Hey Your screen name is awesomefor 1995.FurthermoreThats a pretty fucking stupid question to ask.So either you're pretty fucking stupid, or you made a lame attempt at a burn through a text equivalent of rolling your eyes.
12/31/2007 12:57:43 PM
12/31/2007 1:06:34 PM
Reading comprehension buddyI didn't mention anything about 'started.'
12/31/2007 1:15:22 PM
You're right. You make the equal error of acting like a World War whose sole premise was entangling alliances and meddling in the affairs of other nations is somehow a case against the relevance of non-intervention.F-.
12/31/2007 1:17:42 PM
ActuallyA logical person would make the case that American involvement in european politics earlier then 1917 might have possibly brokered a peace or at the least tipped the balance of war in such a way as to not lead directly to a deadlock rather then waiting and joining later on anyway but far be it for me to assume you're remotely logical.
12/31/2007 1:20:35 PM
Or, a non-insane person might have posited that the pointless war of attrition was nearing stalemate by the time of America's entry and thus would have largely left a status quo wherein no side was left a dominant power, therefore not leading to the lopsided outcome of the Treaty of Versailles where bitter retribution was exacted, thereby sowing the seeds for the rise of an authoritarian regime in Germany. But hey, I mean, America involving itself in wars which have nothing to do with American security have such an awesome track record. How could we resist?
12/31/2007 1:25:36 PM
Continuing with the What If game, one might think that had our Congress not torpedoed our own President's plans for lasting peace, and withdrawn the US back into a shell, then Europe wouldn't be left to a weak and tired France and England who tried appeasement as a means of containment for an ambitious German Chancellor by the name of Adolf Hitler.This consequently led to a surprise invasion of the Soviet Union which had pretty intense psychological impact on Joseph Stalin and threw half of eastern Europe to the grips of communism.I wonder what would have happened had we reverted to isolationism during the cold war. Clearly, its a sound foreign policy.
12/31/2007 1:31:23 PM
So remind me, then - what was America's compelling interest for being involved in WWI, other than Wilson's personal ambition? Nothing? But... that's a great reason to wage war, right? I mean, the best reason of all! Wars made for actual purposes of defending America - how boring! Nothing shows off what a manly country we are more than shoveling blood and treasure into the roaring fires of war. Especially when it has absolutely nothing to do with our security. But let's get back to the Wild Assumptions game, since this seems to be what you're basing your entire political philosophy off of. So, let's assume now that Congress, easily skeptical of the notion of yet another series of entangling alliances with a demonstrably unstable European continent, decides to accede to Wilson' will. We somehow are now left to make the fantastic assumption that the same nations that in the real world themselves imposed the punitive Treaty of Versailles would have actually accepted the terms of Wilson's compromise and not demanded their own harsh retribution. I mean, nations that did do that thing would totally jump at the chance to amicably rhat about all thesolve their differences with a nation that waged aggressive war against them. There's totally reason to believe that everything would have been sunshine and puppies and love in Europe if only not for that nasty old Congress derailing Wilson's One Great Plan.And hey, how about all those other wars with no relevance to American security we got involved with. I mean, Vietnam - what a smashing success for American power and influence! And at zero cost to America in terms of lives, money, or internal domestic strife. No lasting consequences at all. And, look at Bay of Pigs! Magnificent job there, boys. And hey - just look at what a fantastic success the Middle East is, thanks to our own Cold War policy there - absolutely nothing is wrong thanks to America's short-sighted interventions there.Wow, I'm glad we live in a world of constant intervention: America is totally safe because of it. We don't have to worry about the negative effects of any of our policies or anything, because We're America, gosh darnit: actions have no consequences here.
12/31/2007 1:44:21 PM
your post is so willfully simplistic it's silly to even bother.
12/31/2007 1:47:24 PM
And so, I am left to believe that despite how "willfully simplistic" it is, you can't. Oh, you can say you're just too lazy to do so, but frankly, given the lack of evidence otherwise, one is left to believe you just simply can't.Or you could prove me wrong, instead of just pretending that you can.
12/31/2007 1:55:15 PM
let's start with the first sentence
12/31/2007 2:59:33 PM
The Lusitania - remind me, that was the one where we were shipping arms on civilian boats in direct violation of our declared neutrality - right?Thanks for your A-game rebuttal there, chump.
12/31/2007 3:04:01 PM
whatever. your claim that it was just wilson trying to be tuff is pretty simplistic and wrong.
12/31/2007 3:11:13 PM
12/31/2007 3:14:46 PM
whether those reasons are good enough or not is a different question. but we didn't just go to war because wilson had a personal ambition to do so.
12/31/2007 3:21:00 PM
That's what it essentially boiled down to though. Much in the same way Bush sent us into Iraq, to establish his legacy. Once you make a decision to do something, it's pretty damn easy to rationalize it with dozens of insignificant reasons.Non-interventionism is NOT isolationism. There's a HUGE and marked difference between the two. The former is the idea that bringing positive change and spreading democracy and liberty is best done through commerce (which works). As opposed to our imperialism (our current foreign policy) which aims to do the same thing (but doesnt work, at all).Other than WWII, we haven't been in a single WAR that was warranted. And as DrChaosFace pointed out, even WWII would likely not have happened if we hadn't stuck our necks out in the name of good intentions. There have been a handful of conflicts we had a positive impression on (Serbia comes to mind), but they have been vastly outweighed by outright disasters (anyone remember Somalia? Yea boy we did a lot there, or how about Afghanistan or Iran in the 70's and 80's?)
12/31/2007 3:44:35 PM
12/31/2007 6:39:32 PM
Aye look at the flamefest... let's get back to the original post:
12/31/2007 6:40:39 PM
no, really, it makes sense to go out and arm every group over there in that region, though. I mean, hell, it worked with Osama, right? It worked with iraq, right? It worked with Iran, right?btw, I think I made my mom into a Ron Paul supporter the other night.[Edited on December 31, 2007 at 6:44 PM. Reason : ]
12/31/2007 6:43:41 PM
^ Now we're agreeing on political candidates? I find this profoundly disturbing dude
12/31/2007 6:50:18 PM
bout time you came around
12/31/2007 6:56:47 PM
The problem with what you said, Noen, is how you can claim to be a non interventionist and not be isolationist. For the global super power to ignore civil matters internationally because "its not our business" is dangerous ad here is clear precedent on exactly how dangerous- no matter how hard some of you try to reason otherwise.
12/31/2007 7:40:40 PM
I can't type a drawn out reply on an iPhone but I would argue active American involvement prior to both war would have changed the course ad nature of both. ESPECIALLY WWII.
12/31/2007 7:48:07 PM
An isolationist would say "I won't get involved anywhere, no matter what." A non-interventionist would say "hey, how bout we not go around doing things that will piss people off and then maybe people will stop being pissed off at us..." Ron Paul is the latter.\]
12/31/2007 11:36:38 PM
^exactly. We are talking about pre-emptive strikes, occupying forces and cultural strongarming here.Non-interventionism means we keep the hell out of civil conflicts. We do nothing but stir the pot by getting invoved, getting more people killed and bringing out more zealots who use the US as a symbolic target.Sandsanta, all of your arguments are simply mitigating the core problem. If we didn't get in other country's business, we wouldn't have to worry about the rest of the crap.
1/1/2008 4:44:55 PM
You can't have a dichotomy for nonintervention so that it means intervene on good causes and don't on bad ones. You're either actively meddling in global affairs or you aren't. There's no such thing as 'shades of intervention' and actively not intervening is an isolationist agenda.
1/2/2008 12:55:56 AM
^You're exactly right! We must all deny the existence of the color gray, thank you glorious prophet for finally showing us the light! It is utterly impossible for people to look at a particular political situation and decide based on that particular instance what course of action would be best. Such a thing is inconceivable!
1/2/2008 1:33:38 AM
There's no gray area with intervention...you can't intervene in some cases and not others.Because you know, thats what we've been doing for the last sixty years.
1/2/2008 1:43:19 AM
so anybody see how fox news is already banning ron paul from the next debate? no bias there!
1/2/2008 2:28:07 AM
^^the rules are pretty simple. if a country declares war on us, or attacks, or directly threatens to attack the US, we retaliate. Otherwise, we let them sort the shit out.The "gray" area would be if a country becomes militarily expansionist, aka they begin to try and swallow other soverign nations (akin to Germany in WWII, or Serbia after the separation of Yugoslavia). However even then, history has shown us that getting involved doesnt do a damn thing in the end (Korea, Vietnam, et al)
1/2/2008 2:59:57 AM
Which actually is technically an isolationist policy...as I was saying before.
1/2/2008 11:39:38 AM
I see my rant was wasted on this thread. Pity. Anyhoo...
1/2/2008 12:56:10 PM
HmmmYou just tried to use a Star Trek reference to make a point.I see.
1/2/2008 1:26:56 PM
HmmmYou just tried to be funny instead of making a relevant response.I see.
1/2/2008 5:53:24 PM
I'll enjoy seeing Dr. Paul at the FNC debateOh waitlol
1/2/2008 7:07:15 PM
I wonder what Fox's rationale is behind not allowing Paul at the debate. I mean, what is their "public rationale." It's clear that they don't want Paul to win, but I wonder, when taking the Fairness Doctrine into account, how they can rationalize excluding a man from a debate who within the last month raised 6 million dollar bux in one day and in the month prior to that, raised more than 4 million dollar bux in a single day. Hell, with their slogan of "Fair and Balanced," how can they rationalize it?
1/2/2008 9:04:19 PM
who cares on election day they will get a big suprise
1/2/2008 9:31:46 PM
^ I sure hope so, but will they report it?
1/2/2008 9:42:24 PM
What was Ron's total for Q4? Did he get all the way to 20,000? Also check out the huge aol straw poll (Mike and Ron are close in a lot of states): http://news.aol.com/political-machine/2007/12/21/straw-poll-dec-21-jan-4
1/2/2008 9:58:32 PM
You know, it's been more fun watching Ron Paul's effect on so-called conservatives than on liberals.He's been like the Cocker Spaniel of Liberty, flushing out faux-conservatives from their big-gov't weeds. The Fox network might be the latest quail to show itself for what it truly is. People like Hannity and Rush attack Paul for conservative values that were the bedrock values of the Robert Taft era republicans... free trade, non-intervention, anti-war and low taxes.
1/2/2008 11:37:24 PM
1/3/2008 1:58:23 AM
Erios dudeYour post had no information that I haven't already covered.Except the prime directive.From Star Trek.Star Trek(a canceled science fiction television show)(that had a series featuring Scott Bakula)[Edited on January 3, 2008 at 2:05 AM. Reason : >.<]
1/3/2008 2:05:07 AM
Dude. What do you have against Scott Bakula? Quantum Leap? Enterprise? Both quality shows.Seriously, man. Something's wrong with you if you have no love for Mr. Bakula.
1/3/2008 3:23:55 AM
Kinda like in modern day news regarding Iraq
1/3/2008 3:31:08 AM
1/3/2008 9:48:22 AM
Big day today. Ultimately he won't drop out regardless of result just cause he has a ton of money, which more often than not determines whether campaigns continue or not.But as far as results, I'll be happy if he beats Thompson and Giuliani and that's what to aim for. Here is what First Read said on expectations for the Republicans regarding Paul (and Giuliani).
1/3/2008 10:30:08 AM
1/3/2008 11:53:20 AM
1/3/2008 12:08:16 PM
1/3/2008 12:08:49 PM
I hated quantum leap.And enterprise sucked.THERE I SAID IT.
1/3/2008 12:12:46 PM