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Meanwhile, in Congo

I don't know if you are a racist, but you're systematically repeating typical racist comments used since at least the 19th century by the apologists of colonisation, while showing a lack of knowledge of the history of Africa, and a pronounced tendency for personal insults ... :rolleyes:

You sound like someone who thinks religion is something above criticism and apply the same political correctness to cultural traditions.

The only thing I have said is that Africa is still hobbled by traditional tribal, and religious, divides which force decisions to be made on that basis first, and what is best for the nation second, or third. Kind of like how the Iraqis behave, to move the scenario a bit.

If you call that being racist, we do have a problem with logical disconnects.
 
Elind, you have posted the most racist comments here so far.

Which comment was that? The one about tribal culture priorities? If I say black youths in the US today are crippled by a culture best represented by vile rap music; would you consider that a racist comment?

Really, get out of the country once in a while and don't stay in a tourist hotel. Intelligent and stupid people are rather evenly distributed. Circumstances are not.

You know what they say about assuming too much, don't you?

I've lost count of the countries I've lived in, including the Middle East Arab states for many years, and I'm an immigrant (proud and grateful citizen) to the US, and probably old enough to be your father based on what you think you understand.
 
Actually it was George Bush who sent troops into Somalia under UNITAF (25,000 US troops). It was Clinton's withdrawal of most of the US troops in May 1993 which led to the dismal UNOSOM II, which in turn caused the social break down that led to Admiral Howe requesting Task Force Ranger, which in turn led to the Battle of Mogadishu and total withdrawal of US troops from UNOSOM II.

Somalia was starting to get stable until Clinton withdrew the 25,000 US Marines deployed there.

-Gumboot
I know, I keep forgetting that since it was at the end of Bush senior's term and it just seems like it was a Clinton deal. Thank you for correcting me for the second time.

I don't buy the starting to get stable claim though. That's like McCain claiming GW is finally on the right track in Iraq and progress is being made, it is wishful believing.
 
Overpopulation, inadequacy of traditional methods of government, inadequacy of externally imposed system, abundance of modern weapons, general shortage of McDonald's.

I knew a priest who spent all his adult life in African missions, in schools , hospitals and NGO disaster relief work. He commented once that there isn't one country in Africa ready for self government, including Egypt. That was before Burundi, Zimbabwe- and indeed before the power shift in South Africa. The extended state is a European idea. There's no a priori reason why it would work elsewhere- including the middle east. It's notable that the only mid east nation state which seems to thrive against all odds is Israel, which has western backers and to a greater extent than its neighbours, western attitudes.
Maybe it just takes longer than we would like. Hell, Maybe Watson has a point.
And maybe not every non-Western culture has taken the same cultural evolutionary pathway which makes our style of democratic government more 'advanced' than theirs. Tribal communities often functioned equally as well as our system. The problems arise when cultures come into contact with each other disrupting the status quo.
 
Hey guys, I really appreciate the attention, and so kind of you to suggest I know not what I say, particularly since you clearly don't.:p

I think it was who went back some 400 years in the list of crimes holding Africa back. I'm pretty sure they were pretty much at least semi naked small(ish) tribes routinely killing each other, just like the Europeans were doing not much earlier, if not on a larger scale at the same time.

I would like to point out to your rose tinted views that most of Africa was colonized without "war" in any real sense, and that is because the conditions were as described above.

This attitude you seem to hold that, except for colonization, they would automatically have created major nations of peace loving tribes agreeing on one common language (amongst the hundreds or thousands that they had) and live happily ever after, asking only for honest capital investment from the corrupt west, is laughable.

Your ISP is on planet earth is it not?

BTW, how come you haven't given your vote of approval to your friend Gurdur? Forgive me if I wrongly assume you are one of his ditto crowd that he imagines he has.
As to your last comment, I have Gurdur on ignore so I don't know what you are referring to.

As to your first comments, you have a racist perspective. I have traveled to a number of third world countries. People are oppressed, but not because of their own incompetence, rather because of intervention by more powerful countries supporting powerful corporate interests.

One of the problems I have with your position is that you define "better" only from an egocentric perspective. What's "better" in your opinion is not shared by all of the world.
 
Which comment was that? The one about tribal culture priorities? If I say black youths in the US today are crippled by a culture best represented by vile rap music; would you consider that a racist comment?
I would say it was absurdly over-simplistic and certainly racist on its surface.

You know what they say about assuming too much, don't you?

I've lost count of the countries I've lived in, including the Middle East Arab states for many years, and I'm an immigrant (proud and grateful citizen) to the US, and probably old enough to be your father based on what you think you understand.
I'm flattered you think I am young. Let me guess, you are Jewish?

If you have the attitude you do, that people in countries you lived in outside of the US are inferior and you associate their cultures with "primitive" cultures, then you still lived in relative isolation from other people. There are many ignorant people in the world. A whole slew of them live here in the US (for example Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter). So of course there are corrupt and incompetent people in other countries as well. What you seem to have missed are those not falling into your stereotyped version.
 
As to your last comment, I have Gurdur on ignore so I don't know what you are referring to.

Smartest thing I've heard you say for a while:D

As to your first comments, you have a racist perspective. I have traveled to a number of third world countries. People are oppressed, but not because of their own incompetence, rather because of intervention by more powerful countries supporting powerful corporate interests.

Yes I know you hold that opinion. Europeans were once "oppressed" in much the same way as the conditions now described in parts of Africa. The apologist perspective would no doubt have found someone else to blame that on too. Ghengis Khan perhaps?

Note that my words were not "incompetent", nor "retarded" as previously stated by you or Flo. You seem to have a habit of redefining things in words that you like to use to falsify someone else's arguments. I also made it quite clear that I am not referring to individuals' capabilities or potentials, but to the simple fact that there are social and cultural attitudes that are required in order for different groups of peoples to cooexist and cooperate and make concessions between each other in a multicultural nation, which most countries are today.

Older "tribal" type loyalties which have been the norm for most of human existence are not designed for that. (not ignoring related religious divisions).

Keeping up this racist crap makes you sound juvenile.



One of the problems I have with your position is that you define "better" only from an egocentric perspective. What's "better" in your opinion is not shared by all of the world.

You change the argument yet again. Essentially I have defined better as the the ability to cooperate with other groups. Some groups have more trouble doing that than others.
 
I would say it was absurdly over-simplistic and certainly racist on its surface.

Yes, I am aware that you see much in a superficial manner.

I'm flattered you think I am young. Let me guess, you are Jewish?

I took a gamble on that comment, and I'm prepared to be wrong. I'll change it to late awakening. Your attitudes remind me of my own simplistic views in my teens when all problems had simple solutions (as some drug addicted goon once said "why can't we all just get along").

If you have the attitude you do, that people in countries you lived in outside of the US are inferior and you associate their cultures with "primitive" cultures, then you still lived in relative isolation from other people. There are many ignorant people in the world. A whole slew of them live here in the US (for example Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter). So of course there are corrupt and incompetent people in other countries as well. What you seem to have missed are those not falling into your stereotyped version.

You over simplify again, although I agree with you about the names quoted above.
 
Instead of defending your position you are just bouncing the criticisms back, Elind. That's not helping your case.
 
I don't buy the starting to get stable claim though. That's like McCain claiming GW is finally on the right track in Iraq and progress is being made, it is wishful believing.



I'm not so sure about that. Certainly Somalia wasn't achieving any sort of long term self-contained stability, but it was far, far less violent with 25,000 US Marines there, with rigorous ROE than with UNOSOM I or UNOSOM II (think the murder of 24 Pakistani soldiers....). I don't think it's fair to compare that to Iraq because Iraq is quite clearly still very violent, and any change in violence is hard to quantify.

Anyway, I don't want to derail the discussion, but I think Somalia is perhaps a good lesson on why the US and other countries won't get involved in purely humanitarian operations (i.e. no other benefit such as oil or strategic territory).

-Gumboot
 
Instead of defending your position you are just bouncing the criticisms back, Elind. That's not helping your case.

Yes I am critical of your statements, including calling me a racist when you ignore the issues I pose. How do you suggest I help my case when you ignore or misrepresent it?

My case couldn't be simpler. I have stated it in several ways, but it is you, my dear, who respond with cliched and prissy insults, IMHO.

The case can be represented by the example of ancient Greece and their wars with Persia. In those days they took a beating regularly because while they were similar people (the Greeks) they were what was called city states (tribes if you will). The wars with the Persians eventually led them to resist collectively and through that to form a true national identity and hence a nations, without which we would not be what we are today. Something no doubt, but not the same.

Europe went through a similar messy and bloody process to create the nations today, although those have been somewhat redefined even within recent generations.

This topic was about Congo in particular, although it could apply to a number of troubled "nations".

All I said was that I believe they have not formed an equivalent national identity, and I said that your consensus that they didn't do so is all the fault of someone else is cods wallop, particularly coming from you with an unabashed political agenda today.

Either they could have been left alone to kill and fight long enough for someone to conquer and subdue enough to form nations, like the rest of the world has gone through, or that the colonizers could have had a better long terms plan to foster a true national identity, down to the local cultural levels before granting independence.

But that is wishful thinking. They did have advantages that they gained. Not all aspect of colonization were as you allude; but what we see is what we have, and it is largely due to historical cultural forces, and of course religions of different books in many cases.

Your attitude of simplistic external blame is trivial and smacks of petty partisan politics, as you express in other areas of your posts.

Don't patronize when you have nothing to say.
 
I'm not so sure about that. Certainly Somalia wasn't achieving any sort of long term self-contained stability, but it was far, far less violent with 25,000 US Marines there, with rigorous ROE than with UNOSOM I or UNOSOM II (think the murder of 24 Pakistani soldiers....). I don't think it's fair to compare that to Iraq because Iraq is quite clearly still very violent, and any change in violence is hard to quantify.

Anyway, I don't want to derail the discussion, but I think Somalia is perhaps a good lesson on why the US and other countries won't get involved in purely humanitarian operations (i.e. no other benefit such as oil or strategic territory).

-Gumboot
One last comment then back to the topic. Didn't things clam down in Somalia anyway, IE without US troops? The violence and tragedy in that part of the world has been flaring and subsiding for at least 50 years that I am directly aware of. The last natural case of smallpox was in Kenya in the 70s and the reason it was so hard to eliminate there was the continual warfare going on between Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia. The world probably should intervene in that area. The Rwanda and Darfur tragedies are intolerable. So was Sierra Leone's epidemic of limb amputations. Considering the scale of the problems, I sincerely doubt our troops in Somalia were going to have much of a long term impact by themselves.
 
Yes I am critical of your statements, including calling me a racist when you ignore the issues I pose. How do you suggest I help my case when you ignore or misrepresent it?

My case couldn't be simpler. I have stated it in several ways, but it is you, my dear, who respond with cliched and prissy insults, IMHO.
OK, so let's look at these comments and go back to a few of your previous comments and the replies by me and others to those comments that you aren't quite getting the point of. It'll be my last attempt to make a discussion of this rather than a wasteful string of erroneous conclusions on your part about my position and maybe an erroneous conclusion on our part about your position, though your comments are consistent.

...The case can be represented by the example of ancient Greece and their wars with Persia. In those days they took a beating regularly because while they were similar people (the Greeks) they were what was called city states (tribes if you will). The wars with the Persians eventually led them to resist collectively and through that to form a true national identity and hence a nations, without which we would not be what we are today. Something no doubt, but not the same.

Europe went through a similar messy and bloody process to create the nations today, although those have been somewhat redefined even within recent generations.

This topic was about Congo in particular, although it could apply to a number of troubled "nations".

All I said was that I believe they have not formed an equivalent national identity, and I said that your consensus that they didn't do so is all the fault of someone else is cods wallop, particularly coming from you with an unabashed political agenda today.

Either they could have been left alone to kill and fight long enough for someone to conquer and subdue enough to form nations, like the rest of the world has gone through, or that the colonizers could have had a better long terms plan to foster a true national identity, down to the local cultural levels before granting independence.
Here you are ignoring the differences of corporate influence on corruption and oppression of certain populations within the countries in question as well as the massive arms and other tools available to those who wish to oppress the majority of people within the countries. Yes, the populace was oppressed in European history, but you can't simply ignore the vast differences in the times and say it is the people within these countries who haven't progressed to what you believe represents a 'better' system.
But that is wishful thinking. They did have advantages that they gained. Not all aspect of colonization were as you allude; but what we see is what we have, and it is largely due to historical cultural forces, and of course religions of different books in many cases.

Your attitude of simplistic external blame is trivial and smacks of petty partisan politics, as you express in other areas of your posts...
You of course are ignoring all my comments such as, "Yes, poor countries do need partnerships in order to gain capital investments or they might never be able to utilize their natural resources. If only big corporations would have recognized there was more to be gained by raising the standard of living of the poor themselves, thus creating more customers, than there was to be gained from simple exploitation, the world would look quite different today. But big corporations didn't and the world doesn't."

Rather than looking at what you might have wrong, you are creating the straw man argument that I and everyone who disagrees with you on this are "blaming" the troubles of the Congo 100% on "simplistic external" factors". Read what I said. Because it isn't what you claim I said. Nor do I think others here are saying what you claim.



Here are a few more examples of your statements which come across as, colonizers brought the modern world to the backward people and the backward people remain backward despite being offered such modernity.

....
The fundamental question IS; why they are still violent, ignorant, poor and so on, long after colonial days?...
...Most of the undeveloped world was composed of thousands of minor tribal kingdoms of one sort or another. You presumably would have argued that they be should have been left to their own devices (no exploration, no colonization etc.) so we could now have a UN of thousands of nations. ...

Some colonies benefited considerably from their colonizers. India is an example and most African nations gained structured governments that would have been impossible to achieve without countless civil and regional wars of conquest before their nations could become large enough to be called self sufficient in any way.

The problem is that the tribal cultures have persisted regardless (and some have of course continued to wage war). One can never have a nation when the primary allegiance is towards one's local tribe, rather than the country.

I venture that they would be much better off if the colonizers had stayed longer.
...They are in a rut, as defined by tribal conditions and traditions. I understand the difficulty in breaking out of that mold; it means challenging everything one has ever known, and everything in one's history. ...
...I have already said that the colonization process, which is one that humanity has performed for all of known history, did not design borders with a view to nation building in the future. So? In some cases it worked better than others; in central and southern Africa there were in that time period no real "civilizations" in the modern sense. There were a multitude of relatively small tribal groups with loosely defined territories within the areas now called nations, and those same loyalties still supersede national identities to a large extent. Hence corruption, nepotism and favoritism by whoever is in power.

Why do insist on calling that a racist statement (which is a far worse insult than the apologist I call you) and why do you insist on blaming all their ills on others?
.....It is therefore also surprising that one of the previously most successful nations in Africa, now called Zimbabwe, is also now one of the poorest dysfunctional on the planet and perhaps not because of the "tribalism" I quoted, but because of the most blatant racism. ...
....That is a classic apology for their failures. The Americas are colonies, but they are not in a comparable boat. Not always ideal in case you are tempted to state irrelevancies, but the difference is that the colonists, who had more stable structures of societies stayed. (Yes they were not nice either, but the result is better regardless).

The most advance nation in Africa proper is South Africa, because of the skills that the colonists who are still there brought with them. Zimbabwe had that too, until the racists there decided to do away with them....

...Governments "left" by colonizers? Governments are legal structures that are an absolute requirement for civil nations. The colonizers left the structure. The locals did with it what they pleased.
...The only thing I have said is that Africa is still hobbled by traditional tribal, and religious, divides which force decisions to be made on that basis first, and what is best for the nation second, or third. Kind of like how the Iraqis behave, to move the scenario a bit.

If you call that being racist, we do have a problem with logical disconnects.
These are racist comments, whether you like it or not. And just because you believe them to be true doesn't make the comments any less racist.

While you repeatedly accuse others of blaming external causes 100% despite my saying very clearly I did not see things that way, you yourself are indeed ignoring any blame on external forces and you are putting 100% of the blame except for a few bad border designations according to these comments on the nature (and you added the religion) of the populations in the countries we are talking about. Your comments about historical interference suggests it was all beneficial. Colonial borders of course, have a huge influence in current wars in the Middle East today. And the benefits you describe completely leave out leaving impoverished millions with no means of elevating their lot in life while a few corrupt officials and a lot of foreign corporations reaped billions in resource exploitation without reinvesting a dime in infrastructure in the countries except for the infrastructure it took to export the resources.

In America, individuals exploited the resources of the country after the Revolutionary War, not simply foreign corporations. Individuals had equal opportunities to advance their conditions in life. And once they established a country and new immigrants came in with less than an equal opportunity, the immigrants were never the majority of the population. By the time the second and third generation of immigrants were born, they were able to merge into the already successful population.

How is that the same for a dirt poor Nigerian living in the oil pollution left by Shell Oil who pays off a few corrupt officials at the top to keep it that way? That peasant knows the people who stood up to Shell Oil were murdered by the army of the corrupt official paid off by Shell Oil.

And after generations of corrupt officials benefiting from such a set up, is it any wonder that such a country as Zimbabwe might adopt a model of corruption after the Colonial government fell? Is it a surprise that the army which kept the corrupt officials in power, and which was paid for by the corporations who were exploiting the resources might still be intact, and that corrupt officials might just be able to manipulate and continue the system left in place by the Colonial government which fell?

I see a different world than you do. And I believe you still see that naive version you think you left behind in high school.
 
One last comment then back to the topic. Didn't things clam down in Somalia anyway, IE without US troops? The violence and tragedy in that part of the world has been flaring and subsiding for at least 50 years that I am directly aware of. The last natural case of smallpox was in Kenya in the 70s and the reason it was so hard to eliminate there was the continual warfare going on between Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia. The world probably should intervene in that area. The Rwanda and Darfur tragedies are intolerable. So was Sierra Leone's epidemic of limb amputations. Considering the scale of the problems, I sincerely doubt our troops in Somalia were going to have much of a long term impact by themselves.



I think it'd be accurate to say your troops wouldn't have much of a long term impact by themselves anywhere. What the UN hasn't quite got the grasp of yet is that in these ravaged areas you need to put large numbers of soldiers on the group to enforce peace so that the environment is safe for humanitarian relief and rebuilding.

It's only the rebuilding and humanitarian relief that can actually produce any sort of long term stability, but they need the temporary stability provided by soldiers to do their work.

Frankly, the various nations of the UN are stupid. They have literally millions of military personnel that mostly lack any sort of real operational experience. Putting 50,000 troops (or 100,000, or 500,000) into Darfur or the Congo or anywhere else would be a simple task for the UN member states, if they wanted to. With that many troops the operation would be relatively peaceful, any sort of resistance could quickly be crushed, and the humanitarian aid and rebuilding efforts (which western countries are willing to pour billions of dollars into) would actually be protected so it would be vastly more effective.

At the same time your military gain some vital experience in real world operations, and in particular working with the armed forces of other nations. And hey, as an added bonus some of your troops might even get some combat experience.

It's a win-win-win situation, really.

-Gumboot
 
OK, so let's look at these comments and go back to a few of your previous comments and the replies by me and others to those comments that you aren't quite getting the point of. It'll be my last attempt to make a discussion of this rather than a wasteful string of erroneous conclusions on your part about my position and maybe an erroneous conclusion on our part about your position, though your comments are consistent.

Here you are ignoring the differences of corporate influence on corruption and oppression of certain populations within the countries in question as well as the massive arms and other tools available to those who wish to oppress the majority of people within the countries.

You sound like a typical communist of my youth, and I had a few girls refuse to sleep with me when it became clear I wouldn't call them "sister" or be called "brother".....

Corporate influence is what is otherwise known as human influence. Do you seriously think there are no "African" corporations doing what you think the nasty Western ones do out of malice and greed?

You really are funny, but you do work hard at it. I'll grant you that. Get laid and grow up. Ooops, did I say that?:cool:
 
Communist? Give me a break! Fantasizing that my specific criticisms of the underlying racist themes in your posts are due to communist leanings is really some denial on your part. What nonsense. I am very much a capitalist.

I recommend two books for you:

"The Ugly AmericanWP" (apparently you missed this one when it came out), and "Confessions of an Economic Hitman", something more contemporary on the subject. Regarding the latter book, it reflects on my personal observations traveling in third world countries.

Take note please, that Perkins suggests changing corporations from within and not via government regulations and I whole heartedly agree.

Again I refer you to my past comment which you have again overlooked,
Yes, poor countries do need partnerships in order to gain capital investments or they might never be able to utilize their natural resources. If only big corporations would have recognized there was more to be gained by raising the standard of living of the poor themselves, thus creating more customers, than there was to be gained from simple exploitation, the world would look quite different today. But big corporations didn't and the world doesn't.
 
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And here's another book that would do you a lot of good introducing you to the real world, "In the Shadow of a Saint: A Son's Journey to Understand His Father's Legacy". It is the story of Ken Saro-Wiwa written by his son, Ken Wiwa. Wiwa Sr was executed by the Nigerian government for his struggle against Shell Oil's operations which left pollution that ruined the Odoni people's land, villages and way of life.

If you don't have time to read this or Perkin's book, a little surfing on the Net can provide you with all the facts and corroborating evidence you need.
 
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Communist? Give me a break! Fantasizing that my specific criticisms of the underlying racist themes in your posts are due to communist leanings is really some denial on your part. What nonsense. I am very much a capitalist.

I recommend two books for you:

"The Ugly AmericanWP" (apparently you missed this one when it came out), and "Confessions of an Economic Hitman", something more contemporary on the subject. Regarding the latter book, it reflects on my personal observations traveling in third world countries.

Take note please, that Perkins suggests changing corporations from within and not via government regulations and I whole heartedly agree.

Again I refer you to my past comment which you have again overlooked,

I read the Ugly American when you were a glint in someone's eye. I took it seriously then too, but later experience showed me there were two sides to that issue; one was the tendency to assume one's self was the the only perfection possible, the other was that someone else was always to blame for not being so.

As to your other reference, I haven't read it. Perhaps I will, but what I do believe is that you think the solution is to, always, find reason why someone else is to blame for humanities problems, ignoring that it is what we are, on all sides, while thinking the garden of Eden always exists somewhere within if only not for the evil ones preventing true paradise. Why can't we just get along?

I haven't overlooked anything, but you have ignored much.

Sleep tight.

An afterthought. Just curious. What's your opinion of Ayn Rand? Not a hero of mine BTW, but a relevant perspective in this context I think.
 
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... what I do believe is that you think the solution is to, always, find reason why someone else is to blame for humanities problems, ignoring that it is what we are, on all sides, while thinking the garden of Eden always exists somewhere within if only not for the evil ones preventing true paradise. Why can't we just get along?

I haven't overlooked anything, but you have ignored much.
Elind, I believe others in the thread will agree, it is you ignoring what others are saying. You continue to battle your straw men in spite of the fact I have told you three times now what I believe and it isn't what you keep saying you think I believe. Fighting straw men doesn't help your case.

..An afterthought. Just curious. What's your opinion of Ayn Rand? Not a hero of mine BTW, but a relevant perspective in this context I think.
I am not a proponent of Libertarianism and laissez-faire capitalism. I believe it is clear that some regulation such as limits on monopolies are necessary.

I think we need more laws prohibiting fraudulent advertising like that of Listerine and Kevin Trudeau. But considering the latest Supreme Court decision which found laws against lying in political ads were unconstitutional, it's clear we need a different approach to the problem of false advertising. Regulations are not the only way to address the problem.

However, it is clear from the problem of false advertising that human nature is greedy and deceit is not an obstacle. So laissez-faire capitalism in practice will not give us the ideal system.

Another place where laissez-faire capitalism has deficiencies if the best system is one's goal is in some public interest matters. For example it is not profitable for a drug company to make new antibiotics since new ones are prescribed conservatively to slow the process of drug resistance emerging. It is however, profitable to make copy cat drugs which take market share from proven markets despite the fact the copy cat drugs offer little if any improvement over the drug they copy. So market forces in this case and in the case of monopolies and false advertising just don't give you the efficiency and best products as laissez-faire capitalism should in theory.

OTOH, capitalism is clearly the superior system in most respects. It is a shame people in the US can't see the parallels in putting health care into the same category we put certain utilities, police, fire and a few other services. It is nonsense that capitalism always results in the best outcome. Superior in most respects, yes, but not so perfect as to be the sole system. We have one of the finest fire departments in the country here in my home town of Bellevue and the county's Medic I system is one of the best, if not the best emergency medical service programs in the country. Now how is that since both are public services? Our best trauma hospital in the region, Harborview Medical Center, is a public hospital. And our library is top of the line.

We have some of these because we have a successful capitalist economy supporting those services, but the services are still public run, nonetheless.

If you want to discuss this further, you need to start another thread.
 
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Elind, I believe others in the thread will agree, it is you ignoring what others are saying. You continue to battle your straw men in spite of the fact I have told you three times now what I believe and it isn't what you keep saying you think I believe. Fighting straw men doesn't help your case.

:shrug: you keep telling me you think I'm a politically incorrect racist and that the conditions in the Congo are the fault of unscrupulous colonialists two generations ago. No doubt you attribute the incompetence of the Iraqi people to Bush alone as well.

I am simply saying, for the Nth time, that tribal based societies, or religious based societies (cultures) are not well suited to nations building.

I am not a proponent of Libertarianism and laissez-faire capitalism. I believe it is clear that some regulation such as limits on monopolies are necessary.

I think we need more laws prohibiting fraudulent advertising like that of Listerine and Kevin Trudeau. But considering the latest Supreme Court decision which found laws against lying in political ads were unconstitutional, it's clear we need a different approach to the problem of false advertising. Regulations are not the only way to address the problem.

However, it is clear from the problem of false advertising that human nature is greedy and deceit is not an obstacle. So laissez-faire capitalism in practice will not give us the ideal system.

Another place where laissez-faire capitalism has deficiencies if the best system is one's goal is in some public interest matters. For example it is not profitable for a drug company to make new antibiotics since new ones are prescribed conservatively to slow the process of drug resistance emerging. It is however, profitable to make copy cat drugs which take market share from proven markets despite the fact the copy cat drugs offer little if any improvement over the drug they copy. So market forces in this case and in the case of monopolies and false advertising just don't give you the efficiency and best products as laissez-faire capitalism should in theory.

OTOH, capitalism is clearly the superior system in most respects. It is a shame people in the US can't see the parallels in putting health care into the same category we put certain utilities, police, fire and a few other services. It is nonsense that capitalism always results in the best outcome. Superior in most respects, yes, but not so perfect as to be the sole system. We have one of the finest fire departments in the country here in my home town of Bellevue and the county's Medic I system is one of the best, if not the best emergency medical service programs in the country. Now how is that since both are public services? Our best trauma hospital in the region, Harborview Medical Center, is a public hospital. And our library is top of the line.

We have some of these because we have a successful capitalist economy supporting those services, but the services are still public run, nonetheless.

The Ayn Rand premise that I thought would have been the obvious common thread for discussion was the one where she holds, essentially correctly, that humanity's advances, scientific and commercial, derive from a very small group of people who make things happen first.

The commonality with our previous discussion, if one can call it that, is that the colonists actually had much to contribute. Remove too many of them too soon and things fall apart because previous competing forces try to reestablish themselves, unsuccessfully.


If you want to discuss this further, you need to start another thread.

No thanks. You outdid yourself there.
 

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