BULL. SHIT.
YOU are the one who dragged Trump/Russia into this, so you could score some cheap points against "the Resistance."
I know from experience that if I posted something like that, I would be in danger of being accused of thread derailment and vendetta.Extremely glad to see the Resistance take a break from hyperventilating about Russia facebook memes to come together and support a coup in a foreign country.
You could certainly make the argument that the actions of the US government and much of the media right now represent a continuation of more than a century of US foreign policy in Latin America. There would even be, in my opinion, considerable truth to that statement, although I also believe that you have to look at the specifics of each situation, rather than immediately assume that each new crisis is simply a repeat of previous ones.The argument being made is that US policy in Latin America has always been monstrous and there is no fucking reason to think that has changed now. You clearly don't like this and are willing to bleat in protest even as the policy currently being spearheaded is being undertaken by Donald Fucking Trump, Mike Pompeo, John fucking Bolton, Marco Rubio, and Elliot. Fucking. Abrams.
My problem, as I have said (and been ignored) repeatedly, is not that I support US military intervention in Venezuela (I don't, and I am confident enough of my posting record on that point to report anyone who says otherwise for dishonest debating and libel). Nor is it with you criticizing the history of military intervention in Latin America. It is with you appearing to expand that argument to make broad, sweeping claims about the US as a nation, or using this situation as an excuse for some off-topic Whataboutism in defense of the Kremlin.
Frankly, I think a big problem here is that you're so fixated on "US=bad" that you just assume/insist that anyone who deviates from that position in any way, in any context, is simply an advocate of US Imperialism.
For God's sake, I agree with you about the US invading Venezuela. But you seem to assume that I support it because I don't automatically condemn the US on every issue, or because I dare to also criticize America's enemies.
No, and you're obfuscating the topic again. I was referring to your insistence on automatically vilifying the US (down to pretending that the US in 1912 and the US in 2019 are identical countries), while automatically defending Russia and its allies.I'm sorry, the US' monstrous history in Latin America is about nationality and not actions?
I don't care if you critique interventions in Latin America, as long as you confine your criticisms to the realm of the fact-based. What I am objecting to here is your reflexive apologism for Putin and his cronies, your gross double-standard in how you treat crimes by America and its allies vs crimes by its enemies, and your obfuscation of the actual topic and of my arguments.
Vietnam, by your own subsequent acknowledgement.What changed in between 1912 and 1954 that would have any fucking relevance to judging US policies in Latin America?
That's actually a fairly meaningful change for the people affected.What a load of utter wank. Leaving aside your attempts to turn arguments about consistency in US foreign policy to an argument about bigotry, your argument couldn't be anymore clueless and self-absorbed. You think become the suit in the White House changes that means there's been some sort of noteworthy change? The US is run on the same principles and with the same basic priorities as it always has. Staunchly pro-capital, anti-worker, and unashamedly imperialist. And this manifests in its foreign policy, and always has. The fundamental underlying premises on which those policies are run never change - the only meaningful change when government changes hands is how nakedly and violently those policies are pursued.
I would also contend that US foreign policy is not (or wasn't, until Trump came along) nearly as overtly white supremacist as it once was, although it is often latently racist.
Which is ridiculous.No, I apparently feel it 'doesn't count' because nothing has meaningfully changed.
Lie.It is when nobody brings up Russia in this thread except you, actually. Not hard, this stuff.
Vymple wrote:Extremely glad to see the Resistance take a break from hyperventilating about Russian facebook memes to come together and support a coup in a foreign country.
aerius wrote:Same reason he tried to overthrow a pro-Russian government in Syria. Look guys, we're playing 3-D chess here.Elfdart wrote:I'm curious: If Trump is really Putin's bitch, why is he trying to overthrow a pro-Russian government in Venezuela?
Given that we live in a highly interconnected world, I would contend that what happens in one country inevitably affects every other country, where subtly or overtly. Borders are a fiction created by humans.And which one of those things changed a single fucking thing about the priorities on which US foreign policy is formulated? Every single thing you bring up is basically a load of totally irrelevant bullshit. The Vietnam War and anti-war movement is the only remotely relevant example - but it didn't stop the Reagan administration wreaking absolute murderous havoc in Latin America through the 1980s, did it?
You may think the way you arrange the chairs in the same fucking room there's always been - within your own borders - has some sort of meaningful effect on the suffering inflicted outside of them - but thats just being self-absorbed.
In any case, Vietnam, as you alluded to, certainly affected the American public's willingness to take the government line at face value, its enthusiasm for prolonged foreign wars, and its willingness to accept a draft to wage such wars. Whatever happens in Venezuela, you can be pretty sure that the US will not carry a war to the point where it will require drafting its own populace- because of Vietnam.
Nations' foreign policies are generally based largely on self-interest, yes (much as I wish it were not so). That's true of the US, and I expect that its true of just about every other nation that's ever existed. That doesn't mean that the subtler shifts within that framework don't matter- they absolutely do. They're what we call "history". What bothers me is a) your inability or refusal to show any nuance in your analysis of foreign policy, and b) your gross double standard in how you condemn selfish and unethical foreign policy by America, vs. by other nations.
I will also note that your insistent dismissal of changes in administration as "irrelevant" closely echoes the "Deep State" and "Both Sides" rhetoric Trumpers and the Kremlin routinely employ to bait gullible Leftists into supporting neo-fascism.
Working on it.In so far as foreign policy is concerned, its the same damn country. Let me know when you depose the forces of rapacious capital in some form, and then I'll revisit that assessment.
Be careful of your insinuations: I'm not sure who this is addressed to, but if you insinuate that I support military intervention in Venezuela, much less that I support fascism and genocidal death sqauds, I will report it for the despicable libel that it is.Elfdart wrote: ↑2019-01-29 02:25am If being opposed to the overthrow of Maduro makes someone a "dictator apologist", doesn't supporting the overthrow make someone a death squad apologist? I mean Elliott Abrams' track record in turning Einsatzgruppen loose on hapless villagers is well known. When one forensics crew sifted through a mass grave in Guatemala the leader opined:
That's what the US foreign policy establishment has in store for Venezuela, too. Funny how they get behind Trump when he decides to back fascists."It's too bad {Milwaukee mass murder suspect} Jeffrey Dahmer didn't come to Guatemala 'cause he'd be a general by now," Snow said with disgust.
Arguing against Maduro's overthrow because you feel that the risk or cost of doing so outweighs any benefit that is likely to be gained, or because you distrust America's motives, does not make you a dictator apologist. Opposing an overthrow that comes from without rather than within because you believe in national sovereignty as an absolute principle doesn't either, even if I think its idiotic. Opposing it because you believe the opposition is just as bad or worse does not make you a dictator apologist.
Opposing it because you think that Maduro is some sort of noble champion of downtrodden Venezuelans against US Imperialism/capitalism does.
I don't have a problem with people opposing US intervention. I have a problem with people arguing (as you did) that Maduro is some sort of innocent victim, some heroic champion of the downtrodden masses. I am sick of seeing seemingly intelligent and well-meaning people mindlessly repeat the propaganda of corrupt tyrants who would probably see their lives as worth no more than an ant's, simply because they're against America. We should be capable of greater subtlety, greater nuance. Greater honesty. The enemy of your enemy is not always your friend.
(That is the most generous interpretation of your motives- the other is that you are simply lying.)
As to your allegations that Maduro's opponent is a fascist, I honestly don't know enough about him to judge them either way, though your obvious biases make me reluctant to take any claims that you make at face value. I suspect you see very little, if any, distinction between "has the support of the US/is opposed to a US enemy" and "fascist".
I do think, though, that it diminishes the people of countries such as the Ukraine, Venezuela, Libya, etc. to imply that any opposition to their current regimes is simply a product of US-backed coups and agitprop. Not only are you repeating the propaganda of said regimes, which they use to justify rounding up/torturing/massacring dissidents, but you are denying the people of those countries their agency. You are so wrapped up in your worldview of "US=evil, enemies of the US=good" that you dismiss the possibility that their might be large numbers of people in those countries who, of their own free will and without simply being fronts for an American agenda, might desire a change to the status quo.