If anything, it promotes inaction, something I think is highly underrated in this world. People that act cause trouble, people that do not act cause no trouble. It's not very complicated.
I dunno. The world can be a pretty complicated place sometimes. :) I'm pretty much a pacifist through and through - if someone punched me in the face, I'd walk away rather than fight back. I would agree that the US uses action far more than it should in foreign matters, and doesn't value inaction nearly enough. So in that sense I would agree with you. But I don't think it's that black and white - the world rarely is. There are certainly situations where I believe inaction is far worse than action.
I find the question of overthrowing evil dictators to be an interesting and very difficult one. I generally favor a much more isolationist policy, arguing that if we worry more about ourselves, we won't piss off the rest of the world so much. But what about countries where clear human rights violations are happening on a daily basis. There are plenty of smalltime dictators in Africa and elsewhere that are slaughtering their own people. Is it better for us to get involved and try to give those people a better life, or is it better to sit by and let them die horrible deaths? If your neighbor beats his wife on a daily basis, is it ethical to just sit by and let it happen, or is it worse to meddle in other people's affairs?
These are difficult questions for me and I don't feel like I have all the answers. On the one hand, you could argue that it's completely unethical to take no action and let atrocities happen when you have the power to stop them. On the other hand, it's rarely that black and white, and there's generally some bad consequence of taking action too. Or where do you draw the line? If somebody spanks their kid too hard, do you step in or call the authorities? How hard is too hard? Or is there no limit and should you stay out of it no matter what?
I have no easy answers. Life is complicated.
I don't think voting even matters. Money and power matters. Political presitge and influence matters. Corprate holdings matter.
Agreed. The US is effectively an oligarchy. Nobody can attain a position of significant political power - certainly not enough for that one person to singlehandedly effect a major change - without have lots and lots of money. We're ruled by the rich and the interests of megacorporations. No argument there. I can be pretty jaded at times about how the political system in this country is nothing but a bunch of grown men and women acting like babies, wasting our money to play their little power games instead of focusing on real issues...
But even then, I don't believe that voting is a hopeless waste of time. It can certainly have a major impact at the local level - and really, that's where it most strongly affects most people on a day to day basis. Of course any single vote is statistically insignificant in the national election. It's all about numbers, and without the total sum of all those numbers, things could be radically different. On an aggregate scale, votes do make a difference. And not only can I add my personal vote to the tally, but I'm free to go out and persuade others to do the same. If I amass enough support, then I can make a measurable difference. I'd rather have that than live in a country where I truly have no choice.
And I don't think anyone should be held responsible for extreme actions in office that could not have been easily predicted based on the candidate's campaign or past history.
Not easily predicted? His family are oil tycoons. His father stirred up all sorts of trouble in the middle east. If you didn't see a war in the middle east coming, you're more blind than I had imagined.
First, let me say that I was talking in general terms, not specifically about Bush II. That said...
A war in the middle east may have been predictable given his background, but I believe under the right circumstances, it could have been totally justified. I do think Afghanistan was certainly necessary. On the other hand, Iraq was definitely not justified by the "evidence" presented, and I believe grossly mishandled, but under different circumstances it could have been. Personally, I think Bush I should have finished the job in '91. He had every reason to - Hussein is a bad guy (I don't think anyone's gonna argue that) and he invaded another country. Should have been removed right then and there. Done properly, his people would have been much better off for the last decade.
Bush was fated to screw the country up. Saying he has no history of screwing up is a lie. To say we had no prior warnings that something foul was afoot is equally false. Bush was, is and will always be a bad choice for president, and anyone that supports him is tainted by his actions. Ignorace is not always bliss.
I agree to a point. He was a miserable failure as a businessman, and to this day I believe he won the Republican nomination primarily on name recognition alone. Too many people saw the name George Bush and it rang a bell. It sounded presidential (for obvious reasons of recent history), so people voted for him in the primaries. I thought McCain was a far better candidate and would have voted for him, had he been the Republican nominee in 2000. Instead, I didn't vote Democrat or Republican in either of the last two presidential elections because I felt that both major candidates were poor choices for the job (but I did vote - Hi, Hedgemistress). :)
Taking this attitude to its logical extreme, there's always an extremely small chance a parent could unknowingly feed their child contaminated food that could kill him/her. If that were to happen, by your logic, the parent is partially to blame. Thus, not feeding the child frees the parent of that responsibility.
Yes. The parent is partially to blame. They could perhaps, I don't know, check it before feeding it to them? Not feeding the child would relieve them of the responsibility of poisoning their child. Both points I agree with.
Well, then I disagree. It's physically impossible to check every bite of food your child eats without eating yourself. Nobody has a lab in their home capable of detecting every possible contaminant. Thankfully our health codes and standards are good enough that this generally isn't an issue. My example was contrived simply to make a point, and since we disagree, I'll move on. :)
It's like saying the senile and mentally retarded affect who is president because they don't vote. It's like saying felons affect who is president because they don't vote. Others choices hold more sway over their lives than any non-choice.
I would say that the senile, retarded, convicted felons, etc, don't apply here because they can't (and rightfully shouldn't be allowed to) vote. My point was about people who have the opportunity to vote. Again we disagree, and I'm ok with that.
I see it like the amount of responsibility I carry casting a vote is ten-thousand fold more than the responsibility I carry by not voting.
And I see it as roughly equal responsibility. That's one of the cool things about the world - so many people with different points of view, and with many issues, there's no one right answer (some issues I do believe are more clear cut, and some people disagree on those - go figure!). It's why politics is such a hotbutton subject to begin with. And it's why we'll never have a utopian society where everyone's 100% satisfied how things work. Some people get all worked up that their vision of what's right isn't being fulfilled closely enough. Whenever I start feeling like the world is going to hell because of <nobr><insert idiotic behavior of some group here></nobr>, I just take a step back and remember that that's what makes life so interesting. Sometimes dangerous and bad, but interesting nonetheless!
Good discussion!
well thats just plain rude. and who is this mysterious "we"?
this election does not decide my leader. no presidential election will ever decide my leader. whoever wins is not my leader. they are the president of the country that i live in and nothing more. i am confident in my abilities to lead myself, however, some people are not so confident and need a leader to tell them what to think.
what is immature? to be able to decide for yourself? or to follow a leader that tells you what to do and think?
good for them and even better for you. but, i am not them and i am not you, so that touching story of yours has nothing to do with my reasons for not voting.
you don't seem to like people that complain, but, america wouldn't be here if it weren't for complainers.