Seaward wrote:We've used air strikes against people for a lot less than attacking our diplomatic outposts. You're welcome to think it's stupid, I suppose, but if you can't come up with arguments more cohesive than, "It's stupid! You're stupid! Everything's stupid!" I'm not sure what the point in discussing any of this with you is.
That's kind of the issue here. I basically cannot believe that anyone can't see what is utterly ridiculous about bombing a crowd outside a consulate, while you're pretending it's a sensible course of action.
And I could spend a long time in yet another teeth pulling exercise with you, explaining in detail everything that's stupid with the idea, but then we just got through a thread in which you spouted theories about the likely actor in a piece of low level political violence, while having absolutely no knowledge of the recent acts of low level political violence in the US... and when informed of those acts you still couldn't realise how simplistic your ideas were.
So really, what's the point? You like thinking what you think, and reality ain't gonna stop that happening.
I think they're all as concerned with politics as the other, yeah. I'm pretty sure you wanted to use a different adjective.
No, my wording is fine. Everyone knows what is meant when the middle east is referred to as highly political. You can play an inane pedant game if you want, and maybe even pretend it means you're winning. Meanwhile, I just
I think it's more realist vs. idealist, actually.
No, it isn't. Realist is recognising international law has an impact, but that impact is limited by the tendency of all nations to push the boundary.
Making claims that international law has no impact because nations just do whatever they can get away with, on the other hand, is the kind of thing that sounds like realism to over excited teenagers.
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d-usa wrote:Those polls:
(text: "The choices we make Tuesday could have MASSIVE and PERMANENT effects on the charts on Nate Silver's blog!")
Awesome.