Christina Anikari wrote:Also i would like to contest that people will not complain should the US not involve itself in the rest of the world. The French and British seemed pretty pissed that the US was sitting on its hands for years during both world wars and nobody liked the slowness with which the US involved itself in finding a solution to the German post-war depression in the early 20ies. And then imagine how people would feel if they already have the perception that the US has created the mess they are standing in now or the reaction of countries like Iceland that depends on the US for defense. For that matter how do you think the Taiwanese and the South Koreans will attack if the US military just pack up and leave? Not doing anything when you sit on the amount of power the US does is exactly the same as doing something in regards to people being pissed and it will likely happen in a way that leaves the US weaker and many regions of the world even more unstable.
First of all, I said they might complain, but it wouldn't be a strong criticism. They wished we had gotten involved in WW2 sooner, but most people didn't hate us for it. Second of all, that's a bad example anyway. If Ron Paul had been President, he would have allowed Congress to rule on the matter, just like the constitution say, and if the Congress voted to go to war we would have. This is how things should be done.
So far as, "not doing anything is the same as doing something," I have no choice but to laugh. You can't see it, but trust me, I am. Since you were the one the bring up the WW2 example, let me ask you a simple question. How many Europeans hate the Swiss? When Germany was taking over Europe, the Swiss were in a position to help. They were in the region, they have a large military thanks to mandatory participation, and they even had a vested interest in it as their neighbors were the ones who were being conquered. They could have helped significantly, but did not, and no one gives it a second thought. This is how the world works. Doing something costs money. Not doing something doesn't. Doing something is serious grounds for anger and hatred. Not doing something is grounds for annoyance. If you really want to debate this, I'll be happy to show you some examples, but I just don't feel that it's worth either of our time unless you press the issue.
Now, as far as Iceland, Taiwan, South Korea, (And to add a few) Saudi Arabia, Isreal, Japan and Germany, countries that we have taken it upon ourselves to defend, how much of the world should we stretch our armies across? Stretching an army too thin is the number one reason for empires being defeated militarily, the most basic key to a strong national defense is to have plenty of troops ready to deploy in defense. Having our troops around the world, to the point where even the border guard is in Iraq instead of defending our country, obviously weakens our defense immensely. And the more pressing question is that of funding and troops. How long can we keep our troops in these countries? How long should we defend others and ship billions of dollars overseas? I think it makes sense that these countries should defend themselves like every other nation. We cannot afford to defend them. The simple question is, why should we weaken our national defense and bankrupt ourselves to defend other nations who would likely be perfectly able to defend themselves. They merely don't because they have us to take care of them. Besides, we are friends with these nations and we would be engaging in diplomacy. We could make it clear through diplomatic means that we would not stand for these countries being invaded. North Korea wouldn't invade South Korea with us looming over them, even if we had moved our troops out. And in the mean time, our national defense would be boosted and South Korea would get its own military to defend itself.
Christina Anikari wrote:And the way the US truly throws its weight around is not the military, it is the economy. It is trade policies and financial support that keeps dictators in power, not American forces. If anything the American forces weakens said dictators by breeding public dissent. If this power is kept then the holes that the US army has plugged, even though those holes have in many cases been created by the US army, will spring open, increasing instability without the US actually stopping its interference in the affairs of other countries. Without it the US will either supporting dictators through trade, at least as long as free trade is upheld, and it will lose much of its diplomatic leverage making it harder if not impossible to do anything through diplomacy. In the end the net result will be political isolationism, even if the money flows freely. The US simply has such an economic weight that any piece of trade policy, even the decission not to have any, on the part of the federal government will result in the US getting involved in the affairs of other countries and dictating their behavior. Either by still deciding who is worthy of trade and who isn't or by accepting any behavior by any group as long as it has money.
Okay, this is the worst slippery slope argument I've ever seen. You really like your fallacious arguments, don't you? First of all, Ron Paul would have some tariffs. This alone provides large amounts of diplomatic leverage. Second of all, giving out free money to the world doesn't help us. Cut off foreign aid unless we have a really good reason. Third, you are assuming that the entire world will explode if we go away. Of course, this is ignoring the fact that things aren't exactly peaceful now. Exactly what do you expect to happen that isn't already happening? Israel isn't going to be invaded, they're a nuclear power. Saudi Arabia may overthrow their dictator, but I'm not sure that would be a bad thing...
Anyway, Free Trade with people is not supporting them. On the other hand, sanctions directly hurt people. Not governments, so much, but people. Do you think that Cuba being cut off from America is hurting Castro with his palaces or the common person more? Claiming that free trade is bad because we may trade with bad people is just ridiculous and even ignores the facts of the matter.
Christina Anikari wrote:And as a final side note then i am not suggesting that the Libertarian party is some secret cabal controlling wikipedia. The mere suggestion of that is ludicrous. What i am suggesting is that through repeated use of the word in public discourse then Libertarians, and possibly other groups as well, has had luck in planting the word non-interference as a substitute for isolationism. The same way that nationalists in the post-second world war period has had luck in selling patriotism as something different than nationalism, despite the two words previously being synonymous and the content of them is still largely the same just with a different normative judgement.
Once again, I refer you to the root word.
i·so·late /v. ˈaɪsəˌleɪt; n., adj. ˈaɪsəlɪt, -ˌleɪt/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[v. ahy-suh-leyt; n., adj. ahy-suh-lit, -leyt] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation verb, -lat·ed, -lat·ing, noun, adjective
–verb (used with object)
1. to set or place apart; detach or separate so as to be alone.
If you talk to people, travel, and trade with people, you are not alone, you are not isolated. This is a very simple concept. And now you're trying to imply that those diabolical libertarians were secretly "planting" the word. Once again, can I have some of what you're smoking ? Whatever it is, it's got to be strong...