REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Funny how this works, we were JUST discussing this in another thread.....

POSTED BY: AURAPTOR
UPDATED: Sunday, May 23, 2010 16:41
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 9523
PAGE 2 of 4

Thursday, April 29, 2010 3:55 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Magons- People tend to think of the Soviet Union as one giant undifferentiated bloc of misery, like East Germany and Stalinist Russia. But within the eastern bloc, and even within Russia itself (over time) there were areas and times where the government was not so intrusive: Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, and the post-Stalin era within Russia. I don't think it's useful to paint with such a broad brush, it obscures a lot of information.

Now, it's true that Stalin was a brutal tyrant, but that shouldn't reflect on communism everywhere. (There are more fundamental things to criticize!) And quite honestly, does it REALLY matter whether people were obliterated by a maniac or whether corporate heads got together and made a cold, undemocratic calculation? Dead is dead!

BTW- My criticism of communism (not that there ever was such a thing, but what we were all told is communism, so I have to stick with the common usage) goes back to "the dictatorship of the proletariat" ... an idea not initially intentioned to create one-man rule but certainly used to justify it!

Its the "ends and means" problem which I have become SO familiar with on this board! Bad means seem to inevitably create bad ends. So, for example, you can't create a fair society at the point of a gun, you can't impose democracy militarily, and you can't decrease violent crime with the death penalty.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Thursday, April 29, 2010 4:55 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So anyways, Rappy, I see you bowed out of this thread. Do we count your initial post in the "pulled outta someone else's ass" category?

WHEN are you going to learn to think for yourself????

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Thursday, April 29, 2010 1:44 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Magons- People tend to think of the Soviet Union as one giant undifferentiated bloc of misery, like East Germany and Stalinist Russia. But within the eastern bloc, and even within Russia itself (over time) there were areas and times where the government was not so intrusive: Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, and the post-Stalin era within Russia. I don't think it's useful to paint with such a broad brush, it obscures a lot of information.


Oh I agree. And I think that Stalinism had a devastating effect on what otherwise might have been more a more benovelent form of communism. One of the reasons people feel so strongly about the quashing of the 56 uprising in Hungary was that they were NOT trying to overthrow communism and replace it with a western style government - they wanted greater personal and political freedoms, especially freedoms from Moscow dictating their policy. I understand that your husband saw that play out in ugly ways - revolution tends to bring out the shitty revenge tactics in the population, but the intent was good (in my opinion).

My point was meant to be about Stalin's regime and its aftermath and was not meant to be a criticism of communism per se. We haven't seen true communism to date, not the way Marx intended it and I doubt we ever will. Marx's solutions were to a specific set of problems which no longer exist in exactly the same form - not saying there isn't inequality and oppression either - it's just that the world is not the same place. I think his theory had its roots in the same place as those beliefs that brought about the French and American revolutions, that is people should not have to live under the yoke of a ruling class and be powerless, but the implementation never really lived up to those ideals.

I think the problem with the implemenation of communism was the ideological belief that people would govern themselves okay - that it would happen kind of naturally, a bit like the beliefs espoused by libertarians here and elsewhere. The trouble was when governing regime, and all its infrastructure was swept away and there was nothing to replace it, another ruling class emerged anyway, unchecked by any form of law or constitution (I am a big admirer of the US constitution, with its protection from tyranny intent - very clever) In the ensuing violence, the tyrants emerged - the most ruthless, violent, paranoid survived.

I thought that in time, communism probably would have settled down somewhat. I was sorry that the only alternative to the mostly repressive governments of the eastern bloc was unchecked capitalism. There was something depressing about seeing the first McDOnalds open in Prague. I am sure a lot of people who lived in those areas reminise about some of the things they lost - affordable or free housing, cheap or free public transport, guarantee of employment, but few would miss the secret police that seemed to be a feature of all those states. It seems they threw the baby out of the bathwater.

Quote:

Now, it's true that Stalin was a brutal tyrant, but that shouldn't reflect on communism everywhere. (There are more fundamental things to criticize!) And quite honestly, does it REALLY matter whether people were obliterated by a maniac or whether corporate heads got together and made a cold, undemocratic calculation? Dead is dead!

I don't know where corporate heads have got together to plan mass exterminations as we have seen some regimes do - their brutality is more through lack of care, particularly in developing countries.

And although I don't condone those sort of practices, yeah, I do think the other kind is worse. I don't know, signy, it's something about the deliberate, callous extermination of vast numbers of a population - you know someone in an office number crunching how many people needed to be executed per area - as happened under Stalin, just seems more terrible. I agree that death is death. But it's the difference between the murder rate through crime, and police rounding up citizens and taking them away to be killed. It makes a difference to the society you live in, how you see things, whether you feel that the world is bad, good or indifferent rate to live.




Quote:

Its the "ends and means" problem which I have become SO familiar with on this board! Bad means seem to inevitably create bad ends. So, for example, you can't create a fair society at the point of a gun, you can't impose democracy militarily, and you can't decrease violent crime with the death penalty.


no argument from me on any of that

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Thursday, April 29, 2010 6:12 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

I don't know where corporate heads have got together to plan mass exterminations as we have seen some regimes do - their brutality is more through lack of care, particularly in developing countries.
MORE than lack of care Magon. People are shot and killed over things like unionization and working conditions. Do you think that corporations get rich in a "benign" fashion? Don't you think that most of our wars were prompted by corporate interests?

Anyway, what I think you're reacting to is "perceived risk"... the risk, in this case, of being killed by an inimical force, whether that force is Megatron Corp or The Beloved Leader.

People respond to risks differently, so although you have a FAR higher chance of being killed in an auto accident, or dying of lung cancer (if you smoke) people are a lot more tolerant of THOSE risks than they are of a terrorist act or violent crime.

If a risk is unpredictable or unknown or unfamiliar, it looms in the mind much larger than a known risk. So although you face a far higher chance of being killed by Megatron Corp, that risk is familiar and calculable (you think) compared to the risk of being killed by a Fearless Leader who may be a nut-job, because the Fearless Leader (who is unpredictable) challenges your sense of control.

In order for corporations to succeed ... especially at their bases of power (where they control a world-significant military through government cooperation) is to give people a sense of control... without, of course, giving up much ACTUAL control. So people are told... and believe... that they are the masters of their destiny, and they are... in small things. 20 kinds of toilet paper, 200 different channels all saying the same thing, the "right" to compete for increasingly scarce jobs. and the "right" to own (by comparison) a popgun. But in the BIG things- what you want your society to look like, how much environmental or financial or health risk do you want your society to take, do you want to direct your collective resources to rebuilding the environment or education (for example) or towards fighting wars of oppression and building prisons - phfffft!

Just try reining in wall Street and the insurances and the military and unemployment, and THEN you'll see how much power you really have!

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 30, 2010 1:39 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Oh, Geezer, you asked how this was the fault of the US alone. Hmm... well, since you haven't repeated your question, I assume that you've googled up several sources and confirmed what I posted. But the fault isn't the United State's alone. The French had a lot to do with it, since they instituted a repressive rule which drove out all of the moderates.

Where the US came in was in supporting French colonial rule (before 1954) and the non-democratically-elected regime in the south post-1954, fomenting (in essence) a civil war within Vietnam.

http://rationalrevolution.net/war/american_involvement_in_vietnam.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam
http://www.seasite.niu.edu/crossroads/wilson/colonialism.htm

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 30, 2010 3:46 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Oh, Geezer, you asked how this was the fault of the US alone. Hmm... well, since you haven't repeated your question, I assume that you've googled up several sources and confirmed what I posted.


Nope. Just a busy day.
Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
But the fault isn't the United State's alone.



Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM: Because right off the bat, I can tally least five million murders (two million in Vietnam) caused by the USA alone...


Thank you for conceding that the U.S. alone was not responsible for the deaths in Vietnam.

SignyM, what you've posted so far has referenced France and the early South Vietnamese regimes only. You even state, "If Diem had simply agreed to elections, this could have all been avoided."

Sorta like saying, "If Saddam Hussein had just agreed to free and fair elections, the whole Iraq war could have been avoided."

And still not sure that failing to hold elections is an excuse for a 20+ year war. Political and diplomatic means could have been tried, or the country could have remained partitioned.





"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 30, 2010 3:56 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Did you miss my other post?
Quote:

Where the US came in was in supporting French colonial rule (before 1954) and the non-democratically-elected regime in the south post-1954, fomenting (in essence) a civil war within Vietnam.
We supported France AND we supported Diem. Militarily. And not just a little bitty-bit, either. To the tune of billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of soldiers. WE had more troops in S Vietnam than the S Vietnamese government did!



It would be as if France sent millions of troops in to support the Union side during OUR Civil War.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 30, 2010 5:59 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Did you miss my other post? "Where the US came in was in supporting French colonial rule (before 1954) and the non-democratically-elected regime in the south post-1954, fomenting (in essence) a civil war within Vietnam."


So when was it that South Vietnam attacked and tried to conquer North Vietnam? Diem was, from what I can find, happy to run his own patch and take his graft. Ho wanted both North and South under his regime. I guess I'm trying to find by what moral authority you believe that, after partition, the North had a right to first foment revolution in the South and then actually invade.

Was it to liberate them? Go there now and try to start an opposition political party, or newspaper, or radio station.

Quote:

It would be as if France sent millions of troops in to support the Union side during OUR Civil War.

Or tens of thousands of troops, supplies, and a couple of fleets during OUR Revolution?

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 30, 2010 8:53 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Did you miss my other post? "Where the US came in was in supporting French colonial rule (before 1954) and the non-democratically-elected regime in the south post-1954, fomenting (in essence) a civil war within Vietnam."


So when was it that South Vietnam attacked and tried to conquer North Vietnam? Diem was, from what I can find, happy to run his own patch and take his graft. Ho wanted both North and South under his regime. I guess I'm trying to find by what moral authority you believe that, after partition, the North had a right to first foment revolution in the South and then actually invade.

Was it to liberate them? Go there now and try to start an opposition political party, or newspaper, or radio station.

Quote:

It would be as if France sent millions of troops in to support the Union side during OUR Civil War.

Or tens of thousands of troops, supplies, and a couple of fleets during OUR Revolution?

"Keep the Shiny side up"


As usual, I get the impression you are arguing against a vacuous entity. No substance. Although you are obviuously winning, it becomes difficult to tell when they never answer.
Enjoying your attempts to restore reason to the thread, tho.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 30, 2010 11:25 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Thank you Jewel.

Oh, you meant Geezer???

-------------

Quote:

Diem was, from what I can find, happy to run his own patch and take his graft. Ho wanted both North and South under his regime. I guess I'm trying to find by what moral authority you believe that, after partition, the North had a right to first foment revolution in the South and then actually invade.
Geezer- Did you just advocate spending billions of dollars, 58,000 American and 4 million SE Asian lives supporting a guy whose BEST characteristic is that he just wanted his little patch of tyrannical corruption?

So, what were we supporting, really? Corruption? Was that what it was all about?

-------------------
In any case, you obviously haven't bothered to look into Vietnamese history... and neither has Jewel. (Thanks Jewel for that completely baseless comment.) So I'm gonna spell it out to you so that everyone knows, not just you.

Ho Chi Minh was to Vietnam what George Washington was to the United States.

The French had colonized "Indochina" since before 1880. They took the land, created plantations, and pretty much did what most colonial occupiers do: viciously exploit the Vietnamese people and resources.
Quote:

The entire country was made a French "protectorate" in 1883. Under French colonial rule, the Vietnamese were prohibited from traveling outside their districts without identity papers. Freedom of expression and organization were restricted. As land was progressively co-opted by large landholders, the number of landless peasants grew. Neglect of the education system caused the literacy rate to fall. Vietnamese anticolonial movements began to coalesce early in the 20th century, but were vigorously suppressed by the French.
Ho Chi Minh fought against Japanese occupation during WWII, the Koumintang (Chinese) occupation of the north, AND against the French attempt to re-occupy Vietnam after WWII. As he was fighting multiple occupations, he appealed to the USA for help in gaining Vietnamese independence. He wrote the Vietnamese Declaration of Independence, which includes:

"All people are created equal. They are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights. Among these are the right to live, the right to be happy, and the right to be free".

Sound familiar?

Ho Chi Minh's goals for Vietnam were reasonable: Freedom from foreign rule, unification, free elections, land distribution (not collectivization), universal education, and an 8-hour day. The Viet Minh did, in fact, militarily defeat the French occupation. But peace accords representing primarily the Western powers temporarily divided Vietnam for eventual nation-wide elections and unification

The South was governed by Emperor Bao Dai, a puppet for both French and Japanese rule. Diem was his advisor. It was the process of national elections and unification which Diem interrupted. Quite obviously if Diem thought he could have won he would have opted for elections; the inevitable conclusion is that Diem didn't have the support of... well, anybody, really... not even in the South. He was just another self-installed, corrupt dictator.


So, on the one hand... a guy who fought off the Japanese occupation and French colonial exploitation, who quotes the American Declaration of Independence and whose chief aims are land distribution, universal education, free elections, and an 8-hour day.

On the other hand, a corrupt guy who swipes the government from the "Emperor" and imposes himself as ruler, who happens to be nominally Catholic, and who "only" wants his own patch of corrupt tyranny.

googling up diem+ corruption:
Quote:

The United States supported and backed the first president of South Vietnam Ngo Dinh Diem primarily because he was not a communist. However, his reign of power saw extreme corruption and exploitation of citizens.

The Geneva Accords of 1954 had planned to establish a nationwide election during the entire republic of Vietnam in 1956 with hopes to unify the nation. The United States set an agenda to find the perfect candidate to emerge and defeat the immensely popular Ho Chi Minh, of course a Communist. Realizing this would not be possible, the elections were canceled and many citizens were outraged.

In The Vietnam Wars by Marilyn Young, she describes Diem's 1957 campaign to "denounce communists" as being brutal and torturous. Diem and his police not only arrested and tortured current and former communists in Vietnam, but also their family members and others in their village whether they had communist connections or not. As one Viet Minh veteran described it,

"Every arrest was synonymous with barbarous tortures. Even if an arrested person was ready to turn traitor, to cooperate from the first moment, he could nto escape the preliminary torture. A man who had once belonged to the Viet Minh but since 1954 claimed loyalty to Saigon was arrested in 1958 and sentenced to five years without trial"

Aside from unfair and unjustified arrests and torture, Diem's reign saw other acts of corruption to Vietnamese citizens. Diem returned many lands to landlords which forced thousands of members of the peasant class to becomes landless and even more poor. Diem also brought back old taxes, forced labor on many citizens, and exposed much corruption in the government.

Young said, "It was the accumulation of grievances, large and small, that angered villagers and moved many of them to respond to those who sought to resist the government". These corrupt acts mixed with a constant stubborness to accept US policies and ideas and the disapproval of the general public caused the downfall of Diem and his reign.



Which to choose?

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 2:39 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer- Did you just advocate spending billions of dollars, 58,000 American and 4 million SE Asian lives supporting a guy whose BEST characteristic is that he just wanted his little patch of tyrannical corruption?


No I asked why you think that the North Vietnamese aggression against a country that had no designs on the North was morally appropriate. Why did the North spend countless lives and resources trying to conquer another country?

To paraphrase your earlier comment, If Ho had been content to rule North Vietnam, none of this would have even happened.

Quote:

Ho Chi Minh was to Vietnam what George Washington was to the United States.

"All people are created equal. They are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights. Among these are the right to live, the right to be happy, and the right to be free".

Sound familiar?


Unfortunately, this didn't apply to the villagers in the South when dealing with the VC. I worked the I Corps comm center in Hue in 1970-71. Every day were several reports, direct from the field, like this. "Squad of VC entered village of ... Executed village chief and family. Executed school teacher and family. Burned village school. Kidnapped five young men. Took 15 cans of rice."

Quote:

Ho Chi Minh's goals for Vietnam were reasonable: Freedom from foreign rule, unification, free elections, land distribution (not collectivization), universal education, and an 8-hour day.


Freedom from Foreign Rule? The French were gone from both North and South.

Unification? Why? Was Ho the Alliance?

Land distribution (not collectivization). Sure took a while. Land was collectivised until the late 1980s.

Education? Okay one of five. But I bet they learn the Party line.

Free elections? Nope.

Quote:

Which to choose?

The one who doesn't start a war that ends up killing three million of his countrymen.



"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 3:45 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:


No I asked why you think that the North Vietnamese aggression against a country that had no designs on the North was morally appropriate. Why did the North spend countless lives and resources trying to conquer another country?

To paraphrase your earlier comment, If Ho had been content to rule North Vietnam, none of this would have even happened.



If only we adhered to the same standards we expect others to adhere to...

Odd that you'd take North Vietnam to task for the same kinds of actions which we've undertaken this decade. Heck, maybe the North thought Saigon had WMD...

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 6:18 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Kwicko:
Odd that you'd take North Vietnam to task for the same kinds of actions which we've undertaken this decade.



Even odder that SignyM would defend North Vietnamese aggression on the grounds that the country they attacked was not too dangerous, but just too corrupt.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 7:38 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Freedom from Foreign Rule? The French were gone from both North and South.
Yep- thanks to Ho CHh Minh and the Viet Minh. The Browncoats won THAT one! But Diem had nothing to do with freeing Vietnam... in fact, quite the opposite. Diem and Emperor Bao Dai were French and Japanese sock puppets. So, that's one of five for Ho Chi Minh and the Browncoats.
Quote:

Why did the North spend countless lives and resources trying to conquer another country?
Why did Mal defend Serenity Valley to nearly the last man?

I mean, speaking of Alliance... What are YOU for, Geezer? You put yourself squarely on the side of foreign occupation and rule by tyranny.... Sounds to me like Ho Chi Minh was more of a browncoat than YOU are.
Quote:

Even odder that SignyM would defend North Vietnamese aggression on the grounds that the country they attacked was not too dangerous, but just too corrupt.
Aaaaannnnddd... Here comes Geezer, defender of corruption!

But not "just" corrupt, Geezer. Brutal exploiters. Yeah, Diem was dangerous... to his own people. And we supported him.

-----------------

So YAAAAY for corruption and brutality!

They may be brutal dictators but they're OUR dictators!


------------

Geezer, might you not want to do a little soul searching and see if you can figure out why you wind up on the side of slavery and dictatorship, even tho you're a reasonable person?

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 8:28 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer, might you not want to do a little soul searching and see if you can figure out why you wind up on the side of slavery and dictatorship, even tho you're a reasonable person?



SignyM. You're the one who defends, actually admires, a regime which started an unnecessary war which killed 3 million folks, and which you claim was fought in the name of life and liberty, free elections, and redistribution of property.

I know, because I was there and saw the reports every day, that their troops, VC and NVA, killed a lot of innocent folk just for being chosen by their village as a leader or teacher. You continue to ignore this. As noted, try starting an opposition party or media outlet in Vietnam today and find out how well their liberty and free elections are working. You haven't addressed this either.

Let's not forget the re-education camps set up after the end of the war to "rehabilitate" several hundred thousand South Vietnamese - with over 165,000 dying in the camps. Or the New Economic Zones where anyone even suspected of disloyalty could be sent for years of forced labor under horrible conditions. Sounds like you might want to re-evaluate who the "brutal exploiters" were.

Actually, It looks like you might be the one on the side of slavery and dictatorship.

I must admit that the government is finally getting around to redistribution of property to individuals, but this is hardly a win for Socialisn, since they're doing so only because they found that free enterprise could provide more resources and tax base than communes.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 10:54 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Of course, you didn't see the reports about how the S Vietnamese government mistreated and killed people, did you? Not your department, I guess!

If there was a justifiable intervention, it would have been on the side of the 1954 Geneva Peace Accords, which would have required free elections. An election would have been held, the will of the people would have been known, the problems would have been sorted out.

Or, we could have just STAYED OUT OF IT.

Instead, we placed ourselves in service to a guy who just decided, willy-nilly, that he wanted to keep a part of Vietnam for himself, re-created a system of rich and poor, tortured and killed, and robbed the national treasury. Funny thing is, if we had supported Ho Chi Minh, or supported the programs that we COULD support (like universal education) in a post-election situation, or thrown in with the Geneva Peace Accords, the situation wouldn't have gotten so polarized. Instead, we took what was essentially a civil war, smeared it out over several countries, and bombed the snot out of everyone... doing far more damage in three countries than either the AVRN or the VC.

Why do you keep supporting such action? It's not like there weren't more credible, more just alternatives.

I know you keep thinking of yourself as a browncoat, but you slide over the inconvenient fact that browncoats never sided with foreign occupation, corruption, or slavery.

As an aside, I find the situation similar to Afghanistan. Because the Russians invaded Afghanistan, we acted like oppositional children and just "had" to oppose them by backing the most corrupt, regressive parts of their society.

Oh, and BTW- it was the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia that stopped Pol Pot. I guess you didn't like THAT either! Once again... on the side of tyranny.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 11:35 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Of course, you didn't see the reports about how the S Vietnamese government mistreated and killed people, did you? Not your department, I guess!


Have I said they didn't? Diem & co. were crooks, sure, but at least they didn't invade other folks' nations. Combined pressure from the U.N. or other groups might have changed the South Vietnamese government, but the invasion from the North assured they never got the chance.

If you think that governments being corrupt and exploitive is a moral reason to go to war against them, then you should have had no problem with the Iraq or Afghanistan wars, as both the Hussein regime and the Taliban could be considered corrupt and exploitive under pretty much any definition. Half the governments in Africa are corrupt and exploitive. Are you declaring open season on them too?

Quote:

If there was a justifiable intervention, it would have been on the side of the 1954 Geneva Peace Accords, which would have required free elections. An election would have been held, the will of the people would have been known, the problems would have been sorted out.
Given North Vietnam's history of "Free" elections in the years since, I might question that.

Quote:

Instead, we placed ourselves in service to a guy who just decided, willy-nilly, that he wanted to keep a part of Vietnam for himself, and re-create a system of rich and poor, torture and kill, and rob the national treasury.

Could have been that he and his country were being attacked by the guy who wanted all of Vietnam, to turn it into a one-party dictatorship that tortured and killed many more.

Quote:

Why do you keep supporting such action? It's not like there weren't more credible, more just alternatives.

True. North Vietnam could have continued to demand elections and request that the U.N. support them. Failing that, they could have led by example by holding fair elections, releasing political prisoners, and allowing freedom of the press and expression themselves. Instead, they defaulted immediately to military action. At least the U.S. tried diplomatic pressure and sanctions for years before going into Iraq.

Quote:

I know you keep thinking of yourself as a browncoat, but you slide over the inconvenient fact that browncoats never sided with foreign occupation, corruption, or slavery.


Interesting that you don't consider North Vietnam invading and conquering South Vietnam an occupation, don't consider placing hundreds of thousands in "reeducation camps" and "New Economic Zones" where they were worked to death under horrendous conditions to be slavery, don't consider that the promise of free elections still remains unfulfilled, don't consider that any Vietnamese who tried to criticize their government like you do here would be in jail, at best. In fact you don't even address any of these crimes. You don't address the invasion of South Vietnam. You just repeat "Diem was bad" over and over again as if that excuses invasion, massive casualties, huge forced labor camps, one-party dictatorial rule, repression of expression, and on and on.

I guess that if they're good Socialists, in your eyes no crimes can be committed.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 12:59 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

they didn't invade other folks' nations
Read this slowly and carefully Geezer, and maybe you'll get it this time...

The north didn't "invade" the south. The Viet Minh were in the south all along, part and parcel of population, just as they were in the north, and represented a fair portion of the population everywhere in Vietnam, not just the north. Ho Chi Minh had a lot of support in the south and the Viet Minh had been there a long time- certainly long enough to distribute land to peasants... long enough that Diem had to take land AWAY from the peasants and give it back to big landowners. The south wasn't Diem's country to take... they didn't support him either. That's why he had to torture and kill so many people!
Quote:

they didn't invade other folks' nations.
Wow, you really ARE resistant to factual history, aren't you?
Quote:

North Vietnam could have continued to demand elections and request that the U.N. support them.
And, if we were going to deploy 560,000 troops, why not deploy them to MAKE SURE that elections were held, instead of reflexively propping up "the other side", no matter how corrupt, non-representative, and repressive? (Just like we did in Afghanistan? And look where THAT'S gotten us!)

So, here's the deal:

If we were going to get involved, then we could have used force for the good. Are elections good? GOOD! Let's support it! Let's use our troops to make sure its fair and free. Is distribution of land to peasants good? GOOD! Let's support it! Let's use our troops to make sure that the current landowners are treated fairly. Let's use some of our awesome wealth to perhaps even buy them out. Is the 8-hour day good? GREAT! Another thing to back!

Do we like torture? NOPE! Make it clear to those that torture that we ain't gonna stand for it.

Hell, man... we had our bootprints and napalm and bombcraters and exfoliants all over Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia! If we were going to put so many bodies on the line, and that kind of expenditure of resources, why not aim it towards development? If we're going to get into a pissing match with the communist bloc, why not make the basis of the competition... the struggle for hearts and minds... progress, not destruction? It would have worked in Vietnam, and it would have worked in Afghanistan. Hell, for all that we spent on Vietnam (Afghanistan, Iraq etc.) we could have BOUGHT those countries several times over, lock, stock and barrel!

Ends and means.

You almost never get good ends out of bad means.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 2:23 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
The north didn't "invade" the south.


Tell that to all the folks, Vietnamese and U.S., who were killed by NVA regulars in South Vietnam. When support of the VC didn't achieve the goal of taking South Vietnam, the North did put in their own troops down the Ho Chi Minh Trail as early as 1965. Also, by the way, violating the sovereignty of Laos and Cambodia. The tanks that rolled into Saigon? NVA regulars.

Quote:

The Viet Minh were in the south all along, part and parcel of population, just as they were in the north, and represented a fair portion of the population everywhere in Vietnam, not just the north. Ho Chi Minh had a lot of support in the south and the Viet Minh had been there a long time...

But a lot of folks in the South also didn't want to live under Viet Minh, Viet Cong, or North Vietnamese rule. I met them while I was there. Folks in the North who didn't care for Ho's rule had already been reeducated.

Quote:

they didn't invade other folks' nations. Wow, you really ARE resistant to factual history, aren't you?

Hmmm. Who did South Vietnam invade again?
Quote:

And, if we were going to deploy 560,000 troops, why not deploy them to MAKE SURE that elections were held, instead of reflexively propping up "the other side"...

Because by the time we started deploying troops, or could get involved in a peaceful resolution at all, North Vietnam had bypassed a diplomatic solution and gone for the military option.

Quote:

Are elections good? GOOD! Let's support it! Let's use our troops to make sure its fair and free.
Are the elections in Vietnam, 35 years after the "liberation" of the South, fair and free? Should we send in the troops now?

And again my questions you continue to refuse to answer and the points you refuse to address.

By what moral authority you believe that, after partition, the North had a right to first foment revolution in the South and then actually invade?

As noted above, if the goal was to allow free elections, whay haven't there been any? Where's the freedom of expression and dissent supposedly promised in North Vietnam's "Declaration of Independence"?

Do you consider forced labor camps where hundreds of thousands of people were brainwashed and worked to death something other than slavery?

Oh, and going back and revising your posts after I've responded to them is...apparently all right with you if it meets your needs.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 2:35 PM

FREMDFIRMA


Ahem.

Phoenix.

-F

NOTIFY: N   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 3:27 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

By what moral authority you believe that, after partition, the North had a right to first foment revolution in the South and then actually invade?
Again, read this slowly and carefully...

Let's assume that the governor of Texas doesn't like the Feds. So he decides to take over Texas, Alabama, and New Mexico, though at least a significant minority... those of black and hispanic descent as well as most Democratic whites... ... disagree with him. And in order to make his rule stick, he starts torturing and killing the opposition, taking their homes and giving them to his wealthy friends, reviving the old plantation system, and confiscating all of the oil wealth. The United States government sends in soldiers.

And then Geezer says: The NERVE of those people in the north to "foment" revolution and invade! But at least the Texas governor didn't invade the north! That makes him morally superior!

That's what you're proposing, Geezer. What you don't seem to "get" was that before the partition, Vietnam was a whole, unified nation. It didn't think of itself as "north" and "south" Vietnam. That was was an identity WE created.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 3:34 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Oh, and going back and revising your posts after I've responded to them is...apparently all right with you if it meets your needs.
Haven't done that. We may have cross-posted.

Oh, and
Quote:

hundreds of thousands of people were brainwashed and worked to death
is 80-99.9% hogwash.So I'm just gonna pull a Geezer and say "Cites please?". 'Cause I've looked it up, and you're just making shit up.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 9:26 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:



Quote:



Unfortunately, this didn't apply to the villagers in the South when dealing with the VC. I worked the I Corps comm center in Hue in 1970-71. Every day were several reports, direct from the field, like this. "Squad of VC entered village of ... Executed village chief and family. Executed school teacher and family. Burned village school. Kidnapped five young men. Took 15 cans of rice."


Unification? Why? Was Ho the Alliance?


Education? Okay one of five. But I bet they learn the Party line.


"Keep the Shiny side up"


Geezer, now you've confused me. Is there a disconnect there? Executed the school teacher and family, burned down the school, but you agree they supported education and that was really their goal?

At least we now know SignyM is a purplebelly now, supporting Unification.
On a side note, Siggy, are you an M?

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 1, 2010 9:46 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Jewel, you have a basic confusion. According to Joss, he modeled the Alliance on the United States. The people supporting "unification" are those same people who want the United States' bootprints all over the world.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 2:53 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Again, read this slowly and carefully...



Why? To me it has little or nothing to do with the Vietnam situation.

Consider instead the other partitions that happened during that period after WWII. Korea and Germany. These were compromises, instead of forcing entire nations and populations to live under competing and pretty different political/economic systems. Instead, partition allowed choice that unification would not.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 3:14 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Haven't done that. We may have cross-posted.


Okay.

Quote:

Oh, and
Quote:

hundreds of thousands of people were brainwashed and worked to death
is 80-99.9% hogwash.So I'm just gonna pull a Geezer and say "Cites please?". 'Cause I've looked it up, and you're just making shit up.



Not so. Here's a small sample.

Quote:

The re-education camp remained the predominant device of social "control" in the late 1980s. It was used to incarcerate members of certain social classes in order to coerce them to accept and conform to the new social norms. This type of camp was one feature of a broader effort to control the social deviant and to campaign against counterrevolution and the resistance. The concept of re-education was borrowed from the Chinese communists and was developed early in the First Indochina War, at least in part because the nomadic government of North Vietnam was unable to maintain orthodox prisons. The process was continued in the North in 1954, but it came fully to the world's attention only after North Vietnam's takeover of the South in 1975


http://www.country-data.com/cgi-bin/query/r-14750.html

Quote:

After the Communist takeover in South Vietnam in May 1975, the Communist government established New Economic Zones (NEZs). Ostensibly this action was taken to alleviate overcrowding in the cities, whose population swelled with refugees fleeing the war, but the NEZs were inextricably intertwined with the notion of reeducation camps. Although there was no revolutionary reign of terror following the Communist takeover in the south, up to a half-million people, mainly members or supporters of the anti-Communist Republic of Vietnam regime or the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, went through short-term reeducation, while up to 100,000 people were sentenced to long-term reeducation. The reeducation camp programs ran parallel to those of the NEZs.

Though nominally voluntary, hundreds of thousands of people, especially urbanites suspected of disloyalty to the new regime as well as political and common prisoners, were sent to a series of remote camps along Vietnam's isolated border region. There they were subjected to harsh physical labor, including land reclamation and agriculture work, because the zones were supposed to be self-sufficient. Although the zones were hypothetically established before people were sent there, with rudimentary infrastructure, tools, seeds for crops, pumps, and farm equipment, in reality few NEZs were prepared for the influx of urbanites, and the living conditions were exceptionally harsh. The camps had woefully poor infrastructure, including minimal health services and other social programs. The internees were also forced to undergo political indoctrination classes. Unprepared and unskilled at making a living in the harsh rural interior, a large number of urbanites fled Vietnam in what became known as the exodus of the boat people.


http://www.bookrags.com/research/new-economic-zonesvietnam-ema-04/

On a more human level...
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.vietnamese/browse_thread/th
read/4d4dac5ed2e1086a


Human rights committees, such as this one chared by Joan Baez, deplored the camps.
http://archives.cbc.ca/programs/682-2706/page/8/

Quote:

According to published academic studies in the United States and Europe, 165,000 people died in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam's re-education camps.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boat_people


"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 3:35 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Oh, and let's not forget the expulsion from Vietnam of between 450,000 and 750,000 ethnic Chinese in 1978-79.

Note from the cites in my previous post that the Viet Minh were running reeducation camps in the North for quite a while prior to 1954. Might make the concept of a "free and fair" election kind'a suspect.

By the way, here's a little info to refute the "8 hour workday" benefit you claim "liberation" of the South bestowed.

Quote:

Minh, who like most other factory employees refused to give his full name for fear of company reprisal, was one of 40,000 workers who participated in a wave of wildcat strikes late last year and early this year to protest low pay and poor working conditions.

"Everything that you use, food and drink, has become more expensive, and we find that we are struggling to live," said Minh, who earns less than $2 a day. "We are protesting to have a better quality of life."
...
Six months before the first wildcat strikes in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly known as Saigon), 10,000 employees walked off the job at the Hong Kong-owned Key Hinge toy company in the central city of Danang. The workers, who manufacture plastic toys found in McDonald's Happy Meals, told Lao Dong newspaper that if they didn't work 12 hours a day without overtime, they could be fired.

Key Hinge workers also complained to the media that they were allowed only two bathroom breaks a day, were given no sick days and could be fined for any mistake made on the assembly line.


http://articles.sfgate.com/2006-05-30/business/17296007_1_chi-minh-cit
y-minimum-wage-assembly-line


Or...
http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~jh379297/labor.html

Looks like the government there is as willing to exploit as any Capitalist.






"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 3:46 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


And about that corruption the South was "liberated" to end...

Quote:

Dec. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Japan, the biggest country donor to Vietnam, suspended development aid to the Southeast Asian nation, saying stronger measures must be taken to fight corruption.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=aTIhAZGLZ2Ko

Quote:

Earlier this month, Vietnam’s top anti-corruption agency, the Government Inspectorate, completed its annual investigations in the country’s central, central highlands, western and southern regions, and to no one’s surprise, nobody found dust in his own home, although they found plenty elsewhere.
“The higher levels only detected corruption in lower levels. Provinces detected corruption in districts, districts did the same with communes. No one said they had found corruption in their own organization,” Bui Ngoc Lam, Deputy Head of the Government Inspectorate, told the press. Apparently in the minds of many state officials, if there are problems, they must exist elsewhere.
This attitude has become pervasive. Last year, in a similar investigation 28 ministries and sectors as well as 58 provinces and cities submitted their reports to the central government. The result? Only six of the units reported corruption. The rest happily declared, “No corruption here.!”


http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=
550&Itemid=31


Quote:

Transparency International, a global counter-corruption watchdog, ranks Vietnam as the second most corrupt country in South-East Asia (after Indonesia), based on a survey of international businessmen. The Vietnamese government itself recently estimated that light-fingered bureaucrats cream off at least 20% of infrastructure spending. At the National Assembly in July, the prime minister, the speaker, and the secretary-general of the Communist Party all identified corruption as one of the government's main challenges.

http://www.fva.org/200209/story03.htm







"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 6:22 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


According to OTHER published studies, fewer than 6,000 died. According to this estimate:
Quote:

The much-feared bloodbath did not occur. Instead, nearly 100,000 persons, almost all of them former Saigon Army Officers and government officials, were imprisoned for years (the number of years depended on the prisoner's rank and record) in "reeducation camps". Conditions were grim, but the reeducation camps were not like Nazi death camps or the Japanese prison camps of WWII in which half the inmates perished. Ninety four thousand of the reeducation camp prisoners survived and were released.

Controversies and Consequences: The Legacy of War
http://books.google.com/books?id=wUp-Roe0IlYC&pg=PA410&dq=vietnam+reed
ucation+camps+death+thousands&lr=&cd=2#v=onepage&q=vietnam%20reeducation%20camps%20death%20thousands&f=false


I've seen estimates as low as 800. Whichever source you look at, it's not "hundreds of thousands died". Which is why I said that your statement was 80-99.9% (yep, I calculated that!) bullshit. And it still is. So are the rest of your posts. Everything you accuse the north of, the south did the same or worse. Or have the "tiger cages", summary street executions, and death-ending torture slipped your mind?

But that wasn't my point. My point was that IF we had intervened EARLY... We could have used minimal troops to arrest Diem and turned him over to international authorities instead of supporting him militarily... and by clearing Diem from the scene we could have prevailed for a national vote since it was he who canceled it. The war would have never played out as it did, with millions dead in three nations and the follow-on emergence of Pol Pot. Instead of throwing North Vietnam even more into the hands of the Chinese, hardening their stance and fostering the most radical among them (the same mistake the French made in their harsh treatment of Vietnamese freedom fighters), if the Viet Minh had been getting some sort of aid from us for the programs that we favored, we might have been able to set up a dynamic in which the Chinese would be competing with us in aid and development, and we would have gone a LOT farther towards really winning the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese...

Instead of "destroying the village to save it".

That's similar to Afghanistan. If we had supported the USSR in its more beneficial aspects ... brought in international agencies to help them build roads and schools and airports, water resource management, sewer lines and electrical utilities... we would not now be facing the Taliban and the jihadists. You have to remember, Geezer, that by the time the Taliban "won", there were already women doctors in Afghanistan. That means the Russians had been there long enough, and worked persistently enough, to actually get girls through primary education, high school, college AND medical school. SURELY that was one program we could have assisted with, instead of treating Afghanistan as "your playing piece" and "my playing piece" and saying "Well, if WE can't have it then we'll bomb the snot out of it!".

That goes back to my "ends and means" point. If there is an entity which is using violence and killing people, then there is justification for using violence to stop that entity. Beyond that, using violence to win their hearts and minds simply means that you've lost in the marketplace of ideas... since you obviously can't demonstrate that your system is better and have to resort to force to impose it.

We SHOULD be on the side of education, development, democracy, transparency, and open communication anywhere and everywhere. We SHOULD be assisting it NO MATTER who originated it. Because our REAL interests lie in stability and prosperity. And if the PTB refuse our assistance... well... that reflects on them, not us, and between the inet and radio I'm sure we can make that point clear.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 6:26 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Consider instead the other partitions that happened during that period after WWII. Korea and Germany. These were compromises, instead of forcing entire nations and populations to live under competing and pretty different political/economic systems. Instead, partition allowed choice that unification would not.
So you're saying that its a good thing that foreign powers get to partition nations? Like how Africa and most of the Middle East were partitioned for the convenience of the colonial powers?

Purplebelly!

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 7:32 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
According to OTHER published studies, fewer than 6,000 died.


Bet I can match you cite for cite all day long. I just found mine by googling 'vietnam relocation camps'. Where'd you have to go?

Quote:

Everything you accuse the north of, the south did the same or worse. Or have the "tiger cages", summary street executions, and death-ending torture slipped your mind?

Nope. Nor have the messages I saw daily about the torture and killing of innocent villagers by the VC and NVA. These purposeful attacks on non-combatants went on every day for years, all over the country. Of course there didn't tend to be too many reporters and cameramen out with the VC and NVA, so those atrocities never made it onto the 7:00 news.
Quote:

But that wasn't my point. My point was that IF we had intervened EARLY... We could have used minimal troops to arrest Diem and turn him over to international authorities instead of supporting him militarily... and by clearing Diem from the scene we could have prevailed for a national vote since it was he who canceled it.

And once again, if the North had used diplomatic, instead of military, means and displayed any evidence that they were interested in a free country, like holding their own free elections, freeing political prisoners, closing reeducation camps, allowing dissent, etc., maybe there would have been a chance for outside intervention. Then also "the war would have never played out as it did, with millions dead in three nations and the follow-on emergence of Pol Pot."

Quote:

We SHOULD be on the side of education, development, democracy, transparency, and open communication anywhere and everywhere.

How's that democracy working in Vietnam again? The transparency and open communication?

As noted in an earlier post, Japan had to cut off development funds due to massive corruption in the Vietnamese govenment. Oops.

But the U.S. is providing aid of several kinds to Vietnam.
http://vietnam.usembassy.gov/usassistance.html



"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 7:34 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


SignyM.

It's obvious I'm not gonna convince you that the Vietnamese Communists are anything other than white knights of liberation, and I'm sure you aren't gonna convince me that they are.

Wanna continue to butt head over this, or agree to disagree and call it off?



"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 8:03 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

It's obvious I'm not gonna convince you that the Vietnamese Communists are anything other than white knights of liberation
I never thought they were. I think they could have been white knights at one time (with our nudging) but our massive death-dealing response kinda screwed that pooch. But like ALL organizations without vigorous democratic feedback (that includes corporations), they have become what they have become... just another self-serving power structure.

I'm trying to make a larger point, though. Several larger points actually.

My first point is... with all of our military might, we could do much good. But we (EDIT) ALMOST ALWAYS side with corruption and tyranny. Why is that?

I think there are a couple of reasons, but the MAIN underlying reason is that our military is often used to support monopolistic corporatism (which IMHO is what capitalism always becomes, given time.) That support is often given different rationales- sometimes it is quite frankly called anticommunism (altho the connotations of communism go far beyond economic), sometimes it is called freedom (as in "free market"... as in monopolistic corporatism.. one of Rappy's major confusions), and sometimes its even called WMD or anti-terrorism. But however you dress it up, if you dig to the bottom of almost all of our "interventions", from S America to Indochina, you'll find corporations and banks at the heart.

The other point is that our interventions are almost exclusively militaristic: massively deadly and destructive. We have, over the past 100 years or so, killed millions upon millions of people and left devastated nations in our wake. I think if you look at our REAL interests... and by "ours" I mean most Americans, not the power elite... you'll find they revolve around peace, prosperity, education, communication and transparency. World misery is what's used to jerk concessions out of the American average working stiff. Although we may benefit temporarily as consumers from slave-wages in Vietnam, the Marianas, and China, as workers we get pulled to the bottom of the barrel along with everyone else. And since the system really only benefits a microscopically small portion of the population, it MUST be enforced with guns.

War is a poor tool with which to build peace, destruction a poor tool with which to build prosperity, and tyranny a poor tool with which to build freedom.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 8:10 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Absofuckinglootely right on, Sig.
Quote:

My first point is... with all of our military might, we could do much good. But we often side with corruption and tyranny. Why is that?

I think there are a couple of reasons, but the MAIN underlying reason is that our military is often used to support monopolistic corporatism (which IMHO is what capitalism always becomes, given enough time.) That support is often given different rationales- sometimes it is quite frankly called anticommunism (altho the connotations of communism go far beyond the economic), sometimes it is called freedom (as in "free market"... as in monopolistic corporatism.. one of Rappy's major confusions), and sometimes its even called WMD. But however you dress it up, if you dig to the bottom of almost all of our "interventions", from S America to Indochina, you'll find corporations and banks at the heart.

And our government/military will go right on doing it, as long as we can afford it, sadly. We don't seem capable of learning...


"I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 9:19 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


BTW-
Quote:

Where'd you have to go?
GOOGLE BOOKS Vietnam+reeducation+death. I quoted the first link one that showed enough to read but looked at several. I also googled Vietnam+reeducation+death and came up with the same wild discrepancies, but none of them matched "hundreds of thousands", so if you want to accuse me of cherry-picking, that's going to bounce right back at you.
Quote:

And once again, if the North had used diplomatic, instead of military, means and displayed any evidence that they were interested in a free country
Serenity Valley, Geezer. The USA was their inimical enemy and was already in S Vietnam. They had approached the USA for assistance and were rejected, and by then it was clear the USA was going to support Diem militarily no matter what the peace accords and no matter what Diem did. They were a small country faced with a massive power. I think we backed them into a corner by acting like a panicked 800-lb gorilla.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 12:15 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I think they could have been white knights at one time (with our nudging) but our massive death-dealing response kinda screwed that pooch.



Okay, you want to keep going, then.

VC started operations against the South in the Mid-50s, long prior to pretty much any U.S. military presence in Vietnam. There weren't that many U.S. troops in combat until after NVA regulars from the North entered the country through Cambodia and Laos. There was never an opportunity to hold peaceful dialog with North Vietnam because they were already intent on taking the South by military means. Various efforts at negotiating peace were rebuffed.

Quote:

My first point is... with all of our military might, we could do much good. But we (EDIT) ALMOST ALWAYS side with corruption and tyranny. Why is that?

I can't speak for all the decision-makers since whenever, but I'd say that for the last 60 years or so, it's because the government has thought that the guys on the other side were more tyrannical and corrupt, and more interested in aggression, than the ones we supported. I'm not sure that the ALMOST ALWAYS applies either, unless you consider keeping Russian tanks out of West Germany and the Low Countries or chasing the North Koreans and Chinese out of South Korea siding with corruption and tyranny.

Quote:

I think there are a couple of reasons, but the MAIN underlying reason is that our military is often used to support monopolistic corporatism (which IMHO is what capitalism always becomes, given time.)

And I'm not even going to go there, since I don't argue religion with True Believers.

Quote:

I think if you look at our REAL interests... and by "ours" I mean most Americans, not the power elite... you'll find they revolve around peace, prosperity, education, communication and transparency.

You keep saying this, but the country you hold up as the exemplar for these desires has almost none of them. I do note you left out mention of 'Democracy' and 'free and fair elections' this time.
Quote:

War is a poor tool with which to build peace, destruction a poor tool with which to build prosperity, and tyranny a poor tool with which to build freedom.

Maybe North Vietnam should have considered this before they decided to use military force to capture and subdue the South? Maybe the guys who planned the North Korean, and later Chinese, invasions of South Korea should have heard your words? Still waiting word on when the free and fair elections in Vietnam will take place.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 2:03 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

MORE than lack of care Magon. People are shot and killed over things like unionization and working conditions. Do you think that corporations get rich in a "benign" fashion? Don't you think that most of our wars were prompted by corporate interests?

I don’t want to justify one death in the name of anything, a tyrannical regime or corporate greed. One death is too many.

But I find you argument smacks of a bit of desperation to prove that the US is as bad as regimes like Nazi Germany or Stalinist Russia. To compare the two insults the experiences of the multi generations who were hoarded on the cattle trucks and taken away for slaughter or slow death. They just are not the same.

I am a critic of US foreign policy, and my main criticism is the stupidity and ignorance of the people deciding that policy, where they really can’t see the possible impact of regime overthrow or destablisiation, which has often resulted in the worst of regimes coming into power. I may have got it wrong, but I do see that has happened out of ignorance, rather than ‘let’s create a really hideous regime in Cambodia by our driving the Vietnamese communists over the border and bombing the crap out of them’ And I guess hindsight it a marvelous thing which none of us possess.

I think you wear rose coloured glasses with regards to some of the governments you have supported, condemning the US actions and excusing their own. Most countries can be accused of protecting their own self interests, whether that be through economic or ideological expansion and/or military conquest. The Russians were no more concerned about the fate of the Afghanistan people than the Americans were, or the British before them. Stronger countries exploit weaker ones, that’s the way it has been for a long long time. It’s hard to think of a totally benign country, and probably, truthfully, I think I live in one now.

Quote:

Anyway, what I think you're reacting to is "perceived risk"... the risk, in this case, of being killed by an inimical force, whether that force is Megatron Corp or The Beloved Leader.

People respond to risks differently, so although you have a FAR higher chance of being killed in an auto accident, or dying of lung cancer (if you smoke) people are a lot more tolerant of THOSE risks than they are of a terrorist act or violent crime.


No, I’m talking about the actions of a government. I think there is vast difference between being killed accidentally or through disease, than winding up in a place where you are likely to be murdered by government forces. I don’t know how else to explain it to you, if you can’t see the difference.

Quote:

In order for corporations to succeed ... especially at their bases of power (where they control a world-significant military through government cooperation) is to give people a sense of control... without, of course, giving up much ACTUAL control. So people are told... and believe... that they are the masters of their destiny, and they are... in small things. 20 kinds of toilet paper, 200 different channels all saying the same thing, the "right" to compete for increasingly scarce jobs. and the "right" to own (by comparison) a popgun. But in the BIG things- what you want your society to look like, how much environmental or financial or health risk do you want your society to take, do you want to direct your collective resources to rebuilding the environment or education (for example) or towards fighting wars of oppression and building prisons - phfffft!

I do agree that we have less choice than we think we do, but I still think we have choices. And I would assert that the political machine itself lends itself to the status quo. But think about this, throughout much of the world and much of history, to speak negatively about your system of government would have resulted in you being hurled into jail, or worse, tortured, executed, your family murdered. YOU would have been first on the list. We do have the right of free speech, of having some say in political processes. In China, you would be imprisoned for your criticism of your government over the internet.

Hell, I don’t know about where you are, but here, you can get yourself elected, you can protest, lobby. People in democracies have made differences, they have introduced measures such as universal health, stopped involvement in wars, prevented areas of wilderness from being destroyed, introduced environmental measures.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 2:03 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Everything you said about the N Vietnamese applies to us.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 2:43 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

But I find you argument smacks of a bit of desperation to prove that the US is as bad as regimes like Nazi Germany or Stalinist Russia. To compare the two insults the experiences of the multi generations who were hoarded on the cattle trucks and taken away for slaughter or slow death. They just are not the same.
Magon, I've talked to people who survived US-engineered slaughter in Guatemala. It was every bit as horrific as anything Stalin or Hitler ever did, and it was multiplied hundreds of thousands of times over throughout the world. To think that Hitler or Stalin did any worse is to do a disservice to th generations of people who were rounded up, shot, tortured, disappeared... all in the same of "anticommunism".
Quote:

In some places the Reagan Doctrine was meeting a shove with every push it enacted. For many “El Salvador” became Spanish for Vietnam. During his presidency, account after account was reported of U.S.-trained soldiers (more commonly known as death squads- similar to those seen in Chile in the 1970s) raiding towns in El Salvador, torturing civilians, cutting off genitalia, death-squads_el-salvador1and murdering infants. One such event occurred in 1981 in El Mozote, El Salvador. In December of that year there was a systematic execution of nearly 1,000 civilians. The entire town was ravaged by a U.S.-trained and sponsored government battalion. The event was completely denied by both the U.S. and El Salvadoran governments for years. Yet, as time passed and excavations of El Mozote revealed hundreds of bullets manufactured in Lake City, Missouri, the truth became difficult to deny and the public difficult to deceive. It has been projected that in just two years, 1981-1983, more than 100,000 Mayan peasants that were resisting to the changes that Washington was sponsoring were executed. Many U.S. reporters were pulled out of the country during this time; children were drowned in front of their mothers; infants were bashed against rocks; peasants were burned alive; families were made to drink the blood of their pets; farmers were made to bathe in sewage and made to try to outrun soldiers wielding machetes; pregnant women had their stomachs cut open and their fetuses pulled out; young boys were kidnapped and made to fight with the government, raping women and girls (Grandin’s EW, 90). This is not WWII Poland, this is not even Vietnam, this is El Salvador a mere quarter of a century ago.






Quote:

An ex-Navy officer from Argentina, Adolfo Scilingo, said in an interview that in 1970s Argentina, not only were political prisoners routinely dropped over the sea to drown, but they were made to dance first in a macabre celebration of the freedom they were told awaited them



From the latest Honduran coup

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 5:11 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Okay Signy, you win. The US is the worst, most horrific regime in history. You and you alone have committed all the worst atrocities in history. No one else has done anything else to compare. You are such a horrific place that all the rest of the world, all the places that respect human rights, freedom and dignity and currently massing armies to overthrow Obama and your totally evil government which is backed by corporations whose aim it is to exterminate all other people on earth (apart from other Americans of course.)

We obviously live in different realities.

Nevermind, I've had the interesting experience of defending the US, which would have to be an all time first on Internet boards.


NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 5:35 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Okay, you want to keep going, then.
Yep.
Quote:

VC started operations against the South in the Mid-50s, long prior to pretty much any U.S. military presence in Vietnam.
You're missing part of the time period in question... just before and during WWII.

The Viet Minh (in the south, eventually called the VC but still the same people) were fighting French occupation. During WWII, control of Indochina turned to Vichy France, but the Japanese didn't trust them and took over. This was the time of great idealism within the Viet Minh. Ho Chi Minh actually approached both Truman and Eisenhower asking for support, but was turned down. These presidents saw the word "communism" and their butts puckered, although the goals of the Viet Minh were actually pretty tame.

That has been our most common mistake. MOST of the revolutionaries that we drove under were, in fact, socialist reformers. From the Central America to Indonesia to Indochina to Iran to Chile, anything that smacked of "communism" was brutally expunged although the goals were often quite modest: land distribution to the peasants, nationalization of oil or ores or utilities, education, medical care, shorter work hours. Arrangements that would have fit right in with western Germany or France were met with ruthless killing campaigns, torture, and terror. (If you want, I can give you chapter and verse. In fact, I think I will, 'cause I want to shove those facts up your arse sideways, since that seems to be the ONLY way you might actually absorb them!)


Quote:

There weren't that many U.S. troops in combat until after NVA regulars from the North entered the country through Cambodia and Laos.
But The United Sates had placed Special Forces and military advisors in Vietnam as early as 1950... well BEFORE the Geneva Peace of 1954... providing hundreds of millions of dollars and assisting the French Foreign Legion in their attempt to recapture the colony of Vietnam. Our assistance to Diem is often improperly dated, because in fact it began "technically" as assistance to the FRENCH, so its easy to hide what we were doing in Vietnam in the early 1950s. Oh, and did you know that we wanted to nuke Vietnam???
Quote:

There was never an opportunity to hold peaceful dialog with North Vietnam because we were already intent on taking the South by military means.
I fixed that for you.
"In September 1954, right after the Geneva Accords were signed on 20 July 1954, dividing Vietnam into north and south at the 17th parallel, President Dwight D. Eisenhower wrote to the new Prime Minister of the Bao Dai government, Ngo Dinh Diem, promising United States support to ensure a noncommunist Vietnam. Following through on that commitment, direct United States aid to South Vietnam began in January 1955, and American advisors began arriving in February to train the South Vietnamese army. By early 1955, Diem had consolidated his control by suppressing the religious sects in the Mekong Delta and brutally suppressing unrest in Saigon. He also launched a campaign against Communists in South Vietnam, in which 25,000 Communist sympathizers were arrested and more than 1,000 killed according to claims by the Communists. In August 1955, Diem issued a statement formally refusing to participate with the North Vietnamese in consultations to prepare for national elections as called for by the Geneva Agreement. In October, he easily defeated Bao Dai in a seriously tainted referendum and became President of the new Republic of Vietnam." That is the actual factual history. Deal with it.


------------------
Quote:

I can't speak for all the decision-makers since whenever, but I'd say that for the last 60 years or so, it's because the government has thought that the guys on the other side were more tyrannical and corrupt, and more interested in aggression, than the ones we supported.
You're kidding, right? So... when Henry "Realpolitik" Kissinger gave Suharto the go-ahead to kill the East Timorese w/ US guns (just to wait until Kissinger left the country first so his fingerprints wouldn't be on the massacre) that was because Kissinger thought it was for "their own good"? BTW, at least 100,000 East Timorese were killed.
-----------
Quote:

And I'm not even going to go there, since I don't argue religion with True Believers.
That is so below your usual fall-back argument of "cites please" or straw-manning that I'm gonna assume you've conceded this point. But if not, I'll be HAPPY to explain it to you, with real, irrefutable examples!
Quote:

You keep saying this, but the country you hold up as the exemplar for these desires has almost none of them. I do note you left out mention of 'Democracy' and 'free and fair elections' this time.
Didn't cut and paste, the lack was not intentional altho I'm sure you'll want to make something significant out of it! The country I cite is the country that COULD HAVE been an exemplar.

This goes back to revolutions: They start with high ideals, but TPTB (in this case, corporations) get so panicked by any disruption that rather than encouraging positive steps, they smash nascent reform. So TPTB, instead of backing things like the 8-hour day and universal education, wind up supporting deeply corrupt regimes whose STATED goal is graft, exploitation and violence. And that is the side I find YOU defending, over and over. When there IS a choice, when the situation could turn one way or another, you turn to injustice, repression, denial, and cynicism. Why?
Quote:

Maybe the United States should have considered this before they decided to use military force to capture and subdue the South?
Fixed that for you too. AFA China?

Well, I wasn;t talking about China, but thank you for that straw man.

Oh, and BTW Geezer?

I can keep doing this all night, and you'll run out of blah blah blah and air and be buried in facts. Have fun!

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 5:45 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Okay Signy, you win. The US is the worst, most horrific regime in history. You and you alone have committed all the worst atrocities in history. No one else has done anything else to compare
Magon, may I say in the most polite terms possible that you're a dick?

I never said we were "the worst". If you were to tally up the deaths on "our side" and "their side" I'd say were were about even. But we ARE the pre-eminent military power, and we SHOULD learn from the past how our military was used and misused. So, if you want to go bury your head in your arse, feel free. I'm not gonna stop you. Just be aware that's what you're doing.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 6:41 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Quote:

Okay Signy, you win. The US is the worst, most horrific regime in history. You and you alone have committed all the worst atrocities in history. No one else has done anything else to compare
Magon, may I say in the most polite terms possible that you're a dick?

I never said we were "the worst". If you were to tally up the deaths on "our side" and "their side" I'd say were were about even. But we ARE the pre-eminent military power, and we SHOULD learn from the past how our military was used and misused. So, if you want to go bury your head in your arse, feel free. I'm not gonna stop you. Just be aware that's what you're doing.


And politely (unlike you) I still disagree. I don't think you can simply tally up deaths from one side or another, especially when some of your tally ups are questionable at best. I don't think that means that everything comes out even and it is naive to even suggest it.

As much as American foreign policy sucks, and especially big time during the Bush years, I'd personally - and you get this is just me with an opinion here- would rather than at this point in time the US was a world power, rather than have a single Nazi or Stalinistic world power, or some hideous combination of the two.

I'm not sure that the world would be a better place and in fact I'm pretty sure it would be a hell of a lot worse place if current day Iran was a world power. As a woman I'm damn sure I don't. We'll wait and see how China pans out, but I'm pretty sure it wont all be paper lanterns and green tea if Tibet is anything to go by.





NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 7:01 PM

SHINYGOODGUY


Okay, here's a blast from the past that may not mean anything:

My ex-wife had a friend that was Honduran, a really cute lass, who was studying here in the U.S. She extended an invitation to visit her in the summer of 1979, in her native Honduras. We accepted and made good on our promise.

We made a trip to a lakefront cabin to spend a weekend away from the political turmoil of the region and upon our return to the capital city of Tegucigalpa we came upon a roadblock. It was an Army checkpoint some miles outside the city.
We were order of the bus (a type of yellow schoolbus) and told they were searching for contraband. Everyone got off save one brave soul.

Now, mind you, this was during some tense times because of the rebellion in Nicaragua; and these "soldiers" were between 18 and 21 years old, with M-16s and bad attitudes. Well, they came upon this little old lady who had to be in her 80s, gray hair and wrinkled skin; yelling at her that she was in contempt and to deboard immediately. She argued, fussed and fought until the young sergeant in charge ordered his "men" to search the bus and he would deal with the "old woman".

All the passengers outside the bus thought she would be shot. But she was stalwart in her defiance and we all, almost in unison, began to shout out our disapproval of her treatment. He finally saw that he could not win this battle of wills (and get away with it) especially being so close to town. Had we been out further in the sticks, I feel I would not be here to tell this story. We came, I feel, this close.

We were ordered back on the bus after some half an hour of searching and questioning (we were asked why we were visiting Honduras; we said we were students - which was true, but we did cross over the border to see for ourselves the abject poverty that existed in Nicaragua). Death squads roamed the countryside in all parts then, and often was the time we would see bodies - bloated and left by the side of the road as a warning to anyone who would even question the government's actions.

Literally people would turn in their neighbors if anyone uttered even a passing remark. Teenage military would walk the streets as policemen armed with M-16s usually in groups of 5 or 6. These were young men "recruited" to join the local army with cash payments. I saw this with my own eyes. People living in constant fear of losing a loved one (mostly men) at any moment.
Even as visitors we were warned not to bring up any politics whatsoever for fear of reprisals. We were told literally that the walls have ears.

All was silent on the bus for several 100 yards until we got out of earshot of the blockade, then a cheer went up for the fiesty grandmother who repeatedly said she was willing to die before giving in to those "young bullies."


SGG


Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose;
Nothing don't mean nothing honey if it ain't free
- Kris Kristofferson, Me and Bobby McGee

Tawabawho?

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 7:08 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

I don't think you can simply tally up deaths from one side or another
Why not? What's the point of a society, an economy, or a government if it isn't to make life easier and more possible? That would be the objective standard against which I would measure a society: Not what is "says" its for, but the actual outcomes of its policies and the direction of those results (getting better/ getting worse): Are people happier? Are they living better? Do they have more control over their lives?
Quote:

{I} would rather than at this point in time the US was a world power, rather than have a single Nazi or Stalinistic world power, or some hideous combination of the two.
Well then, clearly you're not thinking about those people for whom life IS a Stalinistic nightmare. I "get" that you're comfortable, and it may be hard for you to imagine the horrors that others are living under, so that the horrors of Stalin and Hitler may seem more poignant to you. But the fact is that many people today would see no difference at all between Stalinist Russia and their own lives, and the USA created many of those places. (Not all, but many.)

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 8:20 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Geezer, why we overthrew democracies...

DR MOSSADEGH, DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF IRAN,
Mossadegh's crime was to nationalize oil and fight corruption, and enacted social reforms. In 1953, he was overthrown by a British-American coup, arrested and tried as a traitor in military tribunal court. It was the CIA's first successful dismantling of a foreign government, and Iran has not known democracy since.

------------------------------
GOULART, DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF BRAZIL
Goulart's crime was to pass a law limiting the amount of profits multinationals could transmit out of the country, and to nationalize a subsidiary of ITT.
- "I think we ought to take every step that we can, be prepared to do everything that we need to do," President Johnson ... "We just can't take this one," the tape records LBJ's opinion. "I'd get right on top of it and stick my neck out a little." ... To conceal the U.S. role, Gordon recommended the arms be delivered via "unmarked submarine to be off-loaded at night in isolated shore spots in state of Sao Paulo south of Santos." The documents and cables refer to the coup forces as "the democratic rebellion." (sic) After General Castello Branco's takeover, the military ruled Brazil until 1985.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB118/index.htm

The coup thrust Brazil into a military dictatorship lasting until 1985. During this time, people lived in fear of the military, which took control of the media, drove the economy into the ground, and robbed the national treasury. More info
www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/04/14/brazil-prosecute-dictatorship-era-abuse
s


ALLENDE, DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF CHILE
Allende nationalized US copper firms, and banks and ... sped up land distribution. {S}ocial programs increased from $562.8 million to $828.5 million... this includes health, education, housing, child assistance, and social assistance. ... In October 1972, Chile suffered the first of many socially confrontational strikes — led by the Chilean rich and openly supported by U.S. President Richard Nixon via the CIA.... Despite the declining economy, President Allende's Popular Unity coalition increased its vote to 43.2 percent in the March 1973 parliamentary elections. The CIA paid $8 million to right-wing opposition groups to "create pressures, exploit weaknesses, magnify obstacles". Allende was killed and replaced by the infamous dictator Pinochet, who ruled from 1974 to 1990. You all know about Pinochet.


NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 2, 2010 9:18 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Quote:

I don't think you can simply tally up deaths from one side or another
Why not? What's the point of a society, an economy, or a government if it isn't to make life easier and more possible?


Mostly because you and I appear to be using different forms of tallying - not that I have been providing figures, mind.

You're citing 'capitalism' as the form of government which has caused the figures you continue to quote. A pretty broad stretch, given that you've included the Irish potato famine and any war that you perceive as being fought in the name of capitalism by any country over a vast period of time.

To make it even, you might compare leader with leader, country with country, or period of history with another. But to cite any act of war or atrocity by any country in the western world at any point in time, and then comparing it to one regime is pushing it a bit.

Quote:

That would be the objective standard against which I would measure a society: Not what is "says" its for, but the actual outcomes of its policies and the direction of those results (getting better/ getting worse): Are people happier? Are they living better? Do they have more control over their lives?

Me too. And I could say that equally applied to most communist regimes around the world, that promised that no man was better than another, and yet delivered something to the population that was quite different. Systems of governments rarely deliver what they promise.


Quote:

{I} would rather than at this point in time the US was a world power, rather than have a single Nazi or Stalinistic world power, or some hideous combination of the two.
Well then, clearly you're not thinking about those people for whom life IS a Stalinistic nightmare.I "get" that you're comfortable, and it may be hard for you to imagine the horrors that others are living under, so that the horrors of Stalin and Hitler may seem more poignant to you. But the fact is that many people today would see no difference at all between Stalinist Russia and their own lives, and the USA created many of those places. (Not all, but many.)



Firstly, you don't know anything about the comfort of my life and my experiences, and how I have come to my understanding of the world.

I'm under no illusions that life is not pretty crappy for a vast numbers in the world, but I've no illusions that it would be crappier under a world regime involving the likes of Hitler or Stalin. I'm not also sure that I can attribute all that shit to capitalism, as you do. I think there is a long history to contemplate how we got into this state.

It appears that you see things quite black and white - capitalism as the evil force of oppression, and communism as a saving force for the world. I don't hold views like that. I see that capitalism is a mixed bag, and communism as promising something unobtainable. I have little tolerance for extremists from either the left or the right as they have both brought their share of misery into the world.

I see that many countries fight wars with each other for ever diminishing resources, and treat poorer, less powerful countries with varying degrees of contempt and that has been the predominant paradigm throughout history, regardless of ideology or creed or race.

I also see that at certain times in history, things were worse than others and that one of the worst times would have to be early to mid 20th century Europe, particularly eastern Europe, where continuous military violence decimated the population and destroyed governments, bringing vicious extremists to power, who then also turned on their own populations, resulting in a mass slaughter that has yet to be equaled.

I've said about as much as I think I can say about this topic and it doesn't look like we can find much common ground, even though on other topics we would probably agree. I thank you for sharing your views even though we disagree.

I also want to add that I DON'T agree with the premise of the initial post that centralised governments = road to tyranny.

Just that Stalin - bit of a bastard, really.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Monday, May 3, 2010 3:00 AM

OLDENGLANDDRY


bump

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Monday, May 3, 2010 3:54 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Quote:

Okay, you want to keep going, then.
Yep.
Quote:

VC started operations against the South in the Mid-50s, long prior to pretty much any U.S. military presence in Vietnam.
You're missing part of the time period in question... just before and during WWII.


Nope. My comment was in response to your remark about massive U.S. presence and bombing. None of that happened until North Vietnamese forces entered the South.

Quote:

These presidents saw the word "communism" and their butts puckered, although the goals of the Viet Minh were actually pretty tame.

Considering that they'd just had to chase North Korean and Chinese Communists out of South Korea, at great expense of blood and treasure, one might figure that they had a reason to not trust that Communist goals would remain tame.

Speaking of those goals - like transparency and free communication. Just saw this today on the BBC site. Followed links from an article about the Top 40 Predators of Press Freedom.

Quote:

Vietnam

Nong Duc Manh, Communist Party secretary-general

He is one of the architects of the relentless crackdown on opposition groups and dissident publications in Vietnam. Two journalists and around 15 cyber-dissidents have been sentenced to long prison sentences since January 2007. They include Catholic priest Nguyen Van Ly, who was given an eight-year term on a charge of “propaganda against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam” for launching an underground magazine called Tu do Ngôn luan (Free Expression) in the central city of Hue. When one of those who helped him, Nguyen Phong, was given a six-year sentence, he told the judge: “I will continue to fight for the values of freedom and democracy.” Nong Duc Manh has decided to use every means possible to silence the human rights and pro-democracy activists who got together to form Bloc 8406 and who have defied the government by launching two underground magazines that are distributed abroad and clandestinely within Vietnam. Regarded as an economic reformer, he also distrusts the Internet and had several people arrested in 2007 for demanding more democracy on online forums.



http://en.rsf.org/spip.php?page=article&id_article=26829

Was this one of the goals of the Vietnamese Communists?

And when were those "Free and Fair" elections again? Wasn't that one of their goals?

I already posted a cite on the 12 hour, no overtime, days manufacturing workers must put in or be fired.

Also cites on massive government corruption.

Seems that the Communists in Vietnam don't have that good a track record of meeting goals.





"Keep the Shiny side up"

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Monday, May 3, 2010 7:14 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

I'm under no illusions that life is not pretty crappy for a vast numbers in the world, but I've no illusions that it would be crappier under a world regime involving the likes of Hitler or Stalin.
You know, life for most Germans under Hitler was pretty OK (until they lost the war). Life in Chile under Pinochet was the same. So was life in Brazil under a series of military dictatorships, and in Israel where Jews live quite well while Palestinians are ground under the boot heel. So today, we (you and I) are in the in-group. It's not US being ground down. And its easy to say... where's the problem? I'm OK, you're OK. That smoky smell? Don't know. An exception. Not part of the system. It's far easier to see atrocities if you're not benefiting, and have no emotional ties to the ones being destroyed.
Quote:

You're citing 'capitalism' as the form of government which has caused the figures you continue to quote. A pretty broad stretch, given that you've included the Irish potato famine and any war that you perceive as being fought in the name of capitalism by any country over a vast period of time.
AHEM! If you look back to the original posting by Rappy, you'll see that HE was the one who brought up starvation and I made a point of pointing that out. In your effort to defend the USA, please don't lose your bearings on the scope of this thread.

In any case, for roughly the past 20 posts or so...

I've been counting violent deaths due to direct US support since WWII ... gosh, I haven't even GOTTEN to how many people have starved to death since then due to the workings of capitalism! (A topic, I remind you, opened up by Rappy.)

And I will CONTINUE to count violent deaths due to US support of dictatorial regimes for the foreseeable posts, because... gosh darn... it's a DAMN long list! I haven't even gotten to the 100,000+ killed in East Timor, or formally gotten to Afghanistan, Iraq, Cambodia, Laos, or most of Central and South America!

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE

OTHER TOPICS

DISCUSSIONS
The Olive Branch (Or... a proposed Reboot)
Sun, November 24, 2024 19:17 - 3 posts
Musk Announces Plan To Buy MSNBC And Turn It Into A News Network
Sun, November 24, 2024 19:05 - 1 posts
Punishing Russia With Sanctions
Sun, November 24, 2024 18:05 - 565 posts
human actions, global climate change, global human solutions
Sun, November 24, 2024 18:01 - 953 posts
Russia Invades Ukraine. Again
Sun, November 24, 2024 17:13 - 7497 posts
Elections; 2024
Sun, November 24, 2024 16:24 - 4799 posts
US debt breaks National Debt Clock
Sun, November 24, 2024 14:13 - 33 posts
The predictions thread
Sun, November 24, 2024 13:15 - 1189 posts
The mysteries of the human mind: cell phone videos and religiously-driven 'honor killings' in the same sentence. OR How the rationality of the science that surrounds people fails to penetrate irrational beliefs.
Sun, November 24, 2024 13:11 - 18 posts
In the garden, and RAIN!!! (2)
Sun, November 24, 2024 13:05 - 4762 posts
Sweden Europe and jihadi islamist Terror...StreetShitters, no longer just sending it all down the Squat Toilet
Sun, November 24, 2024 13:01 - 25 posts
MSNBC "Journalist" Gets put in his place
Sun, November 24, 2024 12:40 - 2 posts

FFF.NET SOCIAL