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Politics Where we learn not to think less of others who don't share our views |
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#1 | |||||||
Person who doesn't update the user title
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Southern California
Posts: 6,674
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You'll want an information dictatorship to conceal the genocidal actions and obfuscate the matter in any way possible, to anyone. This wasn't around before the twentieth century on the necessary scale -- and in the twentieth century, the communications technology gave the overwhelming advantage to national-scale entities and operations. The balance has now shifted to private entities, down to a microcosm scale, which works to make classic information dictatorships very much harder to achieve in the last century's manner. It will be harder to conceal genocides in the twenty-first -- and without exception, every genocide in the twentieth was kept secret as long as practicable. As for slavery being genocide, that argument too is defective as the objective was hardly one of mass slaughter: it was of monetary gain all round, at every link of the chain. Casualties were plenty heavy, and enough to give the whole thing a bad name just by themselves -- but unlike genocides, the fatalities were not the point of the slave trade. They were overhead, the cost of doing that business. Quote:
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Further, I'll cite Israel and all those privately carried arms. That Israeli daily arms carriers have the enthusiastic support of their state is secondary. But somebody around there does want all the Jews dead or, er, trying to swim to Cyprus... Amazing how mad some people get when somebody moves in and makes a big success of a place. Quote:
Some of it simply betrays an igorance of unconventional warfare, one truism of which is that the guerrilla can use a lesser weapon to gain control of a greater, and turn that greater weapon to his own ends. Organization any outfit can do. The baseline cleverness to manage organization is easily achieved. Success at organization is more variable after that, owing to factors which can be internal, or can be external factors striving to defeat the organization before it becomes dangerous.
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Wanna stop school shootings? End Gun-Free Zones, of course. |
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#2 | ||
We have to go back, Kate!
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 25,964
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I take your point about the Warsaw Ghetto. And the definition of genocide as it applies to the situation in North America during the 18th and 19th centuries. But there have been genocides where the population was not disarmed. And there are many places where the population is not armed in which there are no risks of genocide. As you say: certain things need to be in place. Read this: On Gun Registration, the NRA, Adolf Hitler, and Nazi Gun Laws: Exploding the Gun Culture Wars (A Call to Historians); Harcourt, Bernard E. It's interesting. It takes a different perspective. To suggest that someone who supports gun control in a liberal democracy 'likes genocide' is ridiculous. It is a matter of risk assessment. We have had genocide in Britain: during the 17th Century the British engaged in ethnic cleansing in Ireland (not strictly genocide, but certainly a crime against humanity). Prior to that there was what amounted to a genocide in the late 11th century (the Harrying of the North). The components necessary for genocide do not exist in modern Britain. To be armed as a defence against a highly theoretical and I would argue vanishingly small risk of a total cultural and political volte face does not make sense when the risks that armament would bring are very real and measurable. It would make as much sense as everybody wearing radiation suits 24/7 to guard against a potential nuclear powerplant accident.
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#3 | |
still says videotape
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 26,813
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At times the Plains Indians were better armed than the the American soldiers. It was really a game of numbers not armaments. Emigration doomed the native culture. I'd agree that it was genocide as it was intentional policy. As a descendant of the poorly armed Irish, I'd also call that genocide. That was a case where arms could have made a difference since they had numbers. As far as political about face goes, it would be well to remember that educated populations have lost their collective mind before. The scapegoating of your Muslim population could lead to similar outcomes. It is an interesting question whether that oppression would come from a government or the armed rabble...
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If you would only recognize that life is hard, things would be so much easier for you. - Louis D. Brandeis |
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