Apt, on 23 January 2015 - 07:02 PM, said:
I am not quite as rabid as Studlock came off in that post but it cannot be ignored that America directly or indirectly has had an influence on many of the conflicts throughout the second and third world. In many of the conflicts on that list America has a finger in the pie. America's foreign policies are meant to benefit American interests, not necessarily countries in which America has interest.
America has toppled democratic governments, it has assassinated political leaders, it sells weapons to bad people and lets not forget the fact that you're, I am guessing here, the only "First world" country that sanctions and defends the use of torture upon both non-combatants and soldiers who by the right of the Geneva code are protected from such treatment.
That's not to say that the rest of us are wonderful, Denmark has a shitty reputation for isolating prisoners for example, how ever when Americas government acts like an asshole, it does it on a whole other level.
Studlock, on 23 January 2015 - 07:17 PM, said:
It's was in the stacks in a book of collected essay's so I'll have to look up the authors, title, and publication for you Amp. Might be a few days though
@Nicodimas the measurement of injustice isn't only be measured in bodies (though to be sure America is where it is today because to climb atop the bodies of black and brown people, as well as white women, these aren't refutable facts hence salute that blood soaked glorious flag). America is currently at the center of economic system and culture hegemony that promotes global suffering and perpetual poverty and inequality of not just populations but entire countries. This is not to mention the present regression in terms of women's right to their bodies, the crime that is War on Drugs, or just straight up doming dudes because there black back at home. America is not a 'good guy' anymore than any other massive geopolitical power is. American can and often do contribute greatly to society. I'm of the opinion that America is the largest concentration of knowledge and innovation to ever be assemble. But as a nation-state it's hands have been dipped in the red for so long as to turn purple and wrinkled.
P.S. I giggle every time I read your posts because I have to read it in the slow Texas drawl that Rust has. Cracks me up.
I am not saying he is wrong. I am merely asking for the reflection of is it the State that seems to cause these problems, or We the people. In America, the people were supposed to be given the power and entrust it to their/our electives. The people give the government the power. Therefore, pinning it on the State, seems to be a...the wrong direction. To really move foward, we must share the blame of the state somehow.
If you are going argue against the State actions, you need argue against making the State so powerful as the people.
@ Stud. I am really grasping the situation of economic inequality in the last year. The people that push this are traitors of humanity as a whole. Many reside here, it's pushed through the Stock Markets, and the Financialization of obligations. However, these people hold no regard to other people, they are vermin, but they are *multi-trillionaires*. Follow the money. If the rule of law was upheld in any area in America, they would have went to Jail in 08-09.
(However a Hedge Fund manager can lose 99.8% of someones money and walk away, however if a common folk fails their job this badly--they can go to jail)
Ok I went rant mode...huh.
This post has been edited by Nicodimas: 23 January 2015 - 08:23 PM
-If it's ka it'll come like a wind, and your plans will stand before it no more than a barn before a cyclone