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  1. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Azor View Post
    Outlaw,

    1. I completely agree that the Financial Crisis and Great Recession laid bare the increasing inequality of American society as well as the impacts of globalization, as lower-skilled and lower-earning Americans had relied upon real estate speculation to achieve the “American Dream”. As Thomas Friedman observed: “If you were born in Minnesota in the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s, you needed a plan to fail…today, you need a plan to succeed.”

    2. The Russian Federation became the successor state of the Soviet Union, and it would not make sense to either apportion the UNSC permanent seat among the former SSRs nor to transfer the seat to say Ukraine or Belarus. Without Russia on the UNSC, the UN will resemble the LON and start breaking down.

    3. The UPR has never been used by the GA to override a SC veto, nor can I see it compelling military action. The UN is a forum for diplomatic resolution of conflicts and a coordinator of international aid; it has no ability to coerce the great powers either diplomatically or militarily. I could write over 10,000 characters on its “failures” in the 20th Century…

    4. The fact that the United States deplores the mass murder and other crimes in Africa, the Balkans and the Middle East, does not mean that it is responsible for intervening. Was the United States also responsible for mass murder in China under Mao or in Afghanistan by the Soviet Union or in Chechnya by Russia? If the United States is to be the “world’s policeman” then it should receive compensation for this burden and the Chinese and Russians should disarm, no? Many feared ethnic and sectarian violence would break out as the Eastern Bloc crumbled, although the Soviet republics received more attention because of the reasonable possibility of nuclear-armed warlords springing up throughout Central Asia. As for Yugoslavia, you were dealing with a unitary authoritarian state imposed on a variety of ethno-religious groups that had been warring for centuries, and which had “unfinished business” left over from World War II.

    I find it difficult to reconcile your service during the Cold War with your naiveté with respect to American foreign policy. I am not trying to offend you, but you seem blind to shades of gray.

    • In World War I, the United States allied with four empires, including one that had committed genocide (Belgium)
    • In World War II, the United States allied with an aggressive and genocidal empire (Soviet Union)
    • During the Cold War, the United States supported or cooperated with many non-democratic anti-communist states, including ones that committed genocide (Pakistan, Indonesia) and ones that used WMDs on civilians (Iraq)


    During all three periods above, the United States was avowedly acting in its own national interests, on behalf of liberal democracy and against non-democratic aggression.

    Yet the United States government compromised its liberal and democratic principles in order to achieve its main objectives, and of course, no state policy can be pursued without a degree of corruption and selfishness by those tasked with executing it.

    After all, was Great Britain's World War II legacy the defense of liberal democracy against the worst barbarian to conquer Europe? Or was it heroic self-defense and ruthlessly preserving its Empire at the expense of its allies and those peoples it swore to protect (e.g. the Poles and Czechoslovaks)?

    Germany today is an instance where the American national interest and commitment to promoting liberal democracy have come together. Yet for Western Europe, Japan and to a lesser extent Taiwan and South Korea (initially authoritarian) to be priorities, other seemingly less important countries were sacrificed.

    5. Germany’s balance of trade surplus is not merely a product of its model of industrial relations, culture of consensus and embrace of automation; it is also derived from Germany having adopted the Euro, which is far lower compared to other major curries than the Deutsche Mark would be.

    Adversarial industrial relations in the United States and resistance on the part of workers to accept automation, were headwinds that were thoroughly documented in the 1970s and 1980s during the rise of West Germany and Japan, when the latter seemed poised to occupy a more powerful position in the world than in 1941.

    No American presidential candidate or sitting president can tell the people the truth about industrial or manufacturing jobs in the United States, nor do the term limits allow a lengthy and costly strategy of retraining and education to be implemented.
    BTW....the Russian Federation is by even some Russian legal experts not the "real" inheritor of the SU..as the SU was comprised of 128 different SSRs....and the RF was just one of them.....

    Just as the Electorial College was the Founding Fathers check and balances on the common one man one vote of the masses....if at some point the UNSC becomes largely ineffective which it has shown itself to be in Syria...then the UNGA option is in fact a valid option.

    If you take the time and reread the statements just after Rwanda and Srebrenica which where led by the US who then had it anchored that in the UN by calling it the "protection of the population" agreements.....

    So basically I am sorry the US is on the hook for something they pushed and signed and shouted to the globe 10 years ago...what happened in WW1 and 2 or the Cold war in Africa..does not matter to me...WHAT does matter is what the US is on record to do pushed ten years ago....

    Which actually when you think about it....the US reneged on the 1994 Budapest Memorandum and had they adhered to it...we would not be seeing the Russian fighting in eastern Ukraine.....

    Actually viewing the world should be right now a true matter of black and white because IMHO...the concept of discussing and acting in the grey zones is what the Obama WH has been doing for 8 years as did Bush in his 8 years....I personally find working the black and white fields allows for clearer thinking and actions....BECAUSE grey just becomes another option if a strategy is actually being used...

    The military in their planning calls the grey zone 2nd...3rd...4th order of effects......

    BECAUSE Obama and Rhodes spun us so hard using the grey zone for their Iran Deal no one even knows any longer what is really black and or white....

    In some aspects this is exactly where Trump functions..he determines his own black and white and all others are in the grey zone and he pays no attention to them....

    Reference Germany....Germany works because they have adhered for years to what is called..."a social contract" which is now causing problems because under the former Schroeder SPD government they followed the US model and went for a loosening of this "contract" and it is now causing a negative impact overall.....in 2016.

    Secondly the Euro as it was envisioned was to be exactly equal to the USD...one to one....but surprisingly it jumped immediately to a level of about 20-40% higher than the USD....depending on the markets..right now it is 6% over the USD.....I know as my USD salary when the Euro came in was suddenly 25% less when I had my salary deposited in the French bank...

    The EU wanted the equal value in order to give them more export chances and eventually potentially surpass the USD as a global standard currency instead of the USD.......

    EVEN in the face of a Euro worth far more than a USD....still does not explain the success in their exports.....that means if anything they must produce at a range of 6-40% cheaper in order to compete with US goods using the USD....

    Will now give you a lecture on the Euro and how much it has changed to actually now a determinate to actual EU wide growth......

    When the euro came out in each country it was to be pegged to the then national currency....for Germany...2.5DM per euro...in France 10 Francs to the Euro...and so on...for each Euro member state.....which in the first five years was great....Germans were buying wine and cheese inside France far cheaper than it was in Germany and French were buying their construction materials and meats in Germany as it was cheaper there......

    BUT then globalization took over...actually the older term MNC...multi national corporations took over but I like the term TNC transnational corps....and figured out that they could actually demand a single price for a single product in all of the EU....and suddenly the cost of living rose by over 20%-50% in the last ten years in the countries of say France and Italy and remained stable in Germany...as they were high to begin with....

    AND not a single EU leader say a single thing about this development.....

    That is the true problem inside the Euro zone........
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 12-14-2016 at 11:35 AM.

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