Okay ... easiest part first ...:
TexasCowboy wrote on 22
nd Jun, 2014 at 1:39pm:
The US has been involved in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia, central America and south America. Lao people to this day are killed every year by unexploded bomb ordinance from the war. Areas of Vietnam remain contaminated by Agent Orange.
As for the Iraq War, the country was stable under the Sunni tyrant Saddam. Now the country is worse off than before the US came. Afghanistan is also in a state of turmoil and disrepair and the current regime has even been overheard negotiating a contingency plan with the Taliban.
Yes. I agree. For the most part, you are just filling in a few of the details of what I already said.
Note: You are conversing with a person who had his conscientious objector status approved while the U.S. military was still in Vietnam.
I have very mixed feelings about that conflict in particular. Much of what the U.S. did there was wrong. But only some of the motivation for doing it was perhaps wrong. And to claim that the U.S. acted as a sole aggressor would be just plain silly, as well as blatantly disingenuous to the people of the local region. A number of my current friends are Vietnamese. Others are Lao. All are grateful for what the U.S. attempted to do in Southeast Asia and many of their families participated. To point to the conflict in Vietnam and say, "Look! It's obvious that the U.S. is just plain evil to the core!" as many people do is to be inexcusably ignorant of the complexity of the situation.
And now for parts that are oversimplified to the point of being horribly misleading:
TexasCowboy wrote on 22
nd Jun, 2014 at 1:39pm:
The warmongering nature of the United States is the reason it has so much power.
Oh, really? That's "the" reason? There aren't other reasons? How about the previous century's worth of economic and industrial development? How about a century worth of influx of vast numbers of ambitious people who wanted to leave the oppression of their homelands and do something different with their lives? (Yes, it may surprise some people to learn that America did not invent oppression.)
If a "warmongering nature" is "
the" reason for power, what about the "power" of other warmongering nations like, say, Iraq, where, as I pointed out, people are STILL being killed every single day, sometimes in massive numbers? ... and not just by unexploded ordinance. They're being hunted down and killed by their neighbors.
Yes. As I already said, the U.S. royally messed up the situation in the Middle East. But "warmongering" alone as "the" source for "power"?? No. That just plain doesn't make any sense.
TexasCowboy wrote on 22
nd Jun, 2014 at 1:39pm:
A private weapons industry sprung up during WWII to meet the demands of the US military. After the war, lobbyists on behalf of the weapons industry argued to congress to maintain the high military budget, citing the Soviet Union as a genuine threat to the free world.
Yes. And the Soviet Union was a "genuine threat to the free world." Ask my Polish friends if you don't think so.
The "domino theory" was not just a fabricated and imaginary excuse for U.S. militarism. It was an accurate description of active and ongoing Soviet aggression for quite a few decades.
The U.S. presence in Europe is not entirely unwanted and is certainly not just "U.S. imperialism," although one could say it is that to some extent also. But things are not that simplistic. In fact, some people in Poland think that the U.S. presence should
expand and that the U.S. should have bases in Poland. Especially now.
TexasCowboy wrote on 22
nd Jun, 2014 at 1:39pm:
In the final analysis, the United States is a country founded on its practice of slavery and genocide. The land was taken from the natives and worked by slaves from Africa.
"Founded" on "slavery"? Really? I guess that's why the U.S. economy completely collapsed 150 years ago when the U.S. decided to end slavery and has never recovered since.
Are you actually serious about this statement? Do you not know anything about the rest of U.S. history? Motivations for people coming here? The rest of the economic and social development of the country? The wide variety of people who did so many different kinds of things to build the country?
And as for the slavery that did exist: At least the British and Spanish
purchased their slaves (for the most part)
from black Africans who rounded them up and owned them. Many of the other countries in which slavery has been prevalent in one form or another (which includes, by the way, perhaps the majority of the countries on Earth) have had to go and conquer them and haul them off their land all by themselves.
And note: Although it took the "civil war" era to outlaw slavery itself, the slave trade with Africa was abolished by the U.S. a number of decades previously. Most of the slaves were brought to those states where it was legal before the U.S. declared independence from Britain. And slavery was never legal in all of the states; it was only legal in the southern states.
And those lands where the English and Spanish purchased their slaves? Yes ... slavery is
still rampant in many of those places.
TexasCowboy wrote on 22
nd Jun, 2014 at 1:39pm:
The land was taken from the natives ...
Name a land anywhere in the world which has not been "taken" by one set of people from another set of people.
I dare you.
You will fail.
Even if you go back as far as Europe being "taken" from Neanderthal tribes 20,000 to 40,000 years ago.