Because during war, Britain summarily arrested hundreds of thousands of citizens of the Home Islands. Obviously not. There was always a difference between Britain and India. Britain always enjoyed greater protection of rights than India under it's rule. It did not end in the XVIII, XIX or XX century, it ended when Britain got the fuck out of India. And since our friend seems to be happy living in a protected shell where he can uselessly protest against evil, but is powerless to stop any of said evil... I consider the comparison quite good.Samuel wrote:That would be a better example. Using war years is a shitty barometer.
"Running something" means being in charge of something. Like... Himmler ran the Nazi occupation of the East.Samuel wrote:Wow, it looks like it is about composition, not responsibility.
I was talking about the system using extralegal means to get rid of undesireables.Samuel wrote:... the example I gave was where there was no legal option for the man to work inside the Chinese system.
Really? In the 1970s America was still in Vietnam.Samuel wrote:30 years is 70s, 80s and 90s. You keep this up and there is no point in responding.
How is a NATO war different from a non-NATO war? I'm not sure what that was supposed to mean. I was asking which wars the public protest has prevented.Samuel wrote:Under the unbrella of NATO. This wasn't a unilateral US military adventure.
The US could do nothing by that time. Well, outside of massively slaughtering Vietnamese in an attempt to colonize Vietnam.Samuel wrote:Vietnam, 1975.
Why 1985, when Somoza was overthrown 6 years before that? Besides, how is public protest relevant here? Ronald Reagan preferred a more covert approach to his "doctrine" of training CIA-supplied insurgents that did enough killing in Nicaragua even without any involvement of the American army. The only serious threat of war between the US and Nicaragua was in 1988, when the latter's troops drove the Contras out to Honduras, and the US deployed troops to stop the incursion. Other than that... The US could have intervened on Somoza's behalf, but the cooldown in relations between Somoza and the US happened before 1979, and so public protest wasn't even barely relevant here.Samuel wrote:Nicaragua, 1985
Do I? I think I didn't make such statements, but feel free to correct me.Samuel wrote:Stas wishes protesters were crushed by tanks.
The Metropole is not "bad", it's just racist and hypocritical.Samuel wrote:Remember, the Metropole is bad for using harsh measures on the outskirts.
Because advanced human rights are a luxury that developed nations introduce in their metropole territories when those are sufficiently developed. I merely noted that if you're fine with opression abroad, you wouldn't object to being a British islands citizen in the British Empire, because opression was concentrated abroad, while British Islands got better standards of human rights. Even in the XIX or prior centuries the British Islands got better treatment than many colonial territories.Samuel wrote:Poor areas result in brutality, which is a property of their wealth and not the fault of authorities.
So what is not right with my comparison? He clearly said he'd feel better in a place which has human rights no matter how many "others" it kills or opresses. So fuck you and your sophistry.
I think I made it perfectly clear that one is not better than the other, unlike in the mind of our humble person quoted here. He wants to live in a warlike and imperialist country that invades other nations, kills "others" and does other nasty shit so as long as he has "personal and political freedom". It is the perfect summary of a British Islands citizen at a time when Britain opressed and invaded other nations.Molyneux wrote:Would you rather live, given the choice, in a warlike and imperialist country that gave its own residents personal and political freedom, or a pacifist country that persecuted the fuck out of its own people?
The only thing "controversial" about my position is that somehow you try to challenge my comparison of him as a US citizen who doesn't care how many "others" the US slaughters in foreign wars as long as he gets protection and civil rights (he "prefers" warlike nations to peaceful, but opressive ones) as that of a British islands citizen in the Empire. There's nothing controversial here, and the position is perfectly clear.