Khross wrote:
Apparently, Liberals in America have not learned the lessons of Open Enrollment.
Why would they learn that lesson? They have a political model that tells them what
should happen, and when something doesn't follow that political model, it's simply ignored. Learning a lesson would admit to a flaw in the basic thinking.
It's not unlike the reason Mao didn't understand why he couldn't push the U.S. off the Korean penninsula. His political model told him that Americans were too few in number, and too poor at fighting to contest him, despite our vastly superior technology and firepower (estimates I have seen put the aggregate advantage in U.S. firepower for a division-sized element at 10 to 20 times that of a Chinese division at that time; mainly due to the complete lack of air and artillery support for the Chinese). He believed this because his ideology told him the U.S. soldier should be a peasent/worker of the proletariat/pesantry and unmotivated to fight for the bogeoise/landowner class. In other words, his model that was initially based ont he performance of Nationalist troops and the situation in China in their civil war he generalized to the rest of the world because it fit with his ideology.
In point of fact, China's initial successes were mainly due to criminal levels of carelessness by MacArthur, Almond, and other subordinate commanders even down to the battalion level in some cases, allowing lax discipline and horrible local security. Once Ridgeway took over, the situation improved immensely. In point of fact, units that were ably led did extremely well against the Chinese even before that, and suffered mainly from the inadequacies of flanking units. The First Marine Division is the prime example; it succeeded not only in withdrawing intact at Chosin, but mauled 4 to 6 Chinese divisions in the process.
Sorry to divert onto military history, but the mistake is repeated frequently.. not just by liberals, but it's the same basic error. Mao's commander, Marshall Peng, pointed out this error in thinking and was far more cautious. Opposing Mao's excesses eventually cost him his life. Liberals are not all that different; questioning the assumptions only gets you shouted down with accusations of some horrible moral failing, usually involving bigotry.