Kane Starkiller wrote:US won the cold war but is not exactly running amok over the previous holdings of USSR. ... I don't see why we should prolong conflict and insecurity because of some kind of abstract concept.
You're crazy if you're saying that with a straight face after the carnage in Georgia and US military bases popping in Central Asia. The end of the USSR didn't stop imperialism or war from occuring. In any case, where did I say the WARPAC or even the USSR itself must be restored? You must be inventhing things. But once again - the collapse of one imperialist
does not excuse the other imperialist. *sighs and puts hands up* Am I clear?
Kane Starkiller wrote:I never claimed it remedies all nationalism especially in the sense of foreign intervention. And I already explained that such interventions are more a function of a nations power and economic strength hence economic interests all around the world. Since US has a multiethnic character its interventions were actually relatively benign once you account for its power which is global.
Global power is a codeword for imperialism. Economic desire to make other nations to conform to your wishes (enable stable supplies of oil, food, or cheap jeapns) is the economic foundation of imperialism. Through political will it manifests then in political action - either diplomatic or, if circumstances demand it - military. Germany had economic interests - it had to take over France for economic reasons in WWII and it needed Russian grain and oil for it's economy. Economic interests do not excuse imperialism. How many times should this be repeated?
Kane Starkiller wrote:Wait so your point is that Russia was too kind to the people it conquered? That's the reason for the current explosion of ethnic violence and why Chechens are increasingly turning to radical Islam? Russia should have been harsher? Sorry don't buy that. Russians had plenty of time to give economic opportunities and ability to migrate to Chechens so that they can become as integrated as Native Americans and US brutality doesn't explain the current state of integration.
Why? Brutality can explain the state of integration. If you utterly destroy and disperse the ethnicity and prevent them from travelling and organizing, living compactly for a large nationalist movement to be born, you can succeed. If all American Indians were living in one place as opposed to dispersed reservations, an ethnic enclave like Chechnya, their resistance would be harder to crush. And things like that city capture thing would be far more common. Would the religion and philosophy of the Natives allow a jihad-like movement to incite an ethnic civil war inside the US? I'm not knowledgeable enough to say. Are you?
Kane Starkiller wrote:A "clearly superior" way to treat a minority is to resettle them so that a portion of them die rather than sterilize some of them so that no human being actually dies? Which minority was sterilized into extinction? No one said that Russians were as bad as Nazi Germany but it is possible for a country to mistreat its minorities and no actively trying to exterminate them right?
Yes, it is possible. I merely said that relocation of minorities does not betray a desire for extermination (I doubt the US wanted to exterminate Japanese Americans, for once). Whereas measures such as forced sterilization clearly do betray a desire to exterminate - they aim to destroy the ethnicity. Hence why forced sterilizations or baby-theft are included in the convention on genocide as descriptors.
Kane Starkiller wrote:Russians picking up a machete and slaughtering Ukrainians with as much gusto as Hutus slaughtering Tutsis would result in the same consequence as the famine? English picking up a machete and marching into Ireland to slaughter all Irish would have the same results as Irish famine? Maybe you should ease down on rhetoric and actually think things through.
Seriously, Kane, you're getting boring and repetitive. Yes, the slaughter would be much more direct and brutal (although I honestly don't know if I'd prefer to be hacked down by a machete or to die of starvation, the former is at least a fast death). I never disputed that. However, how are 800 000 hacked down by a machete different from 800 000 who starve to death? The number of deaths is the same. Sure, you might argue that a greater percentage of Rwanda's population perished, but that would sadly meet up with the unfortunate fact that about the same number of Irish perished in the famine as the number of Tutsis relative to Rwanda's total population perished in the genocide. *rolls eyes* It might be a bit hard to grasp this concept for you Kane, but a human life lost is always a human life lost. But in case of Rwanda, the damage was limited to Rwanda. In case of Britain, the damage spread to Ireland, India and elsewhere.
Kane Starkiller wrote:Ah "exacerbating" famine. As in not all deaths are a direct result of the government but many or most would die in any case because of drought, low technology etc.? So don't use total numbers of famine deaths and compare them to people that cot literally cut down by "poor" regimes OK?
No, Kane, not okay. Most deaths if not all are the result of the government's policies and, sometimes, direct action.
Not engaging in exports and hoarding would alleviate famine and perhaps create a state of
mass malnourishment but not that of
mass starvation. Hence why the responsibility lies with the government. That is especially clear in, say, the case of the Bengal famine of 1943 -
the harvest was as large as in 1941, only hoarding and exports were the cause of death, not a crop failure.
Oh, and as to your claim that famines in India are not relevant because India "continued development and experienced population growth", how would you explain this:
Railways and Famines in Colonial India wrote:The dominant fact of Indian demographics in the post-independence era has been rapid population growth. However, this was not the case in the 1871-1911 period—on the contrary, many areas experience significant population decreases during this era. Of the districts surveyed in 1881, 25% had decreased in population since the previous census6. While only 5% lost population in 1891, 41% decreased in population in 1901, and 24% decreased from 1901 to 1911. Most strikingly, the total population of India in areas for which Census data exists from both 1901 and 1891 actually decreased from 199,724,321 in 1891 to 198,248,257 in 1901. These decreases can be directly attributed to the series of droughts that affected large regions of the country in the years from 1896-1900. Thus the demographic effects of famines, especially those in the late 1890’s, is large enough to be visible even in district-level census data.
And the fact that since 1872 to 1921 the annual growth rate was merely 0,37 percent for India, whereas it became 1% in 1921-1951, thanks to the absence of major famines (excluding Bengal) and a further 2% after India freed itself from the British yoke? The true "population explosion" happened after the British left India.
Finally, if you look here, you will see that the absence of any population explosion in British India was tightly connected with colonial exploitation. The labourers' wages did not keep up with the prices - Britain was pauperizing them.
http://www.celdf.org/downloads/NATURE%2 ... RTICLE.pdf
I think no one could disagree that British policy was the cause of mass deaths through famine and starvation in India in the latter part of the XIX century, British policy maintained the poverty of India and used it as a resource extraction point savagely, whilst precluding Indians getting richer or more industrialized through the policy of supplying them with ready products of British manufacturing.
If you seriously want to argue this point, feel free to do so. Point me to the data that would show the British policies were not destructive, the cause of famine was an absence of food or crop failure (not the inability of labourers to purchase said food thanks to British policies)?
Kane Starkiller wrote:Drought wasn't a cause? Japanese invading Burma which held major supplies of rice for India wasn't a cause? I want to weasel out? Your original claim was that poor countries had less victims than rich countries because they can't be imperialists. Can you actually back that up with NUMBERS for say the last 50 years rather than throwing examples like torturing 10 people somewhere as if that can be comparable to examples I have given.
No, I didn't claim that poor countries had "less victims", Kane, what I said was that the damage a poor nation can do is usually limited by the size of its population. The damage a global empire can do is not limited by the size of population. There was no crop failure in 1943 in India and the rice harvest was larger than in 1941. Japan's invasion of Burma could cut off no more than 15% of India's rice supply - that's the number Burma supplied in 1940, or 1.234 million tons of rice. In 1941, the production of rice in India fell from 8.223 million tons of prior year to 6.768 million tons. In 1943, the harvest was 7.628 tons. Which means that India's harvest was a million ton greater than that of 1941, exceeding the size of Burmese imports. I am sorry, but the math simply does not support claims of Burma being critical to prevent mass starvation in India, nor the claims of a crop failure.
Kane Starkiller wrote:That said I feel no need to further grapple with your Cyprus example, Egypt example, Kenya example and so on. You derailed the discussion long enough. Show me the numbers that prove your ORIGINAL POINT or concede.
What? My original point is well proven. The number of excess deaths in Iraq - 600 000 - is well on par with the 800 000 Tutsis who died during the Rwanda genocide. The Bengal famine claimed about the same number of lives as the Khmer Rouge slaughter of Pnom Penh and other cities. The number of Algerians who died in the Algeria war is around 900 000. You may not like that fact, sure. You may say "but these people died in a less gruesome manner, and they died serving the well-being of the First World, so that doesn't count, because they died as a collateral damage". They're still dead. Death is the ultimate negative utility. If not for war or famine, these people would still be alive, just as you consider that all Tutsis and Cambodians would be alive if not for the actions of the Hutus or the Khmer Rouge. You may take a particular distaste in the method of slaughter (famine vs. machete), but since the end result is the same and it is reasonable to conclude that without a war or a famine, these excess deaths would not have occured, I don't see how I could "concede" the point I singlehandedly won. Once again - your distaste for the machete or your idea that slaughter should be sensible as opposed to senseless is absolutely irrelevant for those who died. The Iraqis, Indians, Egyptians, Algerians, etc. were sure delighted to know that they died due to a sensible reason as opposed to without any sense whatsoever. Whoop de fuck.
Kane Starkiller wrote:It's simple. When people are slaughtered they are then unceremoniously dumped into a large pit that is then called a mass grave. If they die of starvation caused by the regime they're likely to be burried by their faimily in a family grave or something which then won't be a mass grave.
Ah, so starvation is caused "by the regime" now? I see. In any case, if people are dying of starvation at such an enormously fast rate, I doubt their relatives (who as we know were slaving in the fields, to improve crop harvests in the name of Cambodia's Agricultural Future) had any chance to bury them not in mass graves. Especially a whole million of them. When the siege of Leningrad was broken, lots of people were found
in mass graves, you know. Their starving relatives could not bury a significant fraction of them in ordinary graves.
Kane Starkiller wrote:Do you honestly expect be to believe that you don't understand that direct deaths will always lead to more indirect deaths and that you comparing my direct deaths numbers with your indirect deaths numbers wasn't a conscious attempt by you to inflate your numbers and make "imperialists" look worse? Please don't waste both of our times with these transparent attempts
So how many more indirect deaths than the 800 000 direct deaths has the Hutu genocide in Rwanda caused? You have a number? Besides, how is it even important, Kane? You see, if there is a singular event which can be thought of as the primary reason for X and Y excess deaths, regardless of whether they were "direct", "indirect" or both direct and indirect, then those events would be compared by the total number of victims, both direct and indirect. Now why is that? Quite simple. If the US never invaded Iraq, how many excess deaths of those 600 000 deaths would have occured? Zero. Perhaps some other excess deaths would have occured, but not
those ones. If Rwandan genocide order was never given, how many excess deaths of the 800 000 genocide deaths would have occured? Zero. Perhaps other excess deaths (from war, disease, etc.) could have occured, but not
these ones. If the British did not export and requisited grain out of India in 1943, how many excess deaths out of several million would have occured?
Zero. So direct and indirect deaths only differ by the method of killing.
Kane Starkiller wrote:"As for "justified intervention" - the First World commited so much genocide and mass murder on its own historically that it lost any right to anything. At all." You know this is not going to work if you can't stay consistent across 3 pages.
I never limited that genocide and mass murder
to the last 50 years of history, Kane (specifically to exclude World Wars, imperialist conquests, most of the First World caused famines and genocides). You did that
after my post. Now you're trying to shift goalposts. That is not going to work. If we take the last 150-200 years of history, the Rwanda Genocide and the Khmer Rouge would have to stand against
dozens of millions of deaths caused by the First World.
Kane Starkiller wrote:Do you have any evidence that it is lack of oil that made Eastern Europe more developed than Central Asia? Oil is not a drug. It maintains our civilization. Drug doesn't. A more apt comparison would be bread.
Or bananas. Banana republics have only themselves to blame, and not the buyer who forces them to take that particular place in the world division of labour. Is that what you're trying to say? Remember the "US forced Haiti to keep minimum wage low" thread? The buyer is not a fault for maintaining this situation because he is merely catering to the needs of his own populace? Why, sure.
Kane Starkiller wrote:You said so. You said that "in this case I would take arms and do my duty" in the thread "South Ossetia situation escalates" a few years back. What is that if not support for Russia?
So if I support Russia's right to protect South Ossetia, I automatically approve of any Russian imperialism? You realize how crazy this sounds?
Kane Starkiller wrote:Ethnic streaming is immigration that is characterized by only one particular ethnic group. In this case Russians. What does population increase of Central Asia have to do with anything? Yes it increased, that's my point Russians were immigrating but no ethnic Central Asians were emigrating. Unlike US states where there was plenty of immigration and emigration
That should have read "the Russian population increased till 1989". Russians immigrated in greater numbers than Central Asians emigrated. How does this constitute racism or ethnic cleansing? You obviously understood that there were no legal barriers to Central Asians leaving their republics. The fact that the RSFSR government created incentives for Russians to move to Central Asia doesn't constitute anything of the sort. Unlike a law or a decree which bans travel by an ethnic group.
Kane Starkiller wrote:I never said it was ethnic cleansing. I called it dillution. And how on God's green Earth is it not racism when a state is using state money to give incentives to only one ethnicity to immigrate to other parts? It's affirmative action in reverse.
Whoa.
I thought affirmative action is about giving people equal rights to education and the like. Not giving economic incentives to move here or there. How is that "racist"?
How does this injure or violate the rights, and not just legal rights but also human rights, of any nationality? Apartheid, separate schooling and travel bans clearly injure and violate the rights of races and ethnicities. School segregation persisted in the USA until the 1950s. That is real racism as it injures the rights of blacks.
Migration with economic incentives does not injure anyone's rights.
Kane Starkiller wrote:It wasn't only "not low" it was enormous. 124 million abortions in 1973-1989 period compared to 20 million abortions in US for the same period. It is perfectly possible for communist government to legalize abortion without realizing just how much of an impact this would have on demographics and health of women in the future.
Um... are you a supporter of abortion rights? If so, why does it matter how many million abortions the women carry out? Bad sex education might also be an issue, you know. And surely abortion was legalized in 1950s, how could the "communist government" not see the results by 1970s? They had access to the statistics. They had no desire to force people to bear children or procreate, like Stalinist or theocratic governments did and do.
Kane Starkiller wrote:70 years of discouragement won't evaporate overnight.
You haven't proven there was any discouragement at all. A lack of encouragement is not discouragement. A lack of good is not evil. Oh, and "70 years"? So
prior to 1917 the Russian government encouraged Central Asians to immigrate? Or should that read "200 years of non-encouragement"?
Kane Starkiller wrote:If the per capita GDP is different that means either the wages or prices or both to some degree are different. In either case there should've been a noted emigration from Central Asia. There isn't one. The conclusion is obvious and it's not "Central Asians don't like cold weather" or whatever racist excuse. I also find it fascinating that such a staunch anti-imperialist-sensitive-to-non-white-needs person wouldn't understand how a state picking out one ethnic group and giving it incentives to move to other areas wouldn't be oppressive and racist towards others.
Because a lack of incentives for migration does not constitute racism. Educational segregation? Yes, that is racism, a clear violation of rights. Now, I could understand that giving one ethnic group migration incentives is racist. Sure, you got me here. However, racial and eugenics policies usually pursue
racial purity. The idea of Russians migrating and intermixing with Central Asians does not strike me as racist for that precise reason. If the US sent white men into Indian reservations to live together in the same conditions, have sex and intermix,
would that be racist? I want to understand just what is racism for you - a violation of rights, including human rights, or something else? Besides, GDP per capita can be unrelated to wages, it includes investment. Wages can be low with a high GDP/capita. I think you were talking about
income per capita, not
product per capita.
Kane Starkiller wrote:You really need to stop strawmaning people's arguments. It will make things a lot easier. I said PUBLIC DISCOURSE not killing each other. Communist government clamped down on any expression but the underlying hatreds existed. Not with everyone and not to kill everyone but the tensions were there. Or do you think they just popped into existence all over Yugoslavia and USSR in the late 80s? While US had its civil right movements and riots everything was "perfect" in USSR as far as ethnic relations went. Except they weren't and the true extent of the problem was only revealed when it all boiled over in the late 80s.
So racial segregation is a more benigh racism than sending people to immigrate into Central Asia and mix with Asians. Tensions exist now in many parts of the world, and I bet Algerians were never communist to begin with, but it does not seem as if they terribly loved the French. My position is that by drawing a simplistic picture of "people hated each other, so nationalists cannot take the blame" is stupid and dangerous. You are excusing and whitewashing post-Soviet nationalists, crazy fascist tinpot dictators, mass murderers and fans of ethnic cleansing, simply because the "Soviet government did not give them freedom of expression". That elaborate defense of racism and nationalism is almost mind-boggling in doublespeak. By that logic, the Weimar Republic was guilty because the NSDAP came to power. And the NSDAP is not guilty at all - it just exploited "existing tensions" between Germans and Jews - after all, who are we to deny tensions existed, right? So Gotovina, Milosevic etc. aren't really guilty and nationalism is not really to blame. It's Tito and the SFRY who take all the blame. Yeah, sure. You might even like this cozy little picture of yours.
Tell me, are communists also to blame for Hungary's anti-abortion, homophobic constitution 20 years later? It was a clear displacement of more liberal laws of the 1991-2011 period - why did that happen? Were 20 years not enough for "free discussion" on the matter?
Or perhaps the problem is that "free discussion" was hijacked by crazy nationalists and religious fanatics? And a maturity of democracy does not actually prevent this, because in the USA "free discussion" also is often hijacked by religious fanatics and crazy nationalists? And they can even become presidents - like George Walker Bush?
I rest my case.