Irrelevant, as I was disputing
"No other nation in the world puts more pressure on governments to treat their people better than the U.S., (...) "
The U.S. rarely does or did so at all. It's at times the cover for what it really presses for, though. The hypocrisy of opposing evil only when it's not useful is overwhelming.
The mere words don't mean much. That's why the U.S.'s track record in this regard has such a weak pro side.
It's very easy to answer: Greeks, Frenchmen, Englishmen, probably even Germans.Few people in the U.S. to include myself claim our country is perfect and that serious mistakes haven't been made throughout our history, but I find it hard to argue with the claim that no nation in history has done for the betterment of mankind.
The power of philosophical and conceptual advances originating from these countries is much greater than whatever feeble attempts of good-willed and at the same time not utterly inept foreign policy the U.S. can bring up to compete.
You made a general claim, so there's no reason to limit the answer to a specific part.If you have a particular point you like to make about German foreign policy please make it.
It doesn't. The problem is that all the bad stuff outweights the good stuff in my opinion.True, this wasn't a shinning moment in our history, but it doesn't erase all the good we have done over the years either.
Opinions may vary, but I suppose it's only possible to see more positives than negatives by assuming more horrible things would have happened without this or that meddling.
Then again, keep in mind that your country almost blew up the world in a conflict/rivalry which it hyped up itself and in which it fearmongered superbly, vastly exaggerating the problem.
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