rEvolutionist wrote:
1. You were discussing this with Hermit, not me.
And 2. YOU brought up morality first!
Are you drunk??
No, you're wrong.
Asking "what's the moral thing to do?" was in response someone else's post. As I noted "both can exist at the same time," -- in other words, we can do the moral thing without it being the main factor in why we are acting.
Now, you can keep telling me what I believe, or you can accept that what I tell you is what I believe. You love to do this shit. You misconstrue something a person says, take it out of all context, and then you latch on like dog to a bone and demand that what the other person is telling you is not really what they believe. Look - when someone explains their position to you, they are explaining their position to you. If you think they meant X, but then they say "dude, you're taking that the wrong way -- this is my position on that," then accept their fucking explanation. Stop being such a dick.
rEvolutionist wrote:
My point was and always have been that "both may exist together." I never have suggested that morality is the sole factor in determining whether the US -- or any other country - helps or allies itself with some other country.
Strawman. No one ever suggested that you said it was the sole factor. We are rebutting your point that it has anything to do with morality at all!
No, it's not a strawman. A strawman is when a person attributes an argument to you that you never made I didn't do that at all.
You have not rebutted any point that "it has anything to do with morality at all." You've ASSERTED that it has nothing to do with morality at all. However, the decision makers are people, and all people have some form of morality. And, people like to do what they believe to be the moral thing, even if the true motivating factor is economic or some other reason. So, the people doing the acting and the decisionmaking often believe they are acting in furtherance of what they believe to be morality or the moral thing to do. So, of course morality, of some form, has something to do with it. It is not the reason countries go to war, and not the reason countries ally themselves with each other, but it is a factor, like a myriad other factors, that enter into it.
Economics is not the sole factor either, but it is a factor. Geopolitics -- complex alliances and international agreements -- those are factors too. Practicallity and pragmatism -- what can reasonably be accomplished -- those are factors --- global strategy -- another factor. Competition among nations -- national interests - the importance of those interests -- the security of a regime, government or a nation -- all those things are facts -- none of them, alone, is the only factor.
Got it? Morality is not why the US went in and supported the Mujahadeen in Afghanistan in the 80s, but the decisionmakers were pretty happy that they could be in the position of helping the people that were invaded and attacked (looks good to be seen as on the side of right), and at the same time be advancing US global interests and hurting the Soviet Union.
Now, I'm sure your next post will be some idiocy about how I'm declaring that the US's motive is always to advance morality or some such nonsense. Go on, keep telling me what I think. Man, you are so Ratskep. It's a wonder you aren't there more. Many of them LOVE to act like you over there.
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar