Yes, far be it from me to assume that someone could actually experience hubris when they're unwilling to admit their own silliness. Why bother with embarrassment when distraction and denial remove the need?
Fact: The US does not have a longstanding policy of talking crap about its neighbors. Iran does. Therefore it is not hubris to reject claims of such a policy as a basis for dismantling the US nuclear stockpile, while simultaneously considering such claims as a basis for prohibiting an Iranian nuclear stockpile.
Such claims might be weak for other reasons, but they're not actually hubris.
I'll confess to and repent of any hubris you convict me of. But first you have to actually convict me of hubris. And that means using it correctly in a sentence.
I think what you meant to use here was "hypocrisy", but since the US doesn't talk crap about its neighbors the way Iran does, there's nothing hypocritical in taking Iran to task for talking crap about its neighbors but not doing the same for the US.
Assuming that I was aiming at the low-hanging fruit here (the US) would be easy for you to dismiss, I agree,
Since we're specifically comparing the US and Iran, why would you assume any different? But I'm glad to see that you agree with me regarding policy towards Iran.
but what about Pakistan and India? How about Israel? Even better, how about Russia? I assume all of the above are countries you don't think deserve nukes, correct?
Red herrings. This is a thread about policy towards Iran. You want to talk about Pakistan, India, Israel, or Russia, start your own thread.
That said, I will make a few remarks. First, it's a lot harder to disarm a nuclear power than to prevent them from becoming one. Russia became a nuclear power during a period when nobody in the world was in a position to stop them. I wish it weren't so, but what's done is done. Having seen Russia slip through our grasp, why should we allow Iran to do the same, when we have the power to prevent it?
Second, if I were to make a list of nations that should not acquire nuclear weapons, or should give up the ones they already have, every nation on the world would be on it. And if I were to order the nations on the list by priority; putting those I believed required the most urgent attention, the most forceful action, and the greatest immediate expenditure of resources, I would rank Iran and North Korea much higher on the list than Pakistan, India, Russia, and Israel, and I would rank the US much lower.
I'm not entirely sure how your own list would be ordered, but I get the impression that you would find the idea of such a list offensive, and that you would consider it "hubris" (for some definition of the word, YMMV), for anyone to place Iran higher on it than the US. Is this true?
Oh, bravo. When faced with a challenge to the typical bad-faith rhetoric, play the only-slightly-more-eloquent-than "why do you hate America?" card. Very creative.
I assure you I'm arguing in good faith, to the best of my knowledge.
And I'm quite serious: It seems like you desire to level the nuclear playing field between the US and Iran (i.e., that Iran should have more nukes and the US less). Is this true? If so, why?
If it's not true, could you clarify your preferred policy regarding a potential Iranian arsenal?