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#1
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Are 'middle eastern radicals' a threat to world peace? Yes, quite possibly, but so are supporters of US quasi-imperialist tactics, and uncritical supporters of the State of Israel. And the latter have more weapons. |
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#2
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It would be nice to see religion and politics kept out of a forum thats dedicated to an online gaming community that promotes mutual respect, fun and fair play.
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#3
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Seriously, this whole debate arose from someone suggesting that IL-2 should model nuclear weapons. Do you think that neither religion nor politics are relevant to such a question? |
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#4
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PSSSST, that's why we are the world's last remaining super power....for about the next five minutes lol. If things continue as they are now, we are on the decline and will be looking up at China. So not to worry. I'm not sure about the quasi imperialism stuff because I certainly haven't received my share of the ill gotten booty .I think it is telling that you believe that the US and Israel are as dangerous to the world as Iran, N. Korea, or China. Let me ask you this, can we pretend for a second that we transplant every Israeli to the American west? Hell, we have huge tracts of desert we don't use. Let us also pretend that we pull out every foreign soldier from the Middle East. Lastly, let's pretend that renewable fuels were available just a bit cheaper than oil. What would the world look like? Would there be peace in the Middle East finally? Would the radicals fall by the wayside? Would the rest of the world be safe from the leaders in Iran or Alqaeda? Could we all just get along? If you can answer yes to those questions, you are a great optimist. Splitter EDIT: Drewpee (great screen name, BTW), this is relevant because however one views the situation, we are repeating history from some viewpoint. Last edited by Splitter; 08-29-2010 at 04:27 AM. |
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#5
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Its a game
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#6
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I see little point in discussing your last post, Splitter. It makes little sense alongside your previous ones. I'll just leave you with this to think about:
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(P.S. Drewpee, history never repeats exactly, contrary to what Splitter suggests. Indeed, Marx suggested that history occurs first as tragedy and then as farce. For the sake of humanity, I hope he's right.) |
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#7
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I whole heartedly agree that alternative fuels are a must. I am not afraid of the oil running out, we are a long way from that (we have plenty here, btw, we are just not allowed to tap it). I am afraid of it being cut off. Nations do go to war over resources, especially when those resources are essential. That's part of the reason Japan chose war. It's part of the reason Germany invaded certain areas. If the oil were cut off tomorrow, countries that have been benignly bickering for decades would suddenly become allies again. While this is a game, Drewpee, there is not a time when I get flamed or fail to land a wounded bird on the deck that I don't think about pilot's who did it for real. To me personally, playing at war without trying to understand how wars get started, fought, and ended is just irresponsible. I'm not knocking anyone who doesn't look beyond shooting down simulated enemy planes, it's a personal feeling. Call it a mental exercise in seeking understanding. Splitter |
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#8
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I'm interested that you write "Nations do go to war over resources, especially when those resources are essential. That's part of the reason Japan chose war". Was Japan justified in going to war for 'essential resources'? Was Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor justified in consequence? |
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#9
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Well, because they were trying to expand their empire. Western powers protested their aggression by refusing to sell them the resources they needed to wage the wars they were fighting. In turn, the Japanese decided to go south to capture the resources they needed. So if one looks back only to the embargo, the answer would seem to be "yes", they had to go to war to get the resources needed. But going back just a few years ealier, it becomes apparent that the real cause for war was Japan's perceived "right" to unite Asia under their emperor. Other countries were taking away their ability to wage war on their neighbors by denying them resources to do so. Therefore they were not justified in attacking Pearl because their need for resources was mandated by their aggressive effort at expansion. They brought the embargo on themselves. The situation also shows that embargoes and sanctions usually don't work against a determined foe. Such actions may even push them over the edge into violence. A different question is whether or not the Japanese were "smart" in attacking Pearl. As it turned out, they "awakened a sleeping giant" and it cost them dearly. However, if they had caught the carriers in port and followed up their attacks, it might have been years before the US could have put a large enough force at sea to challenge them. It might have been too late by then. Besides, if they had hit the US hard enough, the US attention would have turned to defending it's own west coast. The US might not have even been motivated enough to do more than assist Australia and other nations in Japan's path. Here they showed that to win, you actually have to beat the foe and not just wound. They wounded the US Pacific forces, but they did not beat them hard enough to make them quit. BTW, when a foreign leader declares that destroying other nations is his goal, I tend to believe him. When he goes about acquiring the means to make that threat a reality, he totally convinces me that he is a threat. If he is just full of bluff and bluster then he is playing a dangerous game. Splitter |
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#10
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Given your endless analysis of politics as war, or potential war, between nations over finite resources, I'm beginning to wonder whether my earlier rejection on your parallels with the 1930s was unjustified. Nothing in your analysis even contemplates that US foreign policy could have been wrong. The 'sleeping giant' (that incidentally had been awake enough to impose sanctions on Japan) once aroused can stomp around the Pacific putting the world to order, without any need to consider the consequences. This reminds me of nothing so much as a Godzilla movie, where abstract monsters engage in physically-implausible combat, and a victor emerges by throwing his enemies to a painful death, or by frying them with some unlikely death-ray. Sadly, this denial of the humanity of ones opponents, and assertion that oneself possesses superhuman powers, is all too familiar to students of 20th century history. Are you actually incapable of believing, even as an abstract proposition, that US foreign policy might be mistaken?
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