For the most part, the world's response to the crisis in Syria was to make it worse. — frank
For the most part, the world's response to the crisis in Syria was to make it worse. I continue to wonder what it means that we weren't able to come together as a species and create the healthiest outcome.
I'd like to try out arguing that these things are inevitable and we'll never have the wisdom to avoid tragedies like the Syrian disintegration. Anybody want to argue that we actually can take that creative power?
What I'm saying is our present day situation is quite different than what it has been, and we are sort of still in transition to a more globally integrated, value integrated world stage. So past folly and short sighted thinking may not be a good predictor of future trends. I guess we'll see — aporiap
I'm sorry it looks like many people were focusing their posts specifically on the syrian crisis and consequences of interventionist policy more broadly.Ah ha! An optimist! Or almost-optimist?
'These things' being crises, human problems more generally - humanitarian tragedy, health crises, extreme socioeconomic inequality, sectarian or ethnic violence, rights violation etc.For the most part, the world's response to the crisis in Syria was to make it worse. I continue to wonder what it means that we weren't able to come together as a species and create the healthiest outcome.
I'd like to try out arguing that these things are inevitable and we'll never have the wisdom to avoid tragedies like the Syrian disintegration. Anybody want to argue that we actually can take that creative power?
For the most part, the world's response to the crisis in Syria was to make it worse. I continue to wonder what it means that we weren't able to come together as a species and create the healthiest outcome.
I'd like to try out arguing that these things are inevitable and we'll never have the wisdom to avoid tragedies like the Syrian disintegration. Anybody want to argue that we actually can take that creative power?
All you have to do is say that this is possible, and you're an optimist.An actually functioning international criminal court and sanctioning system? Idk — aporiap
In places like Greece the opposite worked quite well. — Πετροκότσυφας
Optimism vs pessimism regarding global government was what I was looking for. Syria is a good vehicle for exploring the issue (from my point of view).
I wonder then, what they were thinking when they were originally writing the Defense Planning Guidance. — Πετροκότσυφας
hmmm, but what do you mean by 'global government'? Are you talking about stuff like the UN? I think one of the biggest things to take away from the syrian conflict - as with so many middle eastern conflicts - is that the local texture of the conflict determines a lot. There's no easy external solution that can be draped over. — csalisbury
I think it's inevitable there will be instability and strife in one form or another but I think it can be minimized to some degree and it definitely helps that certain civil-liberty demanding, political power disseminating, corruption and groupthink stigmatizing values are being made available via online platforms. — aporiap
By your definition I could be, it depends on how you define 'these things'. I wasn't saying 'disintegrations' are never inevitable. It's just they can be made less frequent in a more equitable world.All you have to do is say that this is possible, and you're an optimist.
Like this one, like reddit, like youtube, like facebook, like online news outlets where regular people can come into contact with and converse others that hold those values and operate under themLike what online platform?
War as creative destruction is a blessing from the point of view of capitalism. — Πετροκότσυφας
The fact that the ultimate objective is regional control and that the form of local government more or less is a matter of contingency, accidental. — Πετροκότσυφας
Obviously. So you do see a long range profit for westerners in Syria's demise. Really?The point of creative destruction is the destruction of existing wealth and markets so that new ones may be created. — Πετροκότσυφας
The fact that the ultimate objective is regional control and that the form of local government more or less is a matter of contingency, accidental. That's why the USA was never consistent to the forms of regimes it supported. — Πετροκότσυφας
The point of creative destruction is the destruction of existing wealth and markets so that new ones may be created. — Πετροκότσυφας
You did told me indeed. And I did told you too. Strange that out of all monarchies USA picked out Iraq and not say... KSA, but whatever. As you said, it doesn't matter much. — Πετροκότσυφας
For "westerners"? In general? No, of course not. For war-mongers and some capitalists yes, of course. That's why I wrote "from the point of view of capitalism" and "from the viewpoint of warlords". My comment was general though, as I understood your question about an optimistic view to be more broad, not constrained by the example of Syria. — Πετροκότσυφας
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