Krypton
Permanent Fixture
- MBTI
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There's been a lot of talk about our involvement in the Middle East, and whether it's a good or a bad thing. I, personally, can see both arguments well enough, but I'd like to come to a bit more of a resolution on how the US should involve itself.
One the one hand, there have been near-constant problems in Iraq since our decision to invade, and our drone strikes motivate future terrorist attacks to some degree. On the other, it would be absurd to suggest every foreign invasion has ended this way--and the particular methods we use to enact the changes we want in these countries are generally the kinds that make the biggest vacuums, making it easier for insurgent groups to pop in or form.
Ultimately, it may end up the least of our problems, given the fact that insurgent groups are now present and wrecking shit in the middle east--the conversation has shifted from how we can avoid making insurgent groups/making them stronger, to how we can squash them. And this is of course to say nothing of the broader humanitarian issues of promoting civil rights and economic development, the both of which have aspects we haven't even really seen discussed in US politics.
So, what's everyone think of all these issues? I have opinions on my own on these, of course, but this is a long post already.
One the one hand, there have been near-constant problems in Iraq since our decision to invade, and our drone strikes motivate future terrorist attacks to some degree. On the other, it would be absurd to suggest every foreign invasion has ended this way--and the particular methods we use to enact the changes we want in these countries are generally the kinds that make the biggest vacuums, making it easier for insurgent groups to pop in or form.
Ultimately, it may end up the least of our problems, given the fact that insurgent groups are now present and wrecking shit in the middle east--the conversation has shifted from how we can avoid making insurgent groups/making them stronger, to how we can squash them. And this is of course to say nothing of the broader humanitarian issues of promoting civil rights and economic development, the both of which have aspects we haven't even really seen discussed in US politics.
So, what's everyone think of all these issues? I have opinions on my own on these, of course, but this is a long post already.