Coyote
Well-Known Member
You keep going back there. As wars go, iraq has gone splendidly. Was taking saddam out an instant fix? Of course not. Will the people be better off governing themselves in the long run? Without a doubt.
Iraq has not gone splendidly - it is at best a holding pattern trying to fix the mistakes we made, because the central government is too weak and ineffective and corrupt to take control. Control is being taken by tribal leaders in tribal areas which is creating the the reality of less violence in those areas but is further weakening any possibility of an effective central government.
Instant fix: I think it's undeniable that the architects of this war (in their think tank equivelant of an ivory tower) had no idea whatsoever of the reality of the culture, political climate, and sectarian divisions within Iraq when they decided to promote an invasion. The package sold to the American people was quick in and out: topple Saddam, the people will love us, and democracy will flourish. At best, that was extremely naive. Democracy needs much more then simple "freedom" to flourish. I think this is evident in many countries where "democracy" has led to genocide, ruthless dictatorships cloaked as democratic regimes, and more.
Are people better off ruling themselves in all cases? I wonder. Do the Iraqi people feel that the current situation - truely one of the most brutal, bloodiest wars in a long time - is better? In a country with more factions and individual warlords seeking personal power through fear and bloodshed - would they rather have Saddam again? They didn't want us to invade. We should have listened. Many people warned of the likelyhood of civil war and anarchy. In an artificial country - with ethnic and religious divisions that are deeply buried and worse - carefully stoked by Saddam to maintain his control - why were our people so surprised at what happened? That once freed from tryanny they would not unite but would instead seek to settle old emnities and carve out their own fiefdems?
I wonder - and have no answer - are people always better off governing themselves or do certain institutions need to be in place first? Look at Russia after the fall of the USSR. It descended into mafia-ruled anarchy. It's gradually pulling out of it...but, because of what? Putin who has systematically dismantled many of the democratic reforms and installed something close to a dictatorship. I'm not defending the old USSR by the way - I'm just pointing out that maybe democracy needs more then "freedom" to flourish.
Modern liberalism in the past half century or so has invented and funded literally thousands of programs. How about you name 10 for me that have worked as advertised and actually improved people's lives in the long run. That is, lifted them up out of poverty and placed them squarely in the mainstream so that they need never look back. And don't try to pass off some anecdotal evidence of individual success that don't represent the norm for any given program.
Rural development and electrification projects such as Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
The national interstate system and road projects.
Fair Labor Standards Act which established a maximum normal work week of 40 hours and a minimum wage of 40 cents/hour and outlawed most forms of child labor.
Environmental Protection Agency: cleaning up of some of the worst polluted areas of the country, setting clean air standards, and cleaning up waterways.
The point, Coyote, is that the ramifications and consequences can, and are, very often seen and accurately predicted but are ignored by modern liberalism in its headlong rush to change.
I agree in that liberals don't always look at consequences but I disagree in that I think we only see some of the ramifications and, none if we want it bad enough (the war in Iraq being a notable modern conservative example).
Also quite often a trade-off is involved with the question being: where is the greatest good? When it comes to social policies on a large scale - it's very difficult to see the big picture. Right now - we see all this with 20/20 hindsight so it's easy to critisize. We are far removed in time from the immediacy of real starvation and real poverty and endless childbearing that characterized the poor in urban inner cities, rural America, Indian reservations, Appalachia, migrant worker camps - but that doesn't make it any less real and in truth, some of it still exists despite the efforts of these programs.
So...do you do the Conservative waltz: do nothing, stick with the tried and true because we know it works...sort of and we won't take the risk of something different" Or do you do the Liberal tango - what the hell, jump in with all the best intentions and try to fix it, to hell with consequences we'll deal with that later?"
There's merits to both.