I would appreciate some actual responses. At some points, it even appears that you were attributing facets to my argument that simply aren't there.
All countries proffer moral justifications for pragmatic acts.
Yeah, I think that's what I said. So how is it that many in the US would criticise France for doing exactly what the US is doing? My point was not that France is good, but that their actions are unassailable from the vantage of someone who would defend the US along moral lines. What is left? Just a few million egocentrics who think anyone who doesn't agree with us should have their name erased from culinary recipes.
Your appeal to democracy is weak.
It's weak? Is that your idea of an argument? Short is fine and well, but say SOMETHING. In mentioning democracy (it was by no means "an appeal to democracy...) I was merely pointing out that France, Germany, and Russia did act democratically which even if it was merely coincincidence, is better than what happened in England and Spain. Apart from that, I used a mock argument to demonstrate why Accom's razor doesn't work in politics. More on that in a sec.
Referendums on waging war is a bad idea, considering the top secret intel that often goes into the decision.
By top secret intel, are you referring to US claims that not only did Iraq have WMDs but that we knew where they were? LOL Actually, that's a nice bit of ossified thinking which we might compare to trying to use musket tactics in a world of machine guns. If Saddam had not been so surprised by the invasion, he might have actually set up nice juicy defences where his world war II technology could be aniquilated in the open, rather than having an enormous percentage of his front line troops just fade into the population. Need I remind you that we have born more casualties since the declared end of the conflict than during?
In any case, the idea that the international community, ie the UN, is not the correct forum for making these decisions is perhaps a fundamental and irreconciliable difference between you and I. I think the UN should be used and respected because international stability is the greatest enemy of a terrorist.
You don't think France should be judged to a double standard. why should we? Do you see the terrific irony of your statements?
Didn't say that. I said the US shouldn't criticize France for doing what the US does. Look Mom, no irony!!!
The table. Is this the table of bribes paid to people from the Iraqui oil for food program? Why is it irrelevant again?
Not that table. go back and look for the link provided by wonderwench to thedissidentfrogman.com. I'm not familiar with the table of bribes paid to people from the Iraqui oil for food program, and if you would care to enlighten me, I'd be grateful.
Oh. Consistent, staunch pressure would have worked? Why didn't you say so.
Again, you disparage and offer no counter argument. I'll requote from my previous post just in case you care to actually address my argument:
"What you say of the UN may be true, but I insist that the situation was mishandled. By Clinton: the embargo should not have endured for the eight years Clinton was in office. Real pressure should have been consistently applied years ago, and Clinton passed the buck. Bush's response: in a matter of a few months, radically change the US policy from twelve years of status quo to demanding an immediate voluntary (or in the absence of such a miraculous rendition, involuntary) regime change. Consistent staunch pressure would have accomplished Iraq's compliance, or at least would have weakened the balking of such countries as France Germany and Russia and galvanized the international community, reinforced the UN (and thus international stability) and more favorably distributed the burden of the costs incurred in both human and economic terms."
Comparing our liberation of oppressed to Russian invasions to annex adjacent territories is a specious intellectual act at best.
Our liberation of oppressed? nice. You won't be surprised to find that the same sort of things were said by the Russians at every step. In fact, the idea of liberating the world from the Capitalist system was the mainstay of Communist propaganda. The fact that Capitalist propaganda uses exactly the same formulations does not constitute an argument on your part. To illustrate the point, it is commonplace in the ex Soviet block to hear people say "shit, we were better off back when..."
"Liberation", like "terrorism" is a matter of perspective.
You explained occam's razor well. But I saw no convincing argument as to why it can't be used in politics. You just said it can't.
Back to Occam's razor... the argument I provided for democracy was illustrative, not a real argument. According to Occam's razor, it would be the preferrable hypothesis because it is the simplest and it leaves out conjecture about motives to which we have no access. In politics, we are dealing with the human mind, not symbolically representable datum. Simply because I can imagine that George Bush paraded around intel on WMDs in order to toss his corporate buddies a very big bone, it is possible that it is true (to say nothing of plausible). However, the true motives of the human mind are not reducible to simple truth statements. Therefore, Occam's razor cannot be brought to bear.
Thanks for the compliment, Spillmind.
Bry