psi29a wrote:Infamous cut-scene from Monty Python's Life of Brian
[youtube]h1dZ0YddG7w[/youtube]
If you are not offended, then you haven't been paying attention.

Hahaha! That's the worst thing I've ever seen! No wonder it didn't make the final cut. Simply hilarious though.
Buzkashi wrote:The west is the greatest power in the world right now. Its a new thing. The west has only been dominant for what?... 600 years or so? Before that they were painting themselves blue and living in dung huts.
Agreed (well, it's a fact, so it's not there to be disagreed with or agreed with... So, I guess I mean: acknowledged and happy that you've brought it up). However, it also brings up the point that power and the development of civilizations has nothing to do with race/religion/or even ideology (counter to what has been preached in Eurocentric American classrooms for years, and in other countries around the world that preach nationalism). It's more objectively to do with circumstance and context so generally the "rise of a civilization" is brought about through historical conjuncture.
Buzkashi wrote:What I'm trying to say is that the problems in the Middle East have happened before. Its a problem that eventually gets fixed by the people. So many people believe its America or the Wests job to bring civilization and modernization to all these countries. What people forget is that civilization in general started in that region. If anyone knows how to create a functioning society its them.
This seems to portray something counter to the above argument, that somehow a people (due to ethnicity, religion, shared history or experience) can be better or worse at forging a functioning society. The Cradle of Civilization in Mesopotamia was just as much due to historical conjuncture and context as was the Rise of The West.
Buzkashi wrote:What we as Americans need to do is get our greedy hands out of the other parts of the world and let them recoup and solve there problems. Shit it might take decades, but it'll get better.
Improving the quality of life of a people is far too complex an undertaking to be discussed succinctly, so I can't say I disagree with you. One way of helping the people of the world is to leave them alone to work out their problems for themselves. I certainly would agree that most Western policies have accomplished nothing except to add fuel to the fire, not least of all due to their true objectives which have all too often been motivated by greed. But I would still like to stay open to other possibilities as well that run short of either extreme: war or indifference.
Facade19 wrote:Well Brainpiercing if some Middle Eastern countries would receive a second Marshal Plan (or some plan similar to that) I am sure these countries would be able to build themselves just like Germany was able to do so after WWII with plenty of U.S. aid.
I agree, these are the kinds of policies that move us forward toward cooperation and mutual benefit.
Brainpiercing wrote:Most probably the middle east won't leave us alone in return.
psi29a effectively addresses why the threat to the US from
war (or an attack from a country's
government) is greatly exaggerated in American society, but I think the real issue is the fear of terrorist attacks (which work outside of country to country interactions, and are thus free from the restrictions imposed by Game Theory and Rational Choice models, in this context), ie. If we move out of the Middle East, then we'll just be leaving ourselves open to another 9/11. I don't agree with this rationale, of course, but I believe it's important to explain why:
http://www.tkb.org/
The above is a link to the Terrorism Knowledge Base which catalogues global incidences of terrorism. There you can graph for yourself (I wish I knew how to upload an image) the number of terrorist incidents committed globally (select "Region" when prompted to select a category by which to graph and later select all regions) between 1969 and present day. You will see that after America began it's Global War on Terror, the global number of terrorist incidents increased and has increased many fold since then. This increase also began at the end of a global low of terrorist incidents, which occurred during the Clinton years, a time when American foreign policy had been comparatively more conciliatory (which hawks saw as creating an impotent America) (barring Operation Desert Fox, which lasted only four days and was nothing compared to the scope of the wars started during the Bush years especially in regard to the number of innocent people effected). Obviously there is more to the story of global politics and this is a drastically simplifying model of politics, but I think this one piece of evidence (of many out there, if you are well read in foreign policy and international relations) shows fairly clearly that a foreign policy of war and retribution, though simplistically seeming to be a good way of stopping terrorism (ie. punish the bad guys), is actually quite counter-productive to this goal.