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Another one is a global perfect storm. This is more a downside scenario where the euro zone becomes disorderly and eventually you get more countries losing market access, more countries defaulting, more countries exiting the euro zone. You get the U.S. slowing down and then having a stall speed and a bubble bursting. You get a hard landing in China. You get a stall in growth in emerging markets. And you get a war in the Middle East between Israel and the U.S. on one side and Iran [on the other]. You know, it’s a bubbling of all crises. That will be the perfect storm. You know, that perfect storm is not my baseline scenario, but I would say that all five of those negative trends in a less extreme way are already underway. The euro zone is a slow-motion train wreck. The U.S. is slowing down. The Chinese landing looks harder rather than softer. Other nations are slowing down. And the tensions in the Middle East might build up again. So you have a very bumpy road ahead this year and next year for the global economy.
Ideally, for peace to occur in the region, Israel should be forced to go to war, so that the Islamists can organize.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Not sure if I read the OP correctly, but basically, "the enemies of my enemies are my friends" is the gist of it, right?
DoomYoshi wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Not sure if I read the OP correctly, but basically, "the enemies of my enemies are my friends" is the gist of it, right?
Basically, the reason the Islamists can't enter a successful war with Israel is that they are too scattered and face "internal problems". So, our freedom and peace comes at a cost of Islamists living in chaos, with the income inequality and lack of women's/homosexual rights that come with that.
Yes, America would be dragged into such a war. Why do Americans have a right to stay out of war when the cost of that staying out is that the Islamists are at war with each other. This is the crux of my question. How can we morally support the current state of affairs without asserting "West trumps East, end of story".
If we cannot do that, then many of the recent talks on peace need to be re-analyzed in terms of this inherent contradiction.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Well, the problem with your position lies with the underlined assumption. Ask yourself:
(1) Is Hamas a failure? (I don't think so--considering its few resources and great gains)
(2) How much has Israeli investment in security hampered the goals of--not only the Islamic, but also the secular terrorist and insurgents?
(Significantly more so than internal strife among the violent, Islamic groups. That Iron Dome, those occasional excursions into neighboring countries, and Mossad are the heavylifters in curbing the effectiveness of anti-Israeli insurgencies/terrorists/freedom fighters/rebels.
Also, it's not the case that poor economic conditions in those areas results in Peace for the West. According to the several reviewed articles in What Makes a Terrorist, there is no correlation between economic conditions and the origin of a terrorist. I see no link between having economic conditions being worse in place A makes place B better. If anything, those poor conditions are the result of dictatorships/poorly managed governments, which could have arisen through foreign (US) intervention--but that's an added condition. Why Nations Fail argues that those outcomes are the result of their history of being colonized. My main point here is that "our freedom and peace comes at a cost of Islamists living in chaos" is not true.
("Why do Americans have a right to stay out of war when the cost of that staying out is that the Islamists are at war with each other?"
(Most Americans aren't in any wars, but the US government certainly has been in many wars/counterinsurgencies in many places for the past 30 years--especially in areas which the Islamists inhabit. This intervention seems to be causing the strife... but this runs into the problem of counterfactuals.
warmonger1981 wrote:What is the technical meaning of terrorist that the US government goes by? Does anyone know. The reason I ask is cause terrorism is thrown around so much.
DoomYoshi wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Not sure if I read the OP correctly, but basically, "the enemies of my enemies are my friends" is the gist of it, right?
Basically, the reason the Islamists can't enter a successful war with Israel is that they are too scattered and face "internal problems". So, our freedom and peace comes at a cost of Islamists living in chaos, with the income inequality and lack of women's/homosexual rights that come with that.
Yes, America would be dragged into such a war. Why do Americans have a right to stay out of war when the cost of that staying out is that the Islamists are at war with each other. This is the crux of my question. How can we morally support the current state of affairs without asserting "West trumps East, end of story".
If we cannot do that, then many of the recent talks on peace need to be re-analyzed in terms of this inherent contradiction.
DoomYoshi wrote:Right. But we aren't in any costly wars with nuclear powers.
DoomYoshi wrote:Why Nations Fail is one of the worst books ever written. This conversation is over.
EDIT: sorry, I confused Why Nations Fail for Collapse, which actually is the worst book ever written.
DoomYoshi wrote:In any case, it's not my assumption. It's based on a statement by Meir Dagan. So, you are saying that you disagree with Dagan? If you disagree with Dagan, that means that Israel should invade Iran.
DoomYoshi wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Well, the problem with your position lies with the underlined assumption. Ask yourself:
(1) Is Hamas a failure? (I don't think so--considering its few resources and great gains)
(2) How much has Israeli investment in security hampered the goals of--not only the Islamic, but also the secular terrorist and insurgents?
(Significantly more so than internal strife among the violent, Islamic groups. That Iron Dome, those occasional excursions into neighboring countries, and Mossad are the heavylifters in curbing the effectiveness of anti-Israeli insurgencies/terrorists/freedom fighters/rebels.
Also, it's not the case that poor economic conditions in those areas results in Peace for the West. According to the several reviewed articles in What Makes a Terrorist, there is no correlation between economic conditions and the origin of a terrorist. I see no link between having economic conditions being worse in place A makes place B better. If anything, those poor conditions are the result of dictatorships/poorly managed governments, which could have arisen through foreign (US) intervention--but that's an added condition. Why Nations Fail argues that those outcomes are the result of their history of being colonized. My main point here is that "our freedom and peace comes at a cost of Islamists living in chaos" is not true.
("Why do Americans have a right to stay out of war when the cost of that staying out is that the Islamists are at war with each other?"
(Most Americans aren't in any wars, but the US government certainly has been in many wars/counterinsurgencies in many places for the past 30 years--especially in areas which the Islamists inhabit. This intervention seems to be causing the strife... but this runs into the problem of counterfactuals.
I'm not sure what the point of this. I didn't make any claims about terrorists.
warmonger1981 wrote:What is the technical meaning of terrorist that the US government goes by? Does anyone know. The reason I ask is cause terrorism is thrown around so much.
DoomYoshi wrote:Right. But we aren't in any costly wars with nuclear powers.
BigBallinStalin wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:Why Nations Fail is one of the worst books ever written. This conversation is over.
EDIT: sorry, I confused Why Nations Fail for Collapse, which actually is the worst book ever written.
Yeah, I was gonna say, google acemoglu and email that to his face.DoomYoshi wrote:In any case, it's not my assumption. It's based on a statement by Meir Dagan. So, you are saying that you disagree with Dagan? If you disagree with Dagan, that means that Israel should invade Iran.
The following is what you said, and it's what I disagree with:
1. the reason the Islamists can't enter a successful war with Israel is that they are too scattered and face "internal problems"
2. So, our freedom and peace comes at a cost of Islamists living in chaos,
and,
3. Why do Americans have a right to stay out of war when the cost of that staying out is that the Islamists are at war with each other.
('Americans', i.e. the US government, has been in several wars and conflicts with many "Islamists" for the past 10-15 years.)
But that's different from Meir's position:
Meir: a strike on Iran (from Israel) "would lead to a regional war and solve the internal problems of the Islamic Republic,".
It depends on what assumptions he's rolling with. I agree with Meir that striking Iran may likely exacerbate the situation because the civilian casualties would be high (try bombing nuclear facilities that are buried under cities), and/or it may involve some prolonged hostage situation (e.g. if Israel sends in commandos), or maybe "striking Iran" involves moving in the armed forces. The last assumption would most likely lead to a regional war. Iran has tried air strikes with great success and little repercussions in the past, so there's that to consider.
The other part is most likely to occur. A war against foreigners can be effective in mobilizing the population (e.g. Iranian Revolution 1979 and then its subsequent war with Iraq). But again, it depends on what he means by "striking Iran."
As for your position, I'm not seeing much of a similarity with Meir's.
DoomYoshi wrote:So, BBS, you are saying that statement (3) is correct but not statements (1) or (2)?
You have also claimed that (1) is correct by the blue highlight. So what evidence is there that (2) is not correct? Or are you just saying that (2) is not correct because there is no evidence for it, meaning it doesn't matter if there is evidence against it?
DoomYoshi wrote:Meir Dagan said: that a strike on Iran (from Israel) "would lead to a regional war and solve the internal problems of the Islamic Republic,".
Basically, what he is saying is that the peace between Israel and Iran is dependent upon non-peace between different Islamic factions.
Is peace based on conflict actually peace? Is this political selfishness something that should be supported or dissuaded by the UN?
Arguably, I would say that if our goal is "World Peace", then an internal power struggle between Islamic tribes is just as damaging as a war between Israel and Iran. Ideally, for peace to occur in the region, Israel should be forced to go to war, so that the Islamists can organize.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Another avenue is where the Arab nations rise up because they've had enough of Israel's shite (e.g. Samuel Huntington's Clash of Civilizations, which in my opinion presumes too much). I'm not sure what Meir thinks about this possibility.
DoomYoshi wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Another avenue is where the Arab nations rise up because they've had enough of Israel's shite (e.g. Samuel Huntington's Clash of Civilizations, which in my opinion presumes too much). I'm not sure what Meir thinks about this possibility.
This is the possibility I want you to consider. If the Islamists could finally work together in a concentrated attack on Israel, then there would be a regional war which would drag in the United States.
My claim is that no such regional war can happen because the various Islamist government are too busy infighting (e.g.Rebels as in Syria/Egypt) or they are too standoffish with each other. If this claim is correct, then the peace of America is guaranteed by this infighting, no?
DoomYoshi wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Another avenue is where the Arab nations rise up because they've had enough of Israel's shite (e.g. Samuel Huntington's Clash of Civilizations, which in my opinion presumes too much). I'm not sure what Meir thinks about this possibility.
This is the possibility I want you to consider. If the Islamists could finally work together in a concentrated attack on Israel, then there would be a regional war which would drag in the United States.
My claim is that no such regional war can happen because the various Islamist government are too busy infighting (e.g.Rebels as in Syria/Egypt) or they are too standoffish with each other. If this claim is correct, then the peace of America is guaranteed by this infighting, no?
...because the various Islamist government are too busy infighting (e.g.Rebels as in Syria/Egypt) or they are too standoffish with each other. If this claim is correct, then the peace of America is guaranteed by this infighting, no?
BigBallinStalin wrote: You might be hyping up the 'infighting' in the ME too much, thus overlooking some details, so the "Eastern Infighting, Peace in the West" conclusion seems incorrect.
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