egslim
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2002
- Messages
- 1,858
The US has no business telling Cubans how to run their country. It's their country.I don't think the reason it continues under Obama is that they are unaware that sanctions are bad and trade is good. All they have to do is make some very sane changes that are quite clearly outlined, Obama repeated this days ago.
Especially after the US supported Batista, who overthrew the government and installed a dictatorship.
Yes. And I expect you to back it up with facts.You're seriously asking me what threat Iran poses to the world?![]()
Unfortunately, yes. Just like it's tough luck for people with terminal cancer, but I can't help them either.Are you saying it's tough luck for the North Korean people?
But the policy of engagement I advocate is more likely to improve the plight of the North Korean people than their continued isolation under current US policy.
Stop attributing strawmen to me.You think the history of the world's greatest global superpower compared to a couple of backwards totalitarian nations is evidence of that conspiracy at all? I detect several fallacies.
I merely stated the US is far more militarily aggressive than either Iran or North Korea, and backed it up with figures. And yes, military power makes militarily aggressive. In the words of Albright, 'what good is having this great military if we can't use it?' Which is why a dumb, hawkish POTUS worries me infinitely more than a dumb, hawkish President of Luxembourg.
Meanwhile the US government keeps meddling in other countries, while it cuts funding for domestic programs that improve life for Americans.Wow I never thought of it like that before! Is that really the secret to peace? It makes so much sense![]()
The government came close to shutting down over negotiations to cut $38B of domestic spending, while $100B+ for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan sailed through.
If you're sarcastic because my statement is so obviously true, why does the US government do the complete opposite?
I'll make it short and simple for you. The only thing that differentiates those countries the US dislikes from those the US likes is if they accept US hegemony or not.They supported Hosni <snipped the irrelevant stuff>
Countries that accept US hegemony are allowed to abuse human rights. They're even allowed to be militarily aggressive towards countries who refuse US hegemony, witness Israel and Georgia.
So you admit the incentives exist. Do you deny they have effect? Because one of the few things economists agree on is that incentives matter.I never denied the incentives existed, I've been clamouring for clear evidence or an ironclad case for these kinds of accusations being true in specific cases.
Ok, so then please stop contributing CT-positions I don't hold to me. But if you agree these dubious estimates occur, do you also agree they affect US policy?Those are radically different considerations from anything I was talking about. I wouldn't argue against these incentives existing and dubious estimates occuring, and have not.