So, then it's perfectly feasible that you're NOT insulting me, and you're actually concerned for my well-being. BTW - what kind of hallucinogens are YOU taking?
I explained why "imposing democracy" on a country can have a terrible cost, and wondered if the manifest benefits of democracy make the cost of that imposition worthwhile.
That's a good one, YOU explaining why imposing democracy on a country can have a terrible cost is like George Bush telling the Iraqi people how lucky they are we invaded.
You replied with a completely irrelevant random neural firing:That was your third completely irrelevant post in about 24 hours. This is evidence of some sort of cognitive dissonance, to swipe Jocko's apt term. Whether it's caused by drugs, alcohol, lack of sleep, inattention from too much pressure at work, inability to multitask effectively on three computers, or some underlying physiological deficit (you had suggested manic depression), I suggest you tend to the matter.
My assertions are not irrelevant or random - maybe just not immediately apparent to you, probably because it's difficult to see past your own political poop. Your assertion that . . .
I'll be the first to say I don't know the answer to those questions - they're questions for better philosophers and ethicists than I. But I fear events will one day force us to to answer "yes."
. . . suggest that "history will tell" (where have we heard THAT before), and I simply agreed with you. However, I also indicated that I thought history wasn't always accurate and had more to do with WHO writes that history than what actually happened.
Just to help you out a bit.
Custer was a great hero
"In late 1875, Sioux and Cheyenne Indians defiantly left their reservations, outraged over the continued intrusions of whites into their sacred lands in the Black Hills. They gathered in Montana with the great warrior Sitting Bull to fight for their lands. The following spring, two victories over the US Cavalry emboldened them to fight on in the summer of 1876. To force the large Indian army back to the reservations, the Army dispatched three columns to attack in coordinated fashion, one of which contained Lt. Colonel George Custer and the Seventh Cavalry. Spotting the Sioux village about fifteen miles away along the Rosebud River on June 25, Custer also found a nearby group of about forty warriors.
Ignoring orders to wait, he decided to attack before they could alert the main party. He did not realize that the number of warriors in the village numbered three times his strength."
http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/pfcuster.htm
He wasn't a great hero, he was another imperialistic buffoon waging war on the terrorists of his time.
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Buffalo Bill was a great frontiersman
"The railroads allowed easy access to the buffalo by anyone who wanted to shoot and they did, right from the trains. Backed up by an unlimited supply of new accurate breech-loading rifles and plenty of ammunition, a wild rush of White buffalo hunters came to the buffalo country. In 1867 "Buffalo Bill" Cody entered into a contract with the Kansas Pacific Railway, then in course of construction through western Kansas, at a monthly salary of $500, to deliver all the buffalo meat that would be required by the army of laborers engaged in building the road. In eighteen months he killed 4,280 buffalos. "Buffalo Bill" was only one of thousands of hunters."
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Atrium/4832/buffalo4.html
So, our decimation of the wildlife and our disrespect for the environment started out early.
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Korea & Vietnam weren't wars
"The United States has launched all of its major armed conflicts since World War II as police actions. In these events, Congress had not made a formal declaration of war, yet the President, as the commander-in-chief, has claimed authority to send in the armed forces when he deemed necessary. Nonetheless, limited Congressional control has been asserted, in terms of funding appropriations.
The Korean War and the Vietnam War, strictly speaking, were not declared wars but police actions."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_action
Guess I should drop my membership to the V.F.W. and join the V.F.P.A. (Veterans of Foreign Police Actions).
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Reagan Conquered Communism
"As the fortieth President of the United States, Ronald Wilson Reagan renewed America’s confidence and made the world a better place. Known as the “Great Communicator,” his unwavering vision of democracy and consummate leadership skills are credited with bringing the Cold War to an end—and guiding the U.S. to new heights of national pride, technological achievement and economic prosperity."
http://www.foxstore.com/detail.html?item=1347&u=1104400212&gclid=CPG9yIewh4cCFQ9OWAod7Sw9bQ
He accomplished and instituted great change in this country - rabid conservatism, the war on drugs and he almost got to call catsup a vegetable serving in school lunches.
"But what really ticked off Ingraham was my response to Blitzer's remark that Reagan was "a conservative Republican who really altered the political landscape in this country to this very day." Indeed he did, I said, adding, "In fact, the gap between the wealthy and the poor increased during his eight years, and has continued on that trend. He had draconian cuts in food stamps and school lunch programs. Remember, catsup as a vegetable and Medicaid [cuts]?"
http://www.thenation.com/blogs/capitalgames?pid=1496
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As for my last assertion, that our soldiers in Iraq are protecting us here at home - I guess history will forget how British airport security and law enforcement uncovered a plot by terrorists to (once again) use jet liners as weapons, and there will undoubtedly be more in the future, thus obliterating the notion that, "We're fighting them there so we don't have to fight them here."
But of course, history will tell.
