[quote]
"Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not; a sense of humor to console him for what he is."
--Francis Bacon [/quote]
I hope you are well rested, Don. And I so like referring to you as Mr. Kissinger. It is so less personal. But dueling is an intimate sport and when one enters the contest they must look directly into their opponent's eyes.
I know we are all still reeling from this most recent blow in common but I think you and I need return to the central issues although we see them so very differently and I see them not at all how you expect me to.
Yes?
Good...
It is wonderful fun Grasshopper to get back in the dojo after all this time, please let us begin round two. Thank you for inviting me back into the fray and this arena.
I see us as having outlined the many faces of death until now though I see this much more as a movement in five pieces, "death, dueling, dualism, diplomacy, and dance," five uneasy pieces. Since I first wrote this much has happened that exemplifies, both the symbolic and pragmatic aspects of death that I wanted to address in my previous statement. The spectacle of human sacrifice is still one that creates enormous social impact and consequence that few ever foresee in advance. It is both the element of Chaos, and death by design.
Please, let me help you with your weapons.
In fencing the choice weapons of the west are foil and epée The foil is considered the subtlest, it is flimsy by standards of weaponry and highly flexible. It is only effective at intimately close distance and only with its tip. It is a weapon of assassins, kings, and children. Its mastery is both the most basic and considered the most sophisticated. Its analogue in the East might be ninja fans.
The epée is more sturdy, but retains much of the finesse of the foil. Its unique T-like triangular shape provides stiffness to mimic the heft and balance of a rapier, but its is blunted so that slashing is still mitigated in effect and it is still the point that is the focus of this practiced martial art. It is the level of epée that most achieve but few partake for it is the foil that is lightest and easiest for use. In dueling foils it is hit or miss but in epée one can find smartness in the hackneyed wounds, points don't accrue as fast as welts. The Eastern analogue might be kendo with a bokku made of bamboo.
Next we encounter a more complex range of weapons. This diverse field that fills this complex middle ground though is almost nowhere any longer practiced. The range is as wide as the arc formed between battle axes and short swords, daggers, rapiers, and double handled twin bladed broadswords.
The reason this area of weaponry is more serious is that usually it is here when a soldier is forced to choose a specialty and foment that particular practice, refining and focusing one's skill with a weapon to meet one's natural talent. Here there are only two objectives, kill and survive.
You may select whichever armament you want but I stipulate for reasons of honor that we only wield what works between us, and none any that kill at a distance. Dueling is about honor and it is also about competitive dominance. Very much like debate.
I suggest the legionnaire's sword. It is balanced, sturdy, highly maneuverable, reliable, very efficient, lighter and much easier to bear in the field than the broadsword. The Roman Short Sword was said to be the first weapon of mass destruction and the first weapon produced by mass production. The broadsword however, belongs in exclusively in the "Final" category of weapons for unlike all previous ones this last category is for more than just killing as the weight and character of the weapon includes the piercing of personal armor and shield.
To talk of killing millions one must at least be able to at contemplate the intimate killing of an individual. Oh I see, perhaps you think it requires much more courage to push a button then to drive a keen edge home between ribs and feel someone's life pour out into your hands and over your flesh.
Or is it just VR mayhem that is to your liking, a little "Hit Man" perhaps, "Road Kill" or is it going "Postal" that strikes your fancy? No, I am not talking about video bytes, I am referring to real bites, and soft flesh and hard bone and actual spilling of blood. Oh yes we are so seemingly civilized as we offer WMD strategy to the world and shy away in horror at the sight of butchery, slaughter, and suffering survivors.
Of course if you are a large person or very small you might prefer the lighter twin headed axe, Marines still carry the rapier for dress purpose but the bayonet is the modern variant, and Special Forces learn the use of various double and single edged blades. But remember no pikes, lances, bows, or pistols.
Simply not cricket old fellow.
Remember it was dem liberals that tried to develop that tactical strategy of killing by remote control. Right? We don't really use Predators in the field. We use Special Forces.
Personally, I am fond of the staff and have played occasionally at that balanced form. My personal preference in blade is the Uchigatana, commonly known as Katana, or the Samurai Sword here in the West. I was surprised to find that a well made machete is remarkably similar to the Roman short sword in balance though much lighter, its weight reflecting the wooden macehuatl it was converted from.
Please select the weapon{s} of your choice, feel free, take your time and feel the balance, the way cold steel transforms hot flesh, practice and understand that you must become one with your weapon.
[quote]
Kissinger says:
Lazarus, the pleasure is mine. Practice does make perfect and the stiffer the resistance, the better prepared ones arguments will become. Sorry about my lengthy responses, I've just been hibernating indoors this weekend because of the cold. Shooting the shit on imminst.org is a way to occupy my mind. [/quote]
You are apologizing to me about lengthy replies how considerate of you. Apology accepted. Now do I have to apologize too? I guess I should apologize in advance to all for caring so much about this issue but I think a lot needs to be written and much more than I've done.
Yes this practice and play between us is quite good, I find it very stimulating.
[quote]
A little history about myself. I have been playing chess since I was seven years old. I view foreign policy in much the same way I view chess. At the age of 19 I left college and went cross country, spent a year backpacking. I really wasn't sure what I wanted to do with my life. When I finally came back to Jersey I had to get a job. I fell into a job as a commercial appraiser. I've been doing that for three years now. It pays the bills. Around two years ago I found a book at a yard sale--Diplomacy, by Kissinger. I started reading it in the mid afternoon. I kept reading straight through the night until I passed out early the next morning. I knew that I had found my passion. After that I read everything ever written by Kissinger. He is a genius. This not to say that I am not diversified, I've read stuff by almost everyone. Currently I am saving my money to go back to Rutgers in the fall so I can eventually get into the field of strategic analyses.
and you wrote:
Hi everyone, my name is Donald (Don) and I am 23 years old. I live in Bloomfield New Jersey which is about 10 miles west of New York City. I am 62.5% Irish, 25% Italian and 12.5% English. I was raised Catholic, but I am agnostic.
I began college at Rutgers in September 97. At the time I really had no direction or idea of what I wanted to do with the rest of my life. After my Sophmore year I decided to take some time off and travel. So I packed up my stuff into my car and headed cross country. Wound up in San Diego. Sold my car which was a high school graduation present. Got some decent cash for it. Back packed around Mexico for a month or so. Went back to San Diego, got a one way to Sydney. Spent a month down under. Hooked up with a group of kids my age and got another one way to Thailand. Spent two month on the beaches near Ko Samui. Partied with a bunch of Auzzies, smoked a lot of Ti Stick Ill finish this post later gotta run for now .
[/quote]
Still you have been mostly a tourist though it does appear the call of going native is heard.
A very similar tale to how I found myself reading Heinlein, though I was much younger. Good luck on getting back into Rutgers. I sincerely wish you well.
I was a wolf child.
I often ran off and left the disciplines and safe confines of the lab after my parents' divorce. I began by roaming the streets and environs of New York City. The subway was still a quarter then and there was little way to force me to comply as my father was too busy healing folks.
This was the 60's after all and I was in puberty. "Be-In's" in Central Park with Santana and the Starship mixed with real war abroad and a very real threat of immediate annihilation. There was so much to watch in the world, race riots, gang wars, and reckless abandon. Yep, I even had to do "Duck & Cover Drills" in the Public Schools but I got to hear Dr. King and the Kennedys speak in person on the street. I had to go look up their speeches much later to find out what I had missed because I was too small to hear over the din of crowd.
Eventually my wild ways got noticed and I was banished upstate to "cool my heels" and it worked, I learned to run wild and naked in the woods too. I also learned to see things very differently than most people I heard talking about what I had seen. I am afraid I stole many of the books I was reading.
I was for the Vietnam War as a foolish child and asked questions even then about the inherent contradictions of affirmative action among my black friends but I began wondering what was going on when I helped triage the wounded with my father after the riots at Columbia University. It was quite illuminating to see phalanxes of mounted police in riot gear wielding clubs march on unarmed demonstrators with your own eyes. Talk about Cossacks: No, no scimitars but trampling works well even without blades.
Have you ever walked from safety into a pending riot thinking how can this be stopped?
I have.
I was a translator for FEMA. A coworker-friend and I helped stop a riot between a half dozen armed marines and a few thousand Cuban refugees at Ft. McCoy one hot summer night in 1980.
They rioted in Ft. Chaffee, they rioted at Ft. Indian Town Gap, they rioted in "Little Haiti" at the makeshift shelters under the bridge there and they were about to riot at Ft. McCoy that night when Bryon and I got very stupid.
You want to talk to me about Carter?
Don't start.
I was there working in Ft. McCoy under lock down inside the fort when the orders to send up the bombers went out three times in one month and twice in one week that summer. Twice that week we went to DEFCON Three status and each time we came back, to refugees with salt on their clothes, hostages in Iran, Soviets in Afghanistan, and Nukes on active launch mode, storms and sleepless nights.
So you think we should just heft a little weight around and everyone will take notice huh? Yes they certainly do. Have you bothered to ask them what it is they think about what they notice?
Many think we're definitely dangerous, and possibly incompetent, if not a little demented.
One of the times we almost killed all life on the planet that week was because of a computer glitch and another time because a meteorite confused sensors on both sides into thinking someone had already launched. We saw the fiasco as our special forces made a spectacle of themselves in the deserts of Iran. Yes as voters we blamed Carter. It was ironically many of the same geniuses of foreign policy that planed that disastrous mission and stayed on into the next administration to achieve such notable mentions as trading cocaine from Latin America for cash to buy guns so that they could supply Iraqi and Nicaraguan Contras with weapons and profits to Dark Op coffers.
It was the next administration, Reagan's, along with many of specifically the same strategists that took up the policy of arming and fomenting "Religious Extremism" in the region of Southern Asia against the Soviets that have now come full circle to manage a crisis, they in fact set in motion back then. They did it to exploit traditional rivalries and divisions within the Soviet Block. In particular they funded the Taliban, Muhajadeen, and a specific group that came to be known as al Qaeda and its leader, Usamma bin Laden.
Now these are the same guys that are going after their own runaway puppet in the way Noriega had to hide from Big Daddy. The easiest way they could justify attacking Iraq is if someone could claim bin Laden was hold up there. The only problem with this is that bin Laden originally tried to kill Saddam.
But what's a little blood between rivals?
Could he be there now?
Who?
O. bin Laden, dats who...
Only one problem, he is smarter than that; bin Laden is ecstatic we are taking out his former foe and creating a possible vacuum for messianic monarchs to manipulate and maneuver in. It is exactly the scenario he has been preparing for and training towards all along. He is getting us to do his dirty work and effectively destabilize the region allowing for power vacuums that his cadre can fill.
Ironic huh?
[quote]
You and Afghanistan! Once again, what did you expect us to accomplish in Afghanistan? There is only so much you can do for a nation that is so undeveloped. Besides, it is not just us in Afghanistan. [/quote]
What do I want from Afghanistan?
I want what we claim we went in for, bin Laden. Oh yeah, he is no longer important. Funny it's hard at times to tell if he ever really was important. From a strategic sense, not a tactical we failed in the mission. We are wining battles and losing the war.
Did we destroy al Qaeda? No.
Did we catch Usamma bin Laden? No.
Did we destroy the Taliban? Apparently and they were a terrible threat. They had mounted cavalry and no effective airforce, tanks, and heavy weapons. Oh yes, a major battle won here.
Did we bring peace and security to the country? No, not really, this is still being time tested.
Have we in fact begun to foment the majority of the populous against us? Yes.
Just look at the results of recent elections in the region. Look at Pakistan and Turkey's results. And at the grassroots level it is much, much, worse. Recruits are begging to be martyred and T-shirts with bin Laden's picture are sprouting up like icons to the Virgin Mary in Mexico and Ché emblems in Cuba.
Yes Afghanistan! We lead a mission into that country for all the above reasons and these as well:
[quote]
Let me spell out reform
Representative government, civil rights, economic prosperity. These are my terms. Are these fair terms?
[/quote]
Now we look like duplicitous over eager thugs that lust after battle to do all the fighting and leave all the real work of the promised and still quite unrealized Nation Building to our suckered allies. That sure is an enticement to bring more on board now isn't it?
And don't forget this is the same political group that has campaigned for decades on keeping us out of the nation building business. Now it looks too many like they can't, or won't get their act straight. Oh yes, trust them they are professionals. They are many of the same expert talking heads that got us all into this mess in the first place.
Nothing they do ever comes back to haunt us. No way could the decisions today ever escalate to unforeseen proportions, nope. Nothing like this ever happened before. We have very "plausible" reasons to deny culpability, anyway everyone knows there was a war on, the Cold War and of course that one is over now, so everyone go home and don't worry we have experts running the show now. They are personally familiar with the protagonists and have a lot of practice in dealing with them.
Lies and Oil?
Why most certainly it is a shame when negotiations deteriorate in this manner, it sure has made it a fact that the real Patriarchs involved have difficulty doing business as usual. The bin Laden family isn't welcome at the White House at this time though they haven't been crossed off the guest list forever. This must be kind of how old Queen Victoria felt after she had to preside over warring prodigy. It definitely puts a pall on the party when the dancers start threatening to destroy one another's cities and governments.
Nobody will credit our arguments for reform if whenever they scratch the slightest bit at the surface of our new found altruism they discover this greasy slimy truth, when we say reform all we generally mean is oil. More poignantly, oil flowing securely NOT just to us, but to our allies, ironically in particular our allies in Europe and Asia.
You have even less likelihood of imposing Reform then Democracy. Does the concept of oxymoron come to mind? It is as absurd as Obligatory Generosity or Mandatory Joy. Please wake up and pay attention, even a primitive bushman is cognizant of contradiction and will tell you to go to hell for destroying his world in order to save him. This situation, despite all claims to the contrary, is NOT rocket science.
[quote]
Mr. Kissinger says:
God, I'm not going into another comparative analyses between the US and Rome. I really don't find it very applicable to tell you the truth. Are there some similarities? Yes, but there are many many differences. Modern times are so different from the rest of history. Our strength is based on economic efficiency and technological superiority, not conquest and agriculture. I just find it hard to make a convincing case one way or the other using Rome as an example. [/quote]
Rome wasn't an agrarian economy based on simple conquest, Rome was the first Military Industrial Republic with a dependency on global free market capitalism and a multicultural populous. Much of your above statements are simply ignorant of history and this bodes ill for you are MORE likely to repeat unnecessary mistakes from the past.
Oh Cicero what was that you said, just give them bread and circuses and the masses will always be content, give them good news and motive, or fears and they will follow you to the ends of the world for conquest and trade. Oh no Cicero today we are so much more sophisticated we all truly think for our selves. There is nobody controlled by the media and everything is openly debated.
Our people are so well informed! Today everyone is so involved in the Democratic Process that everybody votes.
[quote]
QUOTE (Lazarus Long @ Jan 28, 2003)
What of our own nation's illustrious domestic history in all this? Tell us all please of the difference between Caesar and Cincinnatus? And the importance of a League?
you replied:
Cincinnatus--I am ignorant on this matter. Just being honest, I am not all knowing.
[/quote]
No you are not omniscient but I do find you promisingly plain spoken. Here perhaps this will help.
[quote]CINCINNATUS, LUCIUS QUINCTIUS (b. C. 519 B.c.), one of the heroes of early Rome, a model of old Roman virtue and simplicity. A persistent opponent of the pleheians, he resisted the proposal of Terentilius Arsa (or Harsa) to draw up a code of written laws applicable equally to patricians and plebeians. He was in humble circumstances, and lived and worked on his own small farm.
The story that he became impoverished by paying a fine incurred by his son Caeso is an attempt to explain the needy position of so distinguished a man. Twice he was called from the plough to the dictatorship of Rome in 458 and 439. In 458 he defeated the Aequians in a single day, and after entering Rome in triumph with large spoils returned to his farm. The story of his success, related five times under five different years, possibly rests on an historical basis, but the account given in Livy of the achievements of the Roman army is obviously incredible.
http://www.factmonst...e/A0812266.html[/quote]
This Roman Patrician General was brought in to suppress the workers revolt of the Plebians when they began demanding more rights, better wages and working conditions, and respect from the oligarchy, better representation, lower taxes, and more involvement in governmental decision. Class war is an ancient conflict.
The Patriarchy put down the socialist aspirations and insurrection and offered Cinncinatus the Crown of Rome and he shocked the Senate by refusing the dictatorship (all the words for this type of government we use till today come from this time period). He argued he had fought to defend the principles of a democratic republic not to destroy them. In turn he forced concessions upon the patricians to try and alleviate the conditions that had promulgated the revolt in the first place. He didn't intentionally set himself up as a standard of virtue he simply refused to be self indulgent and chose a life of honest dealings, discipline, study, work, and service.
I have raised the comparison between Caesar and Cinncinatus for a reason. I am most certainly not the first to take heed of their important behavioral choices and differences. George Washington found in Cinncinatus's life his inspiration and determination. It was in respect to this long dead General of a lost Republic that he came to the decision to reject the Continental Congress's offer to become King of America. It was in his refusal to accept, and in his own insistence at disbanding the Colonial Army that he insured the beginnings of this Republic that all too many today take for granted.
Early in this thread William quoted Tacitus who said:
[quote]
It is only necessary to make war with five things:
with the maladies of the body,
with the ignorance’s of the mind,
with the passions of the body,
with the seditions of the city,
with the discords of families.
Tacitus
[/quote]
George Washington added:
[quote]
http://encarta.msn.c...refid=762504359Profoundly penetrated by this idea, I shall carry it with me to my grave as a strong incitement to unceasing vows that Heaven may continue to you the choicest token of its beneficence; that your union and brotherly affection may be perpetual; that the free Constitution which is the work of your hands may be sacredly maintained; that its administration in every department may be stamped with wisdom and virtue; that, in fine, the happiness of the people of these States, under the auspices of liberty, may be made complete by so careful a preservation and so prudent a use of this blessing as will acquire to them the glory of recommending it to the applause, the affection, and adoption of every nation which is yet a stranger to it.
[/quote]
The presumption that so much has changed, that we are so qualitatively different and more advanced socially and that our problems are qualitatively more profound then at various times in the past is demonstrably false from almost any and every serious study of history.
What is a true and verifiable fact is that they are QUANTITATIVELY different.
Hence what is underlying motive in this global geopolitical dance is a question of numbers, not principles. I think that what is needed to reach Level 1 social development is precisely the debate concerning principle and recognition that numbers are not the "Prime Directive". Most people are rationally afraid to discuss principle because it is also at the core of what we fight about in the first place but that is exactly why it needs to be discussed.
This leads to the dualism of diplomacy and the reality that there is at all times at the very least, two sides, the thesis and the antithesis of self-interest.
Like they say "inda'hood, Id's jus u n'me babe".
At this very most we need remember that Bob is exactly correct when he admonishes that there coexists an almost infinite set of alternatives to two and when discussing the politics of any situation as this reflects the individual and collective interests of all people. The Socratic application of the dialectic is the source. Hegel is an attempt at refinement of that method of reasoning and I happen to agree with Bob that Socrates' use is more profound and correct than modern man's.
So how has the paradigm shifted?
Backward?
[quote]
Yes, war is morally justifiable. However I must point out that morality is a political argument used to justify conflict. In other words, morality is relative and easily juxtaposed with self interest. Rather than asking whether war is morally justifiable you should be asking whether it is legally justifiable. After all, international law is what has come to symbolize morality since the end of WWII. [/quote]
So here agree we can agree to disagree and still what will stop war between us?
If you feel you are a viable threat to me then do you think that will lead me to not challenging your might?
Why shouldn't I see this as more than a dare, but an intent to dominate?
You see the perspective of the rest of the world isn't necessarily in accord with that of the US. Even adopting this policy is tantamount to forcing a conflict, ironically not only with sworn enemies but with our true friends.
This is a very crucial distinction and one that we will be returning to from time to time but I have to disagree with the basic premise. War is never morally justifiable, it may be ethically acceptable as a risk/reward and question of lesser evils but please don't confuse the two or next perhaps you will be telling how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
"Can immortals condone killing?"
Saille asked this simple question and its profound ramifications are so significant that it does deserve its own thread. It is a significantly more profound question than me and Bob squaring off about the Hegelian Dialectic versus the Socratic Method. For most people their eyes I am sure start glazing at the very mention of the topic titles but you have made an assumption about morality that I think you will find is not rationally supportable, it is merely a lesser evil argument.
There are people who are so convinced that the morality of this question is indisputable that they have forsworn even a right of self-defense. I respect the strength of commitment such discipline requires. I do not scoff at such "Societies of Friends" as foolish utopians and simple self deluded idealists. I find in their humble, yet determined and profound resolve, hope.
As a matter of fact I sense the best path to the future comes more from the strength of their logic rather than from any alleged security from dependency upon weapons of mass destruction.
I am not a liberal because I believe in moderation in all things.
I am not a liberal because I believe in moderating moderation and do appreciate the need on occasion for extreme action but I claim it is the right and responsibility for each of us to make that decision, not our government's.
I am not a liberal because I would prefer not to explain that path of validation in all its detail, though tragically obvious, of where it ultimately leads, I am however confident that you will take us there.
[quote]
Additionally, I am all for a debate of the costs of a war in Iraq. As long as it done fairly. Tossing that $2 Trillion number around seems a tad high, wouldn't you say. Also, note that it is not taking into account the savings we would get from a fall in oil prices after Iraq's supply is opened up.
[/quote]
Actually it is all a matter of perspective and what one sees as their ultimate responsibility. It is about putting our money where our mouth is. Consider that the spectrum for reality simple falls somewhere in-between. You would like to see just the figures at the lower end but let me warn you that once we start we will pay what ever it takes and it will be a great price no matter what.
Just what the final price in blood and money will yet be is ambiguous, and these high side numbers cannot be easily disregarded. In spite of the fact that they only come from the paid experts brought in to analyze the problem by the agencies upon which the responsibility will fall to address the aftermath in all its very personal glory.
[quote]
QUOTE (Lazarus Long @ Jan 25, 2003)
This is not idle threat, civil wars are not fought by the extremist poles of a society they are fought by the vast majority that form a balanced, polarized, and visceral opposition near the center. In other words the majority in the middle. We see signs of such division in our own populace with the last presidential election. Could we see greater division and social strife generated by having a conflict in the Middle East? You can bet on it.
And Mr. Kissinger replies:
External threats tend to galvanize a nation. Another terrorist attack and the divisions in the US will disappear for a while again. The odds of a civil war in the US are zero. Social strife is another issue, but the protests that have taken place so far are marginalized because the majority of the populace knows that these groups are radical in their beliefs. If you think the Middle East could turn into another Vietnam you are mistake. Why do you think the establishment did away with the draft? Some people, especially in liberal democracies like the US, are not fighters. That is fine. Instead of prejudicing their decision by instilling fear in them about being drafted, they should be able to make an informed, objective opinion about war from afar. [/quote]
It is still true that the masses of man seem to still need human sacrifice to come to common cause as they have for oh so many millenniums, tell me again why this time we can't save the virgin?
Explain again why we sacrifice for effect?
When is enough, enough, to address the questions of numbers facing our species in common?
When will we stop with intentional sacrifices made like the "Sinking of the Maine", the Gulf of Tonkien" and even possibly Pearl Harbor?
No you don't think this will tear at the very fabric that binds this nation?
Sadly you are mistaken as to the amount of time the tragedies we are common witness to will delude the mass of the populace into adhering to the party line. This is fundamentally a much larger issue domestically then externally and may be truly at the core of both the most important aspects of the debate as well as the enmity between regional and specific interest groups of the US. It will be tragic for it s a lose/lose scenario and those sacrificed in vain will not avert the greater conflict in time it will become causi belli.
The divisions this is going to create at home will eventually divide families, friends, village, and states. It will create mortal foes. I see this current trend as open threat to the stability and security of this Republic and I see the threat as domestic not just foreign. You bet this can and most probably will cause a war at home.
Regardless of which side one is on, I think we can agree that the fear of a threat to our state is just reason for concern. What we disagree upon is from “whom and what,” comes the greatest threat. Beware of being blindsided to yourself. Plausible deniability is a form of self-delusion and could be the greatest enemy of all.
The whole world is watching.
I agree with you Bob about Hegel in that I don't credit the application of the dialectic with regard to socioeconomics. This isn't just about rich and poor alone; it is about the vast majority of people in between. Capitalism and communism are a false dichotomy. Not because neither doctrine reflects the abstract polar positions of the theory but because the abstractions both have effect in reality, and don't exist in a pure form as any kind of a viable state. They coexist like Relativity and Quantum mechanics. Consider this the physics of politics.
You don't have to see this as a synthesis, just a reflection of reality.
The Federalists won the duel for control of this Nation even when the architect of this policy was gunned down in a duel and the Vice-President tried to secede. Losing a battle doesn't necessarily mean losing a war. One must always compare long and short term objectives. Hamilton gets murdered and Burr eventually tries to break away, his sentiments fueling the Southern Mindset for decades to come, very crucial decades.
Do you see past five year plans Mr. Kissinger?
If so, what vision of the future would you prefer, and what are you afraid of?
Is the idea of a labor in common so frightening to management that we would never make common cause with a foreign land?
This too was said by that Statesman General and fonder of our Republic in that speech I mention above:
[quote]
…Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence (I conjure you to believe me, fellow citizens) the jealousy of a free people ought to be constantly awake, since history and experience prove that foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of republican government. But that jealousy, to be useful, must be impartial, else it becomes the instrument of the very influence to be avoided, instead of a defense against it. Excessive partiality for one foreign nation and excessive dislike of another cause those whom they actuate to see danger only on one side, and serve to veil and even second the arts of influence on the other. Real patriots who may resist the intrigues of the favorite are liable to become suspected and odious, while its tools and dupes usurp the applause and confidence of the people to surrender their interests.
The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is, in extending our commercial relations to have with them as little political connection as possible. So far as we have already formed engagements let them be fulfilled with perfect good faith. Here let us stop.
Europe has a set of primary interests which to us have none or a very remote relation. Hence she must be engaged in frequent controversies, the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves by artificial ties in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities.
Our detached and distant situation invites and enables us to pursue a different course. If we remain one people, under an efficient government, the period is not far off when we may defy material injury from external annoyance; when we may take such an attitude as will cause the neutrality we may at any time resolve upon to be scrupulously respected; when belligerent nations, under the impossibility of making acquisitions upon us, will not lightly hazard giving us provocation; when we may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall counsel.
Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation? Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground? Why, by interweaving our destiny with that of any part of Europe, entangle our peace and prosperity in the toils of European ambition, rivalship, interest, humor, or caprice?
It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world, so far, I mean, as we are now at liberty to do it; for let me not be understood as capable of patronizing infidelity to existing engagements. I hold the maxim no less applicable to public than to private affairs that honesty is always the best policy. I repeat, therefore, let those engagements be observed in their genuine sense. But in my opinion it is unnecessary and would be unwise to extend them.
Taking care always to keep ourselves by suitable establishments on a respectable defensive posture, we may safely trust to temporary alliances for extraordinary emergencies.
G. Washington, Farewell Address to Congress
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I have been known to have had epic battles with my father, my friend but I always listened, I just didn't always obey. Before you get me to embark upon this stated purpose with the case you make I would ask you to reconsider why you think you know so much more today then did the Father's of this Country we hold so dear and why you are so quick to second guess them?
The ambiguity of the English infinitive "to listen" is that to hear does not mean automatically to obey.
You think Washington such a primitive and uneducated clout from the frontier that he could not understand the complexity of the world today?
I in turn question whether in fact most who claim expertise in this matter are not self deluded?
Whether or not those who seek power, do so for themselves and of little higher purpose?
I question whether or not we are being lead to battle to serve MY self interest. Nor do I see these as the true interests of this nation. I perceive us being instead trapped in conflicts of interest by self-serving groups that are merely afraid to lose their powerful economic base. I ponder not only the motives for war but also why the stated arguments appear to be enough reason for some?
I wonder at why so much more appears to be going on then meets our eyes and why I cannot trust those that are claiming to be my protector?
I protect myself reasonable well, thank you very much, I didn't ask for your protection. The best defense as a good offense is an important part of football but as far as foreign affairs goes it is of limited potential and invariable comes to impede progress.