mistermack wrote:Just to make it clear, my condescending posts were deliberate irony, and meant in the same vein as Zilla's sarky posts.
I'm wasted here. Nobody gets my jokes. I'm going to give up comedy and ask for my day-job back.
It seems to me that your condescending post preceded Gawdzilla's retorts, not vice versa.
mistermack wrote:
As far as the ending of the cold war goes, I think that history is being re-written with this view that US spending forced it to an end. It's not true, and it's incredibly unfair to the two leaders, Gorbachev and Reagan. They just aren't getting anywhere near the credit they deserve.
Gorbachev could perfectly easily have carried on with the cold war. It's completely false to claim that US spending forced him to change. You only have to look at North Korea to see that. They haven't got a bean, but there's no change.
You called Gawdzilla's post simplistic, but then you try to draw a meaningful comparison between the DPRK and the USSR?
mistermack wrote:
What Gorbachev did took incredible foresight and courage, and political ability. He had to persuade his own side, and convince Reagan. And Reagan also, doesn't get enough credit for seeing that Gorbachev was sincere, for trusting him, and ignoring all his advisors.
As far as I'm concerned, even though I disagree with the politics on both sides, they are still the two top men of the last century, and it was incredibly weasly for Reagan to claim credit for what they achieved, as a direct result of spending more and more on arms. That was just Reagan trying to take all the credit for himself.
It wasn't the spending, it was the political courage to STOP, that changed the world for the better.
When did Reagan, himself, make that claim, exactly?