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  1. #1
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    Thorne's opinions are one of the problems I have with the country I love. Within the last 8 years we have turned into a selfish, mean country in our views.

    Compassion has been lost. I love how, THorne, you say that you are compassionate when your views express just the opposite. Saying it does not make it so.

    Fear of socialism is just a bugaboo with the criminals that have run the country the last eight years. The criminals that care for one thing and one thing alone, lining the pockets of themselves and their rich friends.

    THorne's opinions are the reason we are hated throughout the world. And the administration that is luckily on its way out DID express MMI's views that AMericans believe they are better than anyone else. With NO basis for that view.

    I love my country and hope we can get back to being a country worthy of that love. A country that takes care of its own and deals with ALL the criminals, including the ones that have run this country into the ground.

    As an American that loves his country and thinks that maybe we are getting back on the right track I apologize for people like Thorne and the arrogant folks that have run this country in the last 8 years.

    There are still good people in this country, but their voices have been silenced for a long time.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by MonsterMaster{vg} View Post
    Compassion has been lost. I love how, THorne, you say that you are compassionate when your views express just the opposite. Saying it does not make it so.
    Showing "compassion" for every person, deserving or not, does not make one compassionate, either. Gullible comes to mind. I can feel sympathy for someone who loses his home due to unseen calamities. But a rich man who builds his home on the beach has to expect a hurricane to take it sooner or later. No compassion for him!

    THorne's opinions are the reason we are hated throughout the world. And the administration that is luckily on its way out DID express MMI's views that AMericans believe they are better than anyone else. With NO basis for that view.
    Ah, yes. The country that does more to help people than any other. The country that led the fight to get relief into Myanmar during their recent calamity. The country that leaps to send searchers and doctors and workers to countries destroyed by earthquakes or volcanic eruptions. True, far too many Americans think they are better than anyone else. So, too, do people of other countries. Most people believe their country is the best. It's taught to us from birth. But don't include me in them. I've seen the limitations of my country. Don't blame the people or the country, blame the politicians. They are why people hate us!

    I love my country and hope we can get back to being a country worthy of that love. A country that takes care of its own and deals with ALL the criminals, including the ones that have run this country into the ground.

    There are still good people in this country, but their voices have been silenced for a long time.
    Here, at least, we are in agreement.

    As an American that loves his country and thinks that maybe we are getting back on the right track I apologize for people like Thorne and the arrogant folks that have run this country in the last 8 years.
    This saddens me. I love my country just as much as anyone. I don't love what it's become. I am a fairly solitary person who believes in personal responsibility and hard work. I believe that this country, this world, would be better if more people felt the same way. If that is "arrogant", then excuse me for breathing.
    Last edited by Thorne; 01-04-2009 at 08:03 AM. Reason: Used "Burma" instead of "Myanmar". Sounded arrogant!
    "A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thorne View Post
    This saddens me. I love my country just as much as anyone. I don't love what it's become. I am a fairly solitary person who believes in personal responsibility and hard work. I believe that this country, this world, would be better if more people felt the same way. If that is "arrogant", then excuse me for breathing.
    I dont think your philosophy is at all arrogant. I work hard, pay my bills, support my family and take responsibility for my actions. The major differrence is that I think everyone deserves a break because but for the grace of "god" (which is a whole other thread!) go all of us.
    I, with a deeper instinct, choose a man who compels my strength, who makes enormous demands on me, who does not doubt my courage or my toughness, who does not believe me naive or innocent, who has the courage to treat me like a woman.

    -:Anias Nin:-

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Skyybird View Post
    I think everyone deserves a break because but for the grace of "god" (which is a whole other thread!) go all of us.
    I don't think everyone desrves a break, and that's the real problem some people have with my attitude. I feel that there are some people (and no, I don't claim to know which ones all the time) who don't deserve any sort of break: those who commit pre-meditated murder; child molestors (true molestors, not some 16 year old kid dating a 15 year old and having sex); and others of this kind.

    Yes, everyone deserves his day in court, and I'm a firm believer in innocent until proven guilty. But once proven guilty, especially of some heinous crime, you forfeit any chance you ever had of getting a "break."
    "A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thorne View Post
    Ah, yes. The country that does more to help people than any other. The country that led the fight to get relief into Myanmar during their recent calamity. The country that leaps to send searchers and doctors and workers to countries destroyed by earthquakes or volcanic eruptions.
    The first world doesn't help the third. We don't help, we exploit. Not as brutal as in colonial days, today it's more subtle: Closing our borders for agricultural products so a couple of American sugar farmers can have a good living is just one of many examples. Same with rice, meat, just about every agricultural product is protected by taxes in the western civ, while we demand from the developing countries that they open their borders for our services and technological products. There's a good reason why Brazil, India and some African countries brought down the newest round of the World Trading Organization talks.

    About sending doctors: Screw that. Screw that big time. In fact what happens right now is that America, Britain, Canada and to a lesser extent other countries of the western civilization are actually draining medical personnel from developing countries such as Ghana and Malawi. There are more Ghanese nurses working outside of Ghana than there are in Ghana, same with Malawian doctors.

    Quote Originally Posted by Thorne View Post
    True, far too many Americans think they are better than anyone else. So, too, do people of other countries. Most people believe their country is the best. It's taught to us from birth. But don't include me in them. I've seen the limitations of my country. Don't blame the people or the country, blame the politicians. They are why people hate us!
    Umm, now i could say that the people and the country get the politicians they elected (or deserve), but that would be cheap. It's still true, though.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by lucy View Post
    Umm, now i could say that the people and the country get the politicians they elected (or deserve), but that would be cheap. It's still true, though.
    I agree to some extent. But in many cases it always seems to be a choice between bad and worse. There are very few independent politicians any more. They all have some sort of heavy, business backing, which generally taints there terms in office. I suppose I could blame my lack of interest in politics in general, but in my experience it really doesn't seem to matter. We're stuck with the people that big business (for want of a better term) foists upon us.
    "A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche

  7. #7
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    Yeah, sometimes, when i look at the candidates i can vote for i feel as if i have to choose between a dog turd and a heap of cowshit too

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by lucy View Post
    The first world doesn't help the third. We don't help, we exploit. Not as brutal as in colonial days, today it's more subtle: Closing our borders for agricultural products so a couple of American sugar farmers can have a good living is just one of many examples. Same with rice, meat, just about every agricultural product is protected by taxes in the western civ, while we demand from the developing countries that they open their borders for our services and technological products. There's a good reason why Brazil, India and some African countries brought down the newest round of the World Trading Organization talks.
    Yes, which is one reason I'm strongly opposed to protectionism like this. I would love to see all the tariffs and subsidies eradicated, but there are too many votes to be bought by keeping them.

    About sending doctors: Screw that. Screw that big time. In fact what happens right now is that America, Britain, Canada and to a lesser extent other countries of the western civilization are actually draining medical personnel from developing countries such as Ghana and Malawi. There are more Ghanese nurses working outside of Ghana than there are in Ghana, same with Malawian doctors.
    No. Absolutely not. I hate this sort of speech, because of the implicit assumption that when someone chooses to move from one place to another this represents an asset - property - being taken from its owner. I may live in the UK, and bear a British passport, but I am not the property of the British government: if I choose to lead a better life elsewhere, that is my decision and my right. I am not being "drained" or "taken": I am under no obligation whatsoever to stay or work here - and any country which I choose for myself is entirely blameless. The notion that being born in Ghana or Malawi should somehow oblige me to stay there rather than lead the best life I can is not just absurd to me, but smacks very much of slavery or feudalism. Not to mention hypocrisy, as you complain about barriers to free movement of goods, then complain about a lack of barriers to movement of people!

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by js207 View Post
    No. Absolutely not. I hate this sort of speech, because of the implicit assumption that when someone chooses to move from one place to another this represents an asset - property - being taken from its owner. I may live in the UK, and bear a British passport, but I am not the property of the British government: if I choose to lead a better life elsewhere, that is my decision and my right. I am not being "drained" or "taken": I am under no obligation whatsoever to stay or work here - and any country which I choose for myself is entirely blameless. The notion that being born in Ghana or Malawi should somehow oblige me to stay there rather than lead the best life I can is not just absurd to me, but smacks very much of slavery or feudalism. Not to mention hypocrisy, as you complain about barriers to free movement of goods, then complain about a lack of barriers to movement of people!
    I don't say the people should be made to stay in Ghana or wherever, i just wanted to point out that those countries invest a lot of money to educate a nurse or a physician which then goes abroad. It's just another form of draining resources.
    They of course have all the right on earth to move. Sorry if i didn't make that clear at all.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by lucy View Post
    I don't say the people should be made to stay in Ghana or wherever, i just wanted to point out that those countries invest a lot of money to educate a nurse or a physician which then goes abroad. It's just another form of draining resources.
    They of course have all the right on earth to move. Sorry if i didn't make that clear at all.
    It seems clear enough, but my objection remains: it is not "draining resources" for them to leave - rather, the countries are failing to attract and retain people they need. It's something I see here, which is probably why it irritates me so much: people talk of a "brain drain" when people like me (the IT profession has been particularly affected, for obvious reasons) and talk of creating obstacles to us leaving, rather than identifying and fixing the root problem: rather than changing the country's laws and systems so we *can't* leave as easily, change them so we don't *want* to leave any more!

    (Companies occasionally fall into this trap, too, regarding their customers and staff as an entitlement to be prevented from leaving, rather than people on whom their existence depends, people they need to attract and convince to stay voluntarily. Long term, that never works.)

  11. #11
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    Fair enough, of course much of the world would be a much better place if people hadn't to leave their home for whatever reason. I'm agree completely with you.
    But i was referring to Thorne saying "we send doctors" when in fact it's exactly vice versa. In the end it's poor countries financing the education of doctors and nurses and other professionals for very rich countries.
    Ok, now you can say "well, that's global competition". That's not exactly good in my opinion, but i guess it's not completely wrong either. What is wrong, though, is that the first world drains all that educated personnel and then goes around bragging what good guys we all are when we send some relief goods or the odd doc when a catastrophe has occurred or people die of cholera or leprosy. That's hipocrisy at it's best.

  12. #12
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    [QUOTE=Thorne;793436]

    ...

    Ah, yes. The country that does more to help people than any other. The country that led the fight to get relief into Myanmar during their recent calamity. The country that leaps to send searchers and doctors and workers to countries destroyed by earthquakes or volcanic eruptions

    ...
    QUOTE]

    Yes, you give so much. Much more than any other individual nation. But, by comparison to your wealth (however you measure it) so much less than many many other countries, and far far less than is needed. A poultice on a tumour.

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by MMI View Post
    Yes, you give so much. Much more than any other individual nation. But, by comparison to your wealth (however you measure it) so much less than many many other countries, and far far less than is needed. A poultice on a tumour.
    When I read comments like this I start to understand why so many Americans think we should withdraw from the international community and simply take care of our own.

    This country is trillions of dollars in debt, far more debt than we can ever hope to repay. Yet, when a disaster strikes somewhere in the world, anywhere in the world, we are among the first to offer, and provide, aid in whatever form we can: food, medicine, rescue experts, anything that's needed. We don't ask who's going to pay, we don't put political restrictions on our help, we just do it.

    And we don't expect the world to love us for it, or to give thanks for it. We don't want people to feel they owe us anything for it. All we ask is that we be respected for what we try to do. But the world seems to want us to do more. Why?

    If I buy a meal for a starving man, sure it's only a temporary fix, "A poultice on a tumour" if you will, but it's one more meal than he would have had without me. And if her doesn't have the decency to at least say Thank You, I can live with that. But when he starts screaming at me and complaining about how much more I could do for him, how much more I have to work with, do you honestly believe I should do more? Should I take him home and give him a place to sleep? Give him my clothes? Maybe give him my car, so he won't have to walk so much? Where do I draw the line?

    No, I would turn away and write him off as a bad job, but I'd be damned sure less willing to buy a meal for the next starving man I see! Or the next country that suffers a devastating earthquake, or is inundated by a flood, or has any number of other problems. Let them help themselves, I say.

    And I would say that for the rest of the world. You don't have to love us. You don't have to admire us. But just a little bit of respect would be nice.
    "A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche

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