20th-century New Dealism: always terrified to look like a weakling in the face of his international enemies, he bows instead to pressure from internal ones to puff himself up and pass himself off as the ultimate hawk. It's all political, of course, the internalization of attitudes developed during liberalism's long twilight. But the recognition of that fact will never stop him and his kind. They will always be "Happy Warriors".
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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Illuminatus Primus wrote:
Guardsman Bass wrote:If by "intervened" you mean "gave Benito Juarez and his government-in-exile shelter and sold them weapons."
And the rest? That's what I thought.
I wasn't justifying the Mexican-American War, although it was more complicated than "the US mugs Mexico for half its land" (California was in open revolt during the war and slightly before it, and not necessarily at US instigation).
Guardsman Bass wrote:The US pushed them towards NAFTA and greater liberalization, but realistically, what choice did Mexico have at the time? They had little capability for further spending after the crisis in 1982 (following a period in which they ran up a huge amount of debt borrowed against their oil reserves, which lost most of their value when the bottom fell out of the price on oil in the early 1980s). On top of that, the economic model that has worked pretty well for them after World War 2 - a version of Import Substitution Industrialization along with the ejido system in agriculture - had been stagnating for over a decade (which was a major reason as to why the Mexican government ramped up spending in the 1970s).

The rural communities, of course, didn't like it, because while they'd been impoverished under the ejido, they'd had some minimal form of sustenance plus some government pay-offs and funding. The Zapatistas liked it even less, for much the same reason.
All this just is about my point that only with great historical ignorance one can paint Mexico as grossly irresponsible purely on the back of its own responsibility, and then go on to advocate stuff like invasion and occupation as has been done in this thread. Furthermore, the liberalization policies promoted by the U.S. have been an outright failure throughout the developing world - the postwar success stories, Western Europe, the Asian Tigers, China, et al, all benefits from significant foriegn aid and protectionist policies. In many ways they reflected the opposite of the Washington Consensus. I don't think its unfair at all to suggest those policies exist for Western profits specifically at the expense of developing countries, more or less hapless before enormous market power by Western companies and overwhelming Western and specifically U.S. international political power.
Well, technically, the Mexican government was grossly irresponsible in the 1970s with regards to their economy - they ran up a vast amount of debt borrowing against their oil reserves, which basically amounted to a faith that oil prices would never have a serious drop leaving them holding the bag. Western political power or not, they were going to be stuck doing austerity measures in the 1980s one way or another if they didn't want to completely default on their debt.

As for the Washington Consensus, it's much easier in hindsight to point out that many of its precepts were wrong, and often cookie-cutter molds of ideas that were originally applied to help Latin America deal with the crisis of 1982 (Mexico wasn't the only country suffering issues with serious inflation, massive public debt, and highly inefficient state companies). But at the time, it wasn't totally obvious that Export-Led Industrialization was the model, particularly since some of the big success stories - Japan and Western Europe after World War 2 - had other things going for them that might have explained the success.

I don't think they were intended solely to benefit western countries, but naturally, the western countries (and particularly the United States) believed they would benefit economically if the developing countries adopted these policies. That's to be expected, since business plays a role in shaping US foreign policy, and you usually can't entirely separate policies from the countries advocating them.

As for
Guardsman Bass wrote:We've done plenty of that (recognizing the Mexican right to self-determination), particularly after the 1930s (the US government, for example, did nothing when Cardenas nationalized the largely US company-owned oil industry in Mexico, against calls from said industry for intervention). There's been plenty of indirect influencing, but every nation does that with regards to its neighbors.
Its still hypocrisy when one nation is largely subject to the undesired influence of the other in a one way fashion for the wealthy powerful nation to squeal that the poor one should have developed better.
Not unless you believe that the bigger country's influence was negative, meaning that the bigger country was hobbling the smaller country and then blaming the latter for its failure. That varied before the 1930s between heavily negative and possibly good, but the US influence was, by and large, neutral or even beneficial to Mexico after that period until the 1980s (they basically let Mexico do their thing economically, with some US companies setting up local branches in Mexico, like Coca-Cola). After that, it's more debated, but as I pointed out, a lot of the policy Mexico adopted in the 1980s was stuff they were more or less stuck doing due to the mistakes they'd made earlier. NAFTA is a trickier issue as to whether or not it was good for Mexico, particularly since it wasn't the only trade liberalization that was affecting the Mexican economy (the rise of cheap Chinese imports had a major effect on the Mexican economy as well during much of the same period).
Illuminatus Primus wrote: How would the U.S. thereafter treat it if China sent troops to occupy a key port with the Chinese President declaring he'd teach them to elect good men? Can anyone even imagine how mainstream media or history narratives would treat such events if any other nation indulged them?
Are you saying that the US had no right to respond to actual attacks on its territory by one of the major factions in the Mexican civil war at the time? Like I said, this wasn't part of some greater conflict between the US and Mexico - Villa started it in the case of the Punitive Expedition, and then ran for it once he actually started to face consequences for those actions. It was not some retaliatory measure for the Veracruz Invasion, since Villa was a US ally at the time.
Illuminatus Primus wrote:1873-96 is not today.
You were the one who brought up grievances going back well over a century, to the Mexican-American War.
Illuminatus Primus wrote: The Korean War was not some sort of knight-in-shining armor rescue mission by the do-gooder U.S.
Who is pretending it was? It was the US backing up its client state in South Korea against the Soviet client state in the north. That said, the mission had wide-spread UN support outside of the Soviet bloc.
Illuminatus Primus wrote: The U.S. instituted a military occupation government that violently suppressed the indigenous resistance movements, and harshly imposed a military dictatorship with the aim of preventing reunification, and this process killed thousands of people before the outbreak of the Korean War.
So, basically you're bitching over the fact that the US wasn't exactly cotton on the idea of the South Korean government re-unifying with a Soviet-installed northern government when it would have meant a communist government, in a period when they were trying to prevent the spread of communism? What a shock. Not that the Soviets themselves were saints, seeing as how they set up a puppet government to push for a unified, communist country that would be a Soviet satellite.

The morality of those decisions at the time is, of course, not affected by the historical outcomes. That said, there's a reason why we distinguish between "brutal but probably beneficial in the long-term" and "unnecessarily brutal" in history - I think a strong argument can be made that in hindsight, the US actions were the former, since the result was far better than if the entire peninsula had ended up as a larger DPRK shithole.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by K. A. Pital »

General Schatten wrote:You keep saying that as if irrational players don't exist or that the player can't distribute the methods of containing the outbreak to other countries it allied with.
Irrational players exist, but it's much like with the public law. You wouldn't argue that the public law is not beneficial to society at large, right? Criminals exist and they do not follow the law. However, the existence of criminals does not automatically mean all other members of the society should behave in a criminal fashion and abolish public law, or that public law is not all-around beneficial regardless of the existence of criminals.
General Schatten wrote:But they obviously do to American politician as those are their voters and it sends a message to other nations when Americans are unable or unwilling to protect it's citizens.
Protect from whom? Mexico has invaded America and is killing it's citizens? No? And if not, how is America protecting it's citizens by, say, invading Mexico?
General Schatten wrote:I said align yourself with our interest not acting like a slave, quit with the strawmen, it's getting tiresome. Aligning yourself with our interests would at the moment be helping us fight terrorism abroad.
That's not a strawman. To follow someone else's interests which do not correspond with your own ones is to be coerced into it or forced by other means; essentially to act like a slave. You have made no distinction, like that nations should "align" with US interests when they correspond to their own; you said they should do US bidding by default, regardless of whether it would be in their interest or not. That's the same as treating as slave - regardless where his interests lie, he should follow those of his master. Not only follow his master's interests when he wants, because in that case, he ceases to be a slave and is no longer useful in the imperialist scheme of the world.

No, what you implied is that other nations should follow US interests, and in your model especially where the interests of one is always the detriment of another (you said that yourself), this means nations should constantly act against their own interests, following the US will. This is nothing but slavery.

If you said there could be mutually beneficial agreements, or that nations are free to act as they like and only help the US of their free will, that would've been much different. But that's not what you said.
General Schatten wrote:Further you argue that a disarmament of biological weapons would benefit everyone even if someone refuses to sign. Does this apply to other radiological and chemical weapons.
Of course not; the latter do not pose a large risk of pandemia, they can be applied to targets. You can't cause an epidemic in Iran by nuking or chemming objects in Iraq, and vice-versa. The deterrent policy works better with more conventional weapons; with biological weapons it's a little different, for the danger of an outbreak doesn't only pose a threat to immediate combatant nations. Biological weapons can't be constrained by human will; their use will creat an unpredictable outbreak, whereas with chemical and nuclear weapons, we can calculate and know the effects. That's the difference.
General Schatten wrote:So you think the US was involved with South Ossetia? Interesting claim. It has everything to do with it, I wanted to make sure you weren't being a hypocrite about your own nations' actions. I on the other hand feel Russia was entirely within it's rights to deal with a situation that close to home in such a manner.
Imperialist actions become less easier to justify as defending your border the farther away from the border you go. So yes, there is a certain grain of truth to your argument. However, being close to one's border does not automatically justify any imperialist action.

As for the US being involved with South Ossetia - no, I think the US was involved with Georgia, which in turn attacked South Ossetia. The US involvement with Georgia, Ukraine and other post-Soviet republics was and remains a form of extending it's geopolitical interests, to that end the US armed, through various PMCs and the like, it's client nations much like it did in the Cold War (probably with less fervor, but still). The US consciously foistered nationalism of the elites of these nations and funneled money to extreme-nationalist elites and politicians in Georgia, to support them in more ways than just a military one. In the end, however, no nation fully controls it's client state in the post-World War II situation; so client states can make unpredictable moves acting against the will of the master, quite possibly, or with his wilful ignorance maybe - because Saakashvili's electoral platform, for example, vied for unification of Georgia "regardless of the method" from day one. The US couldn't have simply not know this.

So the war was a proxy war where one side's client nation was acting on it's own initiative, emboldened by prior support of it's nationalism. However, it was pretty clear that US involvement in Georgia secured some critical geopolitical goals other than those connected to S. Ossetia, etc., for the US as well as for NATO nations as a whole. In particular, the idea of circumventing Russian oil and gas pipelines required a willing client state that would become a transfer point from Central Asia. Georgia was perfect for that, and nationalist elites offered a good opportunity.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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In any case, I'm bowing out of this, although I'll read IP's response if he gets around to it. I'm annoyed that Schatten posted that essay and sent this whole thing reeling off into yet another debate over US Imperialism and power politics (as if we haven't had a couple of those before - they always end up going in the same familiar circles), followed up with craziness about invading Mexico.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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Guardsman Bass wrote:In any case, I'm bowing out of this, although I'll read IP's response if he gets around to it. I'm annoyed that Schatten posted that essay and sent this whole thing reeling off into yet another debate over US Imperialism and power politics (as if we haven't had a couple of those before - they always end up going in the same familiar circles), followed up with craziness about invading Mexico.
If he just said stuff about U.S. interventions, that wouldn't be much out of order. But invading Mexico, without any casus belli? Seriously? With the justification being "that article of Stuart" and "the US should always intervene" mantra? I'm sorry, but Shatten really got way out there.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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Stas Bush wrote:If he just said stuff about U.S. interventions, that wouldn't be much out of order. But invading Mexico, without any casus belli? Seriously? With the justification being "that article of Stuart" and "the US should always intervene" mantra? I'm sorry, but Shatten really got way out there.
If that's what you think go fuck yourself, we're done asshole. We were having a perfectly good discussion without outright lying or insulting the other person's intelligence. Oh well, Testingstan's right, no area of grey for SDN.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by General Mung Beans »

Einzige wrote:What we have here in General Schatten is the last rotting refuse of 20th-century New Dealism: always terrified to look like a weakling in the face of his international enemies, he bows instead to pressure from internal ones to puff himself up and pass himself off as the ultimate hawk. It's all political, of course, the internalization of attitudes developed during liberalism's long twilight. But the recognition of that fact will never stop him and his kind. They will always be "Happy Warriors".
So you basically mean classical hawkish liberals?
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

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General Schatten wrote:
Stas Bush wrote:If he just said stuff about U.S. interventions, that wouldn't be much out of order. But invading Mexico, without any casus belli? Seriously? With the justification being "that article of Stuart" and "the US should always intervene" mantra? I'm sorry, but Shatten really got way out there.
If that's what you think go fuck yourself, we're done asshole. We were having a perfectly good discussion without outright lying or insulting the other person's intelligence. Oh well, Testingstan's right, no area of grey for SDN.
You're either incapable of answering the points I raised above, or just ignoring the essence in favour of swearwords. "Come back when you can actually answer the points", like you said to IP. :lol:
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by Akkleptos »

Stas Bush wrote:If he just said stuff about U.S. interventions, that wouldn't be much out of order. But invading Mexico, without any casus belli? Seriously? With the justification being "that article of Stuart" and "the US should always intervene" mantra? I'm sorry, but Shatten really got way out there.
Under the risk of Schatten thinking "all these Second-and-Third Worlders are piling up on me", I'd say that such an approach would certinly meet a lot of opposition, from within the US, to begin with, not to mention ensuing international reprobation and the consequences thereof ("which?" he might ask. "We have the largest armed forces and navy!". And I would reply "Consider this".). Not to mention the economics fallout, given that Mexico is one of the US' largest and more important trade partners, and the trade with the rest world would also suffer (Also, if Afghanistan -about the size of Texas- and Iraq -larger than California- seem like a heavy burden, you really don't want to imagine what Mexico would be like -if you were to put Mexico on a map over Europe, one tip would be Lisbon in Portugal, and the other would be over Istanbul, in Turkey, in a country so mountainous that if its surface were to be spread out, it would be far larger than the whole of Asia. Talk about a logistics nightmare).

As someone put it, for Mexicans, most of whom have historical reasons to resent the financial and military success of the US for over a century, "We're on the same boat, like it or not". And the door swings both ways, as stated by Jeffrey Davidow, former Ambassador to Mexico. In other words, as put by many American leaders, attacking Mexico would be not entirely unlike the US shooting its own foot.

Summarising, Schatten's position amounts to the essential "Deutschland über alles", said in English, but with an American accent, with a heavy tint of "Might makes right RAR!"

Lyrics: just substitute "Germany" for "USA" (or, to accomodate people from the US: "America", though the word is the name of the continent, not a specific country.)
Germany, Germany above all,
Above all in the world,
When, for protection and defence, it always
takes a brotherly stand together.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by Darth Wong »

General Schatten wrote:I said align yourself with our interest not acting like a slave, quit with the strawmen, it's getting tiresome.
You say this immediately after pointing out that all nations look after their own interests. Why should any nation align itself with some other country's interests instead of its own? There is no realistic circumstance in which two different nations' interests will precisely coincide. Even on terrorism, most nations find it in their self-interest to maintain an arms-length relationship with the US.
Oh well, Testingstan's right, no area of grey for SDN.
This "every time I get into an argument and it gets hostile, I will just whine about how much SDN sucks" behaviour is annoying and tiresome. Not only has it been a troll standby since Day One, but it is a complete red-herring to any conceivable particular subject of debate. If you're going to become one of those whiny little shits who does this every time an argument gets hot, you might as well get the fuck out right now.
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by CarsonPalmer »

Einzige wrote:What we have here in General Schatten is the last rotting refuse of 20th-century New Dealism: always terrified to look like a weakling in the face of his international enemies, he bows instead to pressure from internal ones to puff himself up and pass himself off as the ultimate hawk. It's all political, of course, the internalization of attitudes developed during liberalism's long twilight. But the recognition of that fact will never stop him and his kind. They will always be "Happy Warriors".
Why is that "New Dealism"? And what is so terrible about Hubert Humphrey (who I assume you're referring to, since he was, after all, nicknamed the Happy Warrior)?
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Re: Fleeing drug wars, Mexicans flood into U.S.

Post by Einzige »

CarsonPalmer wrote:
Einzige wrote:What we have here in General Schatten is the last rotting refuse of 20th-century New Dealism: always terrified to look like a weakling in the face of his international enemies, he bows instead to pressure from internal ones to puff himself up and pass himself off as the ultimate hawk. It's all political, of course, the internalization of attitudes developed during liberalism's long twilight. But the recognition of that fact will never stop him and his kind. They will always be "Happy Warriors".
Why is that "New Dealism"? And what is so terrible about Hubert Humphrey (who I assume you're referring to, since he was, after all, nicknamed the Happy Warrior)?
New Dealism is what passes for leftism in the United States: the idea that all social progress must come from the top-down and function through bureaucracy, intentionally excluding views which are critical of the governmental apparatus as a means to effect social change that is nevertheless agreed upon as necessary. And Hubert Humphrey was a shameless hack who would adopt whatever stance on the War he felt necessary to win.

I regard people like Humphrey and "Scoop" Jackson as complicit in the conservative take-over of America and just as bad or worse as Reagan himself. I see what Mung Beans refers to as "classic liberals" to be as much a part of The Enemy as I do any conservative.
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