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So the collapse of oil prices, which I assume was orchestrated to hit Russia, Iran, and maybe Venezuela probably had a huge impact on the existing (creepy American ally) government's ability to bread and circus...
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One could not orchestrate oil prices like one could not control the wind... Too big
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I assume too much. The US increased production a lot but not really enough to impact world prices.
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All I'm saying is high production comes because high prices incentivize it and then there was innovation, not because any one person or government has the ability to sit behind a curtain and pull the levers to make it happen.
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Speaking of the middle east, I found this article on ISIS very informative.
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Well worth reading. |
My observation is that Americans, as a group, are hugely culturally biased about who and what the rest of the world is. On top of that, we don't as a people understand or know about our cultural bias. On top of that, we wade into the rest of the word with our bias and expect everyone to march to the tune of our drum, because we don't even know about our bias we can't understand and are genuinely baffled as to why no one is marching to the beat of our drum. It really doesn't matter if it's ISIS, Russia, China, or any other place that's not within our boundaries. Most of the people I now will read that article and begin to formulate ways to get in there and change what's going on...in our best interest of course. Maybe if we spend just a little more money, or maybe if we just keep troops on the ground a little longer, or maybe if we just engage long enough for them to see the error of their ways.
I say all of this to get to this point. The local culture is where this movement has grown. The local culture is where this movement must be addressed. It will take some very different, long term engagement for us in the middle east, North Africa, and Asia to assist in overcoming movements like ISIS. That is only if our assistance is wanted and asked for. I'll end with something the Brits discovered in Afghanistan long ago, most local nationals loyalties cannot be purchased. They can be rented, of course, for short indeterminate periods of time. That in my opinion is all we have been doing with our last 10+ years of engagements with the Middle East and Afghanistan. Renting for short periods of time, some ones loyalty. In the end the local culture is always going to be loyal to the local culture. There ain't dick we can do about that unless we want to set up shop and start having congressmen elected from Iraq. |
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Agree 100%, we followed the example of previous empires in bullying weaker nations into submission. Lots of bluff and bluster then if that fails, send the Marines. When United Fruit said the natives are revolting, an incredulous Congress said, they certainly are. Before communications shrunk the world, and definitely before the internet, we could often convince the second and third world everyone else obeyed us. No more |
Ah, as the collective, condescending, bored sigh of America continues to say "so what???"
So what, good question. So what is that until we understand ourselves we will continue to spend billions in dollars, thousands in American lives, and even more in foreign lives continuing to wonder why the rest of the world just cant see it our way. |
You're right, "so what" only works if I-fish-on-my-side-you-fish-on-your-side-nobody-fish-in-the-middle.
If we insist on meddling, and apparently half the country thinks we should, it would behoove us to get it right. |
The multi-cultural advocates are telling us that all cultures are basically the same, we merely eat different foods and have different skin colors and celebrate different holidays. If there were actually some deeper cultural differences that lead to misunderstandings, they would have explained that to us. Joe you can't go on believing they are "different" because they are brown people. You are part of the problem
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That would suggest that what is being sought is monoculturism, not multiculturalism.
My understanding of multiculturalism - is not that all people are identical and all cultures basically the same - but that all people share an essential humanity and that the varied ways in which cultures have developed to answer essential questions of existence can co-exist and by doing so enrich each other: a multicultural society is one in which multiple cultural understandings come together - it is a constant and ongoing negotiation of shared and conflicting terms. |
It is, in fact, a fault of ISIS that they are not multicultural enough, but... ah shit now we are demonstrating an understanding of them that we can't actually have and interpreting their statements and whatnot
and judging them for their beliefs this post was made quickly and is more of an offhand remark |
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In the rare case where the US put down a red line (Syria's bio-chemical weapons), the result was an outstanding success. You would not know that from so many extremists who attacked Obama for it by reciting Limbaugh wacko extremist mantras. They now will not admit how wrong they were. Because they parrotted extremist rhetoric rather than see facts. That was a rare case where direct US involvement with an ultimatum was necessary. And resulted in world wide cooperation to eliminate those weapons. Meanwhile, the conflict is their problem. US is and should only be a support function. Even Turkey does not yet get it. US only does support when local powers have failed to provide those capabilities for themselves. We did same in Libya. Again, once extremist rhetoric is removed, then US involvement did not happen. Responsibilities were with and still lie with local powers. Then Britian, France, et al discovered they did not have sufficient weapons beyond one week of operation. Even learned that French and British planes must fly from one another's aircraft carriers. Europe must learn that many other countries (ie Pakistan) have more military (especially attack planes) - have more teeth - then those European nations. More lessons learned because we are no longer rushing madly (in Cheney style) to get into or start every war. Its not our job to be world policemen even though Tea Party extremists say otherwise. |
Our New Improved Middle East
There's a few good vacation spots; but, not as many as eight years ago.
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