Rynar wrote:
DE:
What part of Ron Paul's stated position about, "Declaring war, invading, winning the war in no uncertain terms, and then coming home," leaves you to believe he's unwilling to fight wars?
I do not believe he intends to actually ask for any declarations of war using various excuses, and thereby will avoid invading or otherwise attacking anyone, and will in turn use this as an excuse to cripple our ability to do so in the future. If we're going to start actually declaring war every time we need to conduct a punitive air raid such as Operation El Dorado Canyon or Operation Preying Mantis, fine, but I don't think he's going to do that because for some reason people think there's an actual difference between Congress "authorizing military action" and "declaring war".
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Ron Paul is a guy who advocates absolute property rights, and a citizen's right to defend what he owns.
Absolute property rights (or "absolute" rights of any kind or description) are a hideous idea that should not even remotely be considered; they cannot possibly work in anything other than a fantasy world that doesn't involve actual people. I'm all in favor of citizens being allowed to defend what they own. but this is really a question that will be resolved by the courts. It might be nice to have Ron Paul appointees on the court (one of the few points in his favor IMO)
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He believes that peace is always a better option, when it's available, but when it's not available, you kick the **** out of the guy you need to kick the **** out of, and come home.
While kicking the **** out of the guy and coming home is something I agree with, "peace is always a better option when it's available" is saying nothing. Duh. Of course it is. Peace is cheaper than war and (ostensibly) kills a lot fewer people. It's the "when it's available" part that's the problem. I do not want peace to be thought "available" because it suits someone's ideology of "not getting involved" when all the while we are slowly being economically strangled by China, India, or **** fills the power vaccuum that appears if we try to re-create pre-WWI foreign policy. I can't give you a more specific example than that because "when peace is avaialable" is meaningless. Some nitwits would insist peace is available with nuclear warheads going off above New York, San Diego, London, Paris, Ottowa, and Melbourne because "well, maybe they'll come rebuild us!"
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You don't rebuild him, you don't send him money for his war stricken and impoverished.
All in favor of that, presuming we don't start finding excuses to simply twiddle our thumbs.
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You win, leave, and wash your hands, leaving the example you mean to set in your wake. He's far from a kumbaya peacenik, he's just not an imperialist.
"Not an imperialist" is a silly qualification. "Imperialism" is one of those weasel words; people just slap it on any foreign involvement they don't like. It's meaningless. We haven't been engaging in meaningful "imperialism" in decades, maybe over a century depending how you look at it. In fact, there have been exactly two events that could really be called imperialism by anyone since the end of WWII that I can think of and we fought against the imperialists in both cases; Korea and Desert Storm respectively. Contrary to the silly insistence of a lot of people, Iraq and Afghanistan have zero to do with imperialism. We don't want to rule Iraq; we don't even want to set up a puppet dictator. At most, we want a fairly weak form of hegemony, which we give a **** about only as long as they have oil and we need it.
I'd also point out that American "imperialism" has generally worked out at least halfway decently for the people supposedly victimized by it. Is Iraq worse off than under Saddam? Maybe, but then again Saddam's own imperialism in 1991 already **** their standard of living. Afghanistan? Already such a shithole it's unlikely to matter.
American Indians? Treated horribly for much of our history but in reality they're living in a for more modern society with access to a great deal they wouldn't otherwise have; how much better woulkd their lot be if we'd actually treated them decently after conquering them? Arizona and New Mexico? A damn site better off than they would be under Mexico. Alaska? Far better off than it would have been under Soviet Russia.
It's been far from perfect, but "imperialism" is just a word to bludgeon people into agreeing because they think all "imperialism" is bad because of the British Empire and because the Communists used it as a slur against us. I don't give a **** that he wants to "avoid imperialism"; it's far too late for that. I want to know specifically what does he have in mind as far as force structure and his criteria for use.
Is he going to.. maybe stop wasting money on silliness like the LCS, and start funding CGNs again? Eliminate fossil-fueled warships in favor of all-nuclear propulsion? Re-instate Ares/Constellation? Fund B-1R? Re-start the F-22 production line? Anything substanitally similar to those? All things that would point to him being serious about kicking *** and going home..