Moderator: Community Team
Which question? You posted two. Only fair that you answer at least one of mine before taking the moral high ground.john9blue wrote:answer the question.Symmetry wrote:Are you trying to take the moral high ground? Do go on...john9blue wrote:do you know why i was banned?Symmetry wrote:Welcome back from your ban J9B.john9blue wrote:yeah, man, you fucking don't. and you really should if someone like you wants to talk about morality without making someone like me laugh out loud.
do any of you, other than pimpdave?
lol really sym?Symmetry wrote: 1)Are you trying to take the moral high ground?
2)Which question?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Was that what you got a ban for?john9blue wrote:lol really sym?Symmetry wrote: 1)Are you trying to take the moral high ground?
2)Which question?
the second question was pretty obviously directed at everyone else other than you (because i already asked you)
i do think i'm taking the moral high ground, but part of my moral code is not wanting my country to force its morals upon other countries, so i still think i'm good
say what? you thought i got banned for having a non-interventionist foreign policy? even OUR mods aren't that bad lolSymmetry wrote:Was that what you got a ban for?john9blue wrote:lol really sym?Symmetry wrote: 1)Are you trying to take the moral high ground?
2)Which question?
the second question was pretty obviously directed at everyone else other than you (because i already asked you)
i do think i'm taking the moral high ground, but part of my moral code is not wanting my country to force its morals upon other countries, so i still think i'm good
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Yes.john9blue wrote:AAFitz wrote:
Yes.are you guys serious?pmchugh wrote: In a word, yes.
Well taking action is pretty damn open ended.thegreekdog wrote:There is a difference between criticism and taking action on the criticism. The United States could criticize the Chinese for human rights violations... and that's fine (ignoring any potential hypocrisy). But if the United States takes action, that's another matter entirely.
I'm still a believer in state sovereignty, which is probably a little short-sighted, but... whatever...
Trade sanctions can have similar effects to military intervention. The hypocrisy (at least from my point of view) comes from when we decide to invade Country X, but not Country Y when the Country Y violations are more severe.AAFitz wrote:Well taking action is pretty damn open ended.thegreekdog wrote:There is a difference between criticism and taking action on the criticism. The United States could criticize the Chinese for human rights violations... and that's fine (ignoring any potential hypocrisy). But if the United States takes action, that's another matter entirely.
I'm still a believer in state sovereignty, which is probably a little short-sighted, but... whatever...
If you mean militarily, the human rights violations better be pretty damn severe. If we decide they are severe enough, to warrant trade sanctions, that's a completely seperate issue. In fact, the hypocricy would more lie in criticizing, and continuing to trade with them and taking no action at all.
Well I agree that not treating all is hypocritical too, but that doesnt necessarily justify not acting at all in some cases, it could more likely suggest acting more.thegreekdog wrote:Trade sanctions can have similar effects to military intervention. The hypocrisy (at least from my point of view) comes from when we decide to invade Country X, but not Country Y when the Country Y violations are more severe.AAFitz wrote:Well taking action is pretty damn open ended.thegreekdog wrote:There is a difference between criticism and taking action on the criticism. The United States could criticize the Chinese for human rights violations... and that's fine (ignoring any potential hypocrisy). But if the United States takes action, that's another matter entirely.
I'm still a believer in state sovereignty, which is probably a little short-sighted, but... whatever...
If you mean militarily, the human rights violations better be pretty damn severe. If we decide they are severe enough, to warrant trade sanctions, that's a completely seperate issue. In fact, the hypocricy would more lie in criticizing, and continuing to trade with them and taking no action at all.
I guess if we start from the beginning we say:AAFitz wrote:Well I agree that not treating all is hypocritical too, but that doesnt necessarily justify not acting at all in some cases, it could more likely suggest acting more.thegreekdog wrote:Trade sanctions can have similar effects to military intervention. The hypocrisy (at least from my point of view) comes from when we decide to invade Country X, but not Country Y when the Country Y violations are more severe.AAFitz wrote:Well taking action is pretty damn open ended.thegreekdog wrote:There is a difference between criticism and taking action on the criticism. The United States could criticize the Chinese for human rights violations... and that's fine (ignoring any potential hypocrisy). But if the United States takes action, that's another matter entirely.
I'm still a believer in state sovereignty, which is probably a little short-sighted, but... whatever...
If you mean militarily, the human rights violations better be pretty damn severe. If we decide they are severe enough, to warrant trade sanctions, that's a completely seperate issue. In fact, the hypocricy would more lie in criticizing, and continuing to trade with them and taking no action at all.
And while sanctions can have similar effects, choosing not to shop in a particular store is quite a bit different than blowing it up because you dislike how they treat their employees.
But doing nothing in this case, is doing something. Enabling, is very much the same as causing, in many cases.thegreekdog wrote:I guess if we start from the beginning we say:AAFitz wrote:Well I agree that not treating all is hypocritical too, but that doesnt necessarily justify not acting at all in some cases, it could more likely suggest acting more.thegreekdog wrote:Trade sanctions can have similar effects to military intervention. The hypocrisy (at least from my point of view) comes from when we decide to invade Country X, but not Country Y when the Country Y violations are more severe.AAFitz wrote:Well taking action is pretty damn open ended.thegreekdog wrote:There is a difference between criticism and taking action on the criticism. The United States could criticize the Chinese for human rights violations... and that's fine (ignoring any potential hypocrisy). But if the United States takes action, that's another matter entirely.
I'm still a believer in state sovereignty, which is probably a little short-sighted, but... whatever...
If you mean militarily, the human rights violations better be pretty damn severe. If we decide they are severe enough, to warrant trade sanctions, that's a completely seperate issue. In fact, the hypocricy would more lie in criticizing, and continuing to trade with them and taking no action at all.
And while sanctions can have similar effects, choosing not to shop in a particular store is quite a bit different than blowing it up because you dislike how they treat their employees.
Can we tell other countries how to live their lives?
If the answer is yes, we need to deal with the hypocrisy of that statement.
If the answer is yes, we also have to deal with what countries we tell what to do and how we encourage them to do what we ask (e.g. economic sanctions, invasion, stern talking-tos)
And then we have to deal with the hypocrisy of invading one country while giving another country a stern talking to.
My reaction, again, is that we should either go all in or do nothing at all. I'm partial to doing nothing at all because going all in would be catastrophic.
I don't really agree. If the United States's policy is to do nothing, it is not enabling a specific country to act in a specific manner (unless perhaps it's enabling all countries to enjoy sovereignty).AAFitz wrote:But doing nothing in this case, is doing something. Enabling, is very much the same as causing, in many cases.
I'm not saying unintended consequences don't matter. I'm mocking the idea that people who are in favour of intervention, or any action really, don't factor in potential unintended consequences to the equation. People might not be able to predict with any precise accuracy exactly how profound those consequences are, but that's because some variables are unquantifiable, it doesn't mean they can't predict the consequences. Or that every potential tenuous consequence should be factored into the equation.BigBallinStalin wrote:I'm pretty much in line with TGD on this one. You can criticize as much as you want, but intervention breaches into much unknown territory.*
* (yes, aradhus, unintended consequences matter -- case in point: the CIA aiding the mujahideen--many of whom joined the Afghan Taliban or split away to go home or form their own groups like Al-Qaeda. Whoops, Unintended Consequences, like omg lol 9-11! ... ).
In other words, because something can't be quantified, it should be ignored--regardless of its importance, whatever it may be. How can you say that such line of thinking will lead to accurate predictions?Aradhus wrote:I'm not saying unintended consequences don't matter. I'm mocking the idea that people who are in favour of intervention, or any action really, don't factor in potential unintended consequences to the equation. People might not be able to predict with any precise accuracy exactly how profound those consequences are, but that's because some variables are unquantifiable, it doesn't mean they can't predict the consequences. Or that every potential tenuous consequence should be factored into the equation.BigBallinStalin wrote:I'm pretty much in line with TGD on this one. You can criticize as much as you want, but intervention breaches into much unknown territory.*
* (yes, aradhus, unintended consequences matter -- case in point: the CIA aiding the mujahideen--many of whom joined the Afghan Taliban or split away to go home or form their own groups like Al-Qaeda. Whoops, Unintended Consequences, like omg lol 9-11! ... ).
Regarding the Afgan situation during the 1980s, the US didn't like the Soviets trying to establish their own puppet government there. In accord with their containment approach, the US would use almost any means to stop the Soviets. The mujahideen seemed like a great choice, so the CIA set up shop with the ISI in Pakistan, who funneled the guns to the mujahideen.Aradhus wrote:Regarding the CIA and the mujahideen, it was some time ago that I read anything on that, and unfortunately for me, I've got the worst memory ever, so you'll have to bear with my clumsiness. What's the argument here? If the CIA hadn't helped fund the mujahideen, then 15/20 years later the people(mostly Saudis) who hijacked planes and flew them into buildings wouldn't exist because the soviets would've killed or subjugated them and/or the people from Afghanistan who fostered the enviroment that allowed this group to exist? If that's the argument, (and I really hope it's not, because it's retarded) how do you know that the Soviets would've prevailed in Afghanistan without the Mujahideen being partly funded by the Cia? Or that the situation wouldn't have been worse with a Soviet victory, or that a 9/11 event would still have happened even with a soviet victory?
Right, how does one show the counter-factual? As in, would things have been better if no intervention occurred? It's a difficult question to answer, but it depends on the topic.Aradhus wrote:I guess what I'm asking is this: How do you measure the impact of unintended consequences from a particular action against the consequnces of taking a different action? well you can't, because you didn't take that other action. Therefore you have free reign to criticize every action taken, piling up every tenuous unintended consequence as an argument for why such and such an action shouldn't have been taken and therefore in the future no action is always best.
That's not what I'm saying. Take the Iraq situation. Lots of people predicted that it would devolve into a civil war. But you can't predict at what point, and how ferocious it is, how many deaths therer will be, etc.BigBallinStalin wrote:In other words, because something can't be quantified, it should be ignored--regardless of its importance, whatever it may be. How can you say that such line of thinking will lead to accurate predictions?Aradhus wrote:I'm not saying unintended consequences don't matter. I'm mocking the idea that people who are in favour of intervention, or any action really, don't factor in potential unintended consequences to the equation. People might not be able to predict with any precise accuracy exactly how profound those consequences are, but that's because some variables are unquantifiable, it doesn't mean they can't predict the consequences. Or that every potential tenuous consequence should be factored into the equation.BigBallinStalin wrote:I'm pretty much in line with TGD on this one. You can criticize as much as you want, but intervention breaches into much unknown territory.*
* (yes, aradhus, unintended consequences matter -- case in point: the CIA aiding the mujahideen--many of whom joined the Afghan Taliban or split away to go home or form their own groups like Al-Qaeda. Whoops, Unintended Consequences, like omg lol 9-11! ... ).
Sure, we're not in dispute that at the time there would be a civil war. IIRC, many US foreign policymakers thought that the Soviets would crush the Afghanis. I think the tide turned, so they gave the go ahead to the CIA.Aradhus wrote:That's not what I'm saying. Take the Iraq situation. Lots of people predicted that it would devolve into a civil war. But you can't predict at what point, and how ferocious it is, how many deaths therer will be, etc.BigBallinStalin wrote:In other words, because something can't be quantified, it should be ignored--regardless of its importance, whatever it may be. How can you say that such line of thinking will lead to accurate predictions?Aradhus wrote:I'm not saying unintended consequences don't matter. I'm mocking the idea that people who are in favour of intervention, or any action really, don't factor in potential unintended consequences to the equation. People might not be able to predict with any precise accuracy exactly how profound those consequences are, but that's because some variables are unquantifiable, it doesn't mean they can't predict the consequences. Or that every potential tenuous consequence should be factored into the equation.BigBallinStalin wrote:I'm pretty much in line with TGD on this one. You can criticize as much as you want, but intervention breaches into much unknown territory.*
* (yes, aradhus, unintended consequences matter -- case in point: the CIA aiding the mujahideen--many of whom joined the Afghan Taliban or split away to go home or form their own groups like Al-Qaeda. Whoops, Unintended Consequences, like omg lol 9-11! ... ).
As for tenuous unintended consequences, If I'm a doctor and I save the life of a car crash victim, and 10 years later that person kills a bunch of people, is that an unintended consequence of the doctors actions?
(I'll get to the bulk of your post later on)
I'll be glad to explain that, but I'd really appreciate it if we arrived at a mutual understanding about why and how I criticize state intervention by citing unintended consequences.Aradhus wrote:I'm talking about the us led invasion of Iraq, people predicted civil war would erupt there.
Anyway, oK, the training and weaponry and so on that the CIA gave to the Afghans? How did any of that contribute to the people hijacking planes with stanely blades?
They had no guns, they needed no combat training. Any monkey could've done it.