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Instapundit on Ron Paul's New Blockbuster Book

Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) has a new book out titled The Revolution: A Manifesto (it's currently No. 8 on Amazon's bestsellers list).

Here's Glenn Reynolds, a.k.a the Instapundit, on it:

[The Revolution is] important because Ron Paul's candidacy has interested a lot of people in libertarian ideas who probably haven't read those other books, and because their exposure has come not in the context of academic dissatisfaction with the status quo, but in the context of political action. The book benefits from many of the Paul campaign's virtues, in the form of accessibility, clarity, and straightforwardness. On the other hand, it also suffers from some of the Paul campaign's vices, about which more later.

My biggest disagreement, and that of many libertarians with Paul, involves national security. Paul and I are both libertarians, but of different varieties. Paul is an old-fashioned Rothbardian. I'm more of a Heinleinian libertarian and we, like the Randian libertarians, tend to view national defense as more important than the Rothbardians do. Paul's view, essentially, is that if we quit sending troops abroad, other people and countries would quit wanting to kill us. I'm not particularly persuaded by this. First, even during the minimal-government era of Thomas Jefferson we wound up at war with the Barbary Pirates (in many ways, the spiritual antecedents of today's Islamic terrorists). And second, Paul is not an isolationist—he favors much more commercial and cultural engagement with foreign countries, something which, if experience is any guide, is as likely to anger Islamic fundamentalists and other varieties of terrorists and tyrants as is the establishment of foreign bases....

The main shortcoming in Paul's book, as with his candidacy, is in the follow through, the transition from critique to action. Although he does include a chapter entitled "The Revolution," about reducing the size of government, it's a pretty skimpy plan. Were we to see a Ron Paul Administration, with a House and Senate made up of, well, Ron Pauls, it might have a chance of succeeding, though even so he's a bit timid in places - proposing a freeze on the budgets of cabinet departments instead of their outright abolition, for example, despite noting that only State, Defense, and Justice have clear constitutional mandates. But given the unlikelihood of a Paul Administration, and the even greater unlikelihood of a Paul Congress, his policy prescriptions aren't likely to bear fruit. But those who want to see liberty progress right here and right now will look in vain for suggestions on what they might do, right here and right now, to make progress.

Rome didn't fall in a day, and today's monster government didn't spring up overnight. It was the result of incremental expansion. Given that we're not likely to see an opportunity to downsize the federal government overnight, or even in a single Presidential term, those of libertarian inclinations might well look to incremental approaches to reining in Big Government. They will be well advised, however, to look elsewhere than Revolution: A Manifesto. Still, if Fabian Libertarianism is to have a future, it will owe much to the consciousness-raising of the Paul campaign. Socialist candidate Eugene Debs, after all, never got elected President either, but within a few decades much of his platform was adopted by the Democratic Party. May Paul enjoy similar influence on the future of national politics.

Whole thing here.

reason on Ron Paul here.

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Comments to "Instapundit on Ron Paul's New Blockbuster Book":

3... 2... 1... | May 12, 2008, 3:42pm | #

reason sucks.

MK2 | May 12, 2008, 3:43pm | #

All of this ignores the deep background--the Austin Illuminati and their man Nelson Linder, who handles Ron Paul for the international communist movement. Ron Paul's task is to destroy the GOP. Who do you think controls which books get on the NY Times best seller list?

MP | May 12, 2008, 3:44pm | #

Aren't Heinlein's militaristic viewpoints commonly perceived has having been conceptualized prior to Heinlein embracing a more libertarian philosophy?

MK2 | May 12, 2008, 3:44pm | #

Revolution? Manifesto? Where have you heard those words before?

Anon | May 12, 2008, 3:49pm | #

come visit us : www.revolutionbroadcasting.com

Radio home of www.Revolutionmarch.com

Featuring the march on DC July 12th with Dr Paul

Live radio and true news without the MSM spin.

LIVE CHAT ROOM to interact with other fellow marchers and Ron Paul supporters.

John | May 12, 2008, 3:50pm | #

. Ron Paul to Eugene Debs is a pretty insightful comparison. Libertarians need to look to the far left and the evangelical right for inspriation. The thing is that the evangelicals are a spent force. Further, they have been seduced by big government and are likely to vote with the nanystaters anyway. Give it a few years and they will be voting Democrat because Jesus tells them they should drive a Prius and support high taxes. The nanny state Democrats are just fallen puritans anyway so they have a lot more in common with the evangelicals than either side would like to believe.

The Libertarians could fill that gap in the Republican Party if they go their act together. You could actually see real realignment with the evangelicals going to their natural pro-government home in the Democratic party and the younger creative class and western conservatives reasserting control over the Republican Party and making alliance with middle class and small business people.

anon | May 12, 2008, 3:50pm | #

come visit us : www.revolutionbroadcasting.com

Radio home of www.Revolutionmarch.com

Featuring the march on DC July 12th with Dr Paul

Live radio and true news without the MSM spin.

LIVE CHAT ROOM to interact with other fellow marchers and Ron Paul supporters.

Episiarch | May 12, 2008, 3:55pm | #

I await the inevitable savaging of Reynolds. Who will it be?

LLStone | May 12, 2008, 3:55pm | #

MP, the time gap between 'Starship Troopers' and 'Moon is a Harsh Mistress' is only six years and there isn't any obvious hard change in philosophy between them. In fact, Heinlein still agrees with his early muscular foreign policy in later books like 'Expanded Universe' (1980).

MK2 | May 12, 2008, 3:56pm | #

I forgot to add you're all fools and I'm done posting here.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 3:58pm | #

Paul and I are both libertarians, but of different varieties. Paul is an old-fashioned Rothbardian. I'm more of a Heinleinian libertarian and we, like the Randian libertarians, tend to view national defense as more important than the Rothbardians do

Yeah, as with Glenn, that tends to be my major diasgreement with Reasonoids. For me, as a libertarian, the importance of liberty doesn’t stop at U.S. borders. I support armed intervention on behalf of liberty for all people at all places and times their liberties are threatened, whether they be South Koreans, West Germans, Taiwanese, Poles, Iraqis, French, British, Kosovars, etc.

(Disclosure: Glenn links me fairly often.)

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 3:59pm | #

the Randian libertarians, tend to view national defense as more important than the Rothbardians do

Yeah, Glenn...national defense...not endless, open wars abroad that have nothing to do with securing the nation.

Perhaps the man should read what Miss Rand thought about WWI (and WWII pre-Pearl Harbor), Korea and Viet Nam before he drags us all in with this "Sword in One Hand/Credit Card in the Other" version of "Defense".

Jamie Kelly | May 12, 2008, 4:00pm | #

I forgot to add you're all fools and I'm done posting here.

We'll be sure to kill ourselves in our abiding grief.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:04pm | #

Aren't Heinlein's militaristic viewpoints commonly perceived has having been conceptualized prior to Heinlein embracing a more libertarian philosophy?

Have you read TMIAHM recently? I wouldn't call his vision of libertarianism peaceful.

tarran | May 12, 2008, 4:05pm | #

I think that the critic is off base;

Governments don't get incrementally downsized - they either get kicked out by a bigger, badder government, or collapse suddenly and abruptly after becoming too big and parasitical, when people decide they don't want to deal with them anymore. The reason is obvious, government officials, being criminals participating in a set oh lucrative organized crime rackets will keep their criminal gang going as long as possible. They are loathe to show any weakness since it will encourage their victims to defy them. They are afraid of having to earn an honest living. Thus they will keep an iron grip on the power they already have and try to suppress anything that threatens it, violently if need be.

Additionally, so what if trade angers foreign dictators? The locals being traded with will love it and advocate for their positions. They won't send bombers to bomb GE plants here in the U.S.. They'll try to beat up merchants in their homelands. And the merchants, being a part of the local culture will fight back. This critique is one which sounds obvoous at first blush and then falls apart when actually analyzed - kind of like the belief that the Earth is flat.

Ross Levatter | May 12, 2008, 4:05pm | #

Reynolds is no doubt a fine law professor, but he has a way to go as a historian. The belief that a non-interventionist foreign policy began with Rothbard is a howler. Has he never read Spencer? Is he completely unfamiliar with Cobden and Bright?

MP | May 12, 2008, 4:07pm | #

Have you read TMIAHM recently? I wouldn't call his vision of libertarianism peaceful.

I never got around to Heinlein, and rarely read fiction anymore. What I know is from various profiles I've read.

Thanks LLStone.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:07pm | #

"Perhaps the man should read what Miss Rand thought about WWI (and WWII pre-Pearl Harbor), Korea and Viet Nam before he drags us all in with this "Sword in One Hand/Credit Card in the Other" version of "Defense"."


Why don't you cut out the middle man and just say what you think and you know make an argument? Appealing to authority, especially Rand, just reaffirms people's notion that Objectivists are just third rate cultists.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:08pm | #

TallDave,

For me, as a libertarian, the importance of liberty doesn’t stop at U.S. borders. I support armed intervention on behalf of liberty for all people at all places and times their liberties are threatened, whether they be South Koreans, West Germans, Taiwanese, Poles, Iraqis, French, British, Kosovars, etc.

I support it too, I just dont support using taxpayer money or our military to do it. When you arm up to free the Kosovars (or whoever), let me know, I will send you $20 to help out.

Colin | May 12, 2008, 4:09pm | #

"[The Revolution is] important because Ron Paul's candidacy has interested a lot of people in libertarian ideas who probably haven't read those other books"

It should read:

"[The Revolution is] important because Ron Paul's candidacy has interested a lot of people in libertarian ideas who probably haven't read any books"

madmikefisk | May 12, 2008, 4:09pm | #

The belief that a non-interventionist foreign policy began with Rothbard is a howler.

I don't see where he said that, although he did say that the Rothbardians do have that viewpoint.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:10pm | #

Also, what did Ms. Rand have to say on the subject of date rape as wish fulfillment?

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:11pm | #

TallDave,

I might agree with you...if the US was any good at spreading democracy. So far, I can't think of one country that became peaceful and democratic (that hadn't had any previous history of democracy) as a direct result of US intervention.

Pragmatically speaking, if you've shown no improvement at an action after several attempts and its costing you alot for each attempt, maybe you should stop doing it. Just a thought.

Gimme Back My Dog | May 12, 2008, 4:11pm | #

And second, Paul is not an isolationist—he favors much more commercial and cultural engagement with foreign countries, something which, if experience is any guide, is as likely to anger Islamic fundamentalists and other varieties of terrorists and tyrants as is the establishment of foreign bases

Does anybody have any idea what experience he is referring to? Has there ever been a terrorist attack in response to cultural engagement?

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:12pm | #

uhh..John? It was a jab at the fact that Reynolds wants to lump "Randian libertarians" in with his (and TallDave's) vision of America as endless Freedom Fighter, in complete disregard of America's interests.

So, when I want to set a (mis)characterization of "Randians" straight, I think pointing the gentlemen to what Rand thought would be a step in the right direction.

Finally, I've made my arguments clear. "War forever" "conservatives" such as yourself and TallDave aren't actually interested in hearing them. You're just looking to argue, and I am not going to indulge you.

Jamie Kelly | May 12, 2008, 4:13pm | #

Also, what did Ms. Rand have to say on the subject of date rape as wish fulfillment?

"Go get yerself some unwilling pussy."
Especially if you're SURE she wants it.

Gabe Harris | May 12, 2008, 4:14pm | #

TallDave,
Help me please! a group of serial liars and corrupt thugs in my country are trying to force me to pay them about 50% of my income to them. They say they are using the money to "protect me" but it seems that the biggest threat to my family and I is that they will come stick me in a dungeon cell. This group has put more people in dungeons than any other group in the world and they seem to be greatly broadening their attacks. Please send forces to intervene on behalf of the liberty of my children! I already know that I will be paying these people my entire life( I am only 35), but I only hope to free my children from the promises these demons have given me to confiscate even greater portions of my son's future earnings.

Chris Potter | May 12, 2008, 4:16pm | #

First, even during the minimal-government era of Thomas Jefferson we wound up at war with the Barbary Pirates (in many ways, the spiritual antecedents of today's Islamic terrorists).

Because, like, they were Muslims, you know, and all Muslims are the same. Never mind the fact that the Barbary Pirates were in it for money, not religious or political reasons, and happily refrained from attacking Western shipping flying flags of govts that were paying them tribute.

Seriously, do any of the libertarian hawks do five minutes of research on the Barbaries before equating them to al-Qaeda?

PapayaSF | May 12, 2008, 4:16pm | #

John & TallDave: good points.

Tarran: governments can get incrementally downsized. New Zealand did it. Governments can also slow or stop their growth, making them proportionately smaller over time.

Ross: I see nothing in the piece indicating he thinks "non-interventionist foreign policy began with Rothbard." He's just using Rothbardian as a term for one strain of libertarianism.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:16pm | #

I support it too, I just dont support using taxpayer money or our military to do it.

Well, I can understand and sympathize that objection. But I would argue its necessary, because nonstate militaries are illegal, and we probably want to keep it that way.

Since the rise of city-states, it has been clear that the institution with the greatest ability to use force is, almost by definition, can and does impose its will on all other institutions. With the advent of liberal democracy and rule of law, it is necessary that the State have a monopoly on force, else it can neither enforce the law nor implement the will of the people. Thus independent military forces are pretty much forbidden from having any but the lightest arms, and are consequently unable to effect any kind of extranational defense of liberty. Only the State can.

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 4:16pm | #

Paul's view, essentially, is that if we quit sending troops abroad, other people and countries would quit wanting to kill us. I'm not particularly persuaded by this.

Neither am I, and while libertarians are often able to see that Fundie Christians must oppose gay marriage they completely miss the fact that Fundie Islamics must hate us by virtue of their religion and our women going to the beach and tooling around town with the top down and no face gear.

OTOH, minding our own business will help our standing in the world. I favor bringing our troops home from the far corners of the earth but I am under no illusion that somehow doing so will be a panacea.

Warren | May 12, 2008, 4:17pm | #

Yeash. Noninterventionism coupled with free market trade is the part Paul got exactly right. No one's going to blow themselves up over Tia Tequila. Even if she pisses em off and they see the end of all that is good and right in the world in her, it's still not enough to fly planes into buildings for. When they see "Made In The USA" stamped on the bombs falling on their heads, that's what makes the martyrs.

Where Paul gets off the freedom train is on immigration.

I'm with him on the FED and fiat money too. Only I would have saved it for my second term.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:17pm | #

"Additionally, so what if trade angers foreign dictators? The locals being traded with will love it and advocate for their positions. They won't send bombers to bomb GE plants here in the U.S.. They'll try to beat up merchants in their homelands. And the merchants, being a part of the local culture will fight back. This critique is one which sounds obvoous at first blush and then falls apart when actually analyzed - kind of like the belief that the Earth is flat."

Trade doesn't anger them. They just take the money and use it to make mischief. Also, if the trade threatens their position, they can always just shoot anyone who trades. Look at North Korea or Burma for good examples. What happens when someone seeks to destroy a trading partner? Take South Korea for example. Is it really in the US interests to let the North Koreans destroy the South and turn it into a prison state? The US does a lot of business with South Korea and all of that business would be gone or have never happened if the US had never defended North Korea. The same goes for Japan. At the end of World War II, had the US just gone home, Japan probably goes communist and there is no Toyota or Sony or any of the other great aspects of the Japanese miracle. Defending Japan and South Korea from the communists has paid for itself 100 fold at least. But had Paul been in power we would have never done it.

Trade is great but you have to have someone to trade with. If it were up to some people in the world, there would be a lot more countries like North Korea than there are like Japan. At what point do we step in to help make sure we actually have free stable trading partners? That is a tough question. That certainly doesn't justify endless war. But also, just putting your head in the sand and pretending that everything will take care of itself is not an answer either.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:17pm | #

(oops, missed an edit)

Well, I can understand and sympathize with that objection. But I would argue its necessary, because nonstate militaries are illegal, and we probably want to keep it that way.

Since the rise of city-states, it has been clear that the institution with the greatest ability to use force, almost by definition, can and does impose its will on all other institutions. With the advent of liberal democracy and rule of law, it is necessary that the State have a monopoly on force, else it can neither enforce the law nor implement the will of the people. Thus independent military forces are pretty much forbidden from having any but the lightest arms, and are consequently unable to effect any kind of extranational defense of liberty. Only the State can.

Chris Potter | May 12, 2008, 4:19pm | #

Also, you'll note that we didn't attempt to invade the Barbary States and set up a democracy back then. If only Jefferson had had the vision and foresight of Dubya.

PapayaSF | May 12, 2008, 4:20pm | #

So far, I can't think of one country that became peaceful and democratic (that hadn't had any previous history of democracy) as a direct result of US intervention.

Wouldn't pre-1945 Japan count? They didn't have real elections or political parties before then, AFAIK.

Adamness | May 12, 2008, 4:20pm | #

I support armed intervention on behalf of liberty for all people at all places and times their liberties are threatened, whether they be South Koreans, West Germans, Taiwanese, Poles, Iraqis, French, British, Kosovars, etc.

I might be more inclined to support that too (ok, probably not) if the interventions weren't detrimental to ourselves and actually, you know, worked. Seems to me that our interventionism is just a convoluted way of achieving national suicide.

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:20pm | #

Since the rise of city-states, it has been clear that the institution with the greatest ability to use force is, almost by definition, can and does impose its will on all other institutions. With the advent of liberal democracy and rule of law, it is necessary that the State have a monopoly on force, else it can neither enforce the law nor implement the will of the people. Thus independent military forces are pretty much forbidden from having any but the lightest arms, and are consequently unable to effect any kind of extranational defense of liberty. Only the State can.

You do understand that this reads like a machievellian nightmare right?

those who have power have justification to use power to the greatest extent possible in their own interests.

The problem is the "State" will never be "the will of all people", merely the will "of 51% of people" and therefore you're advocating tyranny of the majority with such a simplistic statement.

Pro Libertate | May 12, 2008, 4:22pm | #

"Fabian Libertarianism" sounds fine, except when you realize that such a thing would take decades of concerted effort to achieve. What's more likely to happen, in the unlikely event that we move back to a more libertarian model, is that we'll continue down the path of increasingly unlimited government until we reach a point of frustration that ushers in immediate change. Whether that happens within the system or through revolt will depend on how bad we let things get in the first place.

Jamie Kelly | May 12, 2008, 4:23pm | #

We should bring almost all our troops home from overseas.
Afghanistan showed us how rapidly mobile our forces are, and how quickly we can respond to a clear and present danger vis a vis our national security, even if it's halfway around the world.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:23pm | #

we probably want to keep it that way.

No, we dont.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:23pm | #

"Wouldn't pre-1945 Japan count? They didn't have real elections or political parties before then, AFAIK."

It would and so would South Korea I think. Further, Germany is a pretty close. The old German Empire was not totalitarian but it certainly wasn't particularly democratic by our standards. Further, the Nazis wiped out whatever Democratic traditions Germany had. Pacifying and turning Germany into a modern democracy was a tremendous accomplishment.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:24pm | #

nonstate militaries are illegal

The law also requires congress to declare war, but that hasnt stopped anyone in the last 60 years or so.

Mick | May 12, 2008, 4:24pm | #

Thus sayeth the warmonger libertarian. Reynolds is no libertarian. He believes in human liberty except for foreigners and brown people...

Neil | May 12, 2008, 4:25pm | #

Glenn Reynolds:

Vhat vee Amerikans need to do ist to defent Amerika against oll those Untermenschen!

Since all other nations in the world are potential threats, it totally makes sense to try to prophylactically wipe every other Nation from the face of the earth, no matter what the cost!

Sieg heil, and death to anybody that doesn't have credit-card debt, i.e. Jews.

Chris Potter | May 12, 2008, 4:25pm | #

they completely miss the fact that Fundie Islamics must hate us by virtue of their religion and our women going to the beach and tooling around town with the top down and no face gear.

Fundie Christians, Jews, Hindus, and atheists hate us for similar reasons. The difference is, we haven't been treating those religions' homelands like a Risk board game for the last 60 years.

There are going to be people who irrationally and unquenchably hate America as long as America exists. That doesn't justify a foreign policy that gives many, many more people justifiable reason to hate America.

Jamie Kelly | May 12, 2008, 4:26pm | #

I support armed intervention on behalf of liberty for all people at all places and times their liberties are threatened, whether they be South Koreans, West Germans, Taiwanese, Poles, Iraqis, French, British, Kosovars, etc.

You've got a nice mix of ethnicities in there, TallDave -- slopes and Krauts and sand monkeys -- but what of the niggers?
We need to save the entire planet from itself. It's for the good of all people! And it won't cost us a dime.

MP | May 12, 2008, 4:26pm | #

I favor bringing our troops home from the far corners of the earth but I am under no illusion that somehow doing so will be a panacea.

I suspect few military isolationists harbor that illusion either. Military isolationists predict that retraction will simply reduce, not eliminate, foreign aggressiveness against the U.S. as it removes major bone of contention. When direct aggressiveness flares up, non-interventionists are perfectly willing to defend.

Those who state that non-interventionists believe that world peace will result from non-interventionism simply do not understand the concept and are looking to launch straw man attacks against it.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:26pm | #

No one's going to blow themselves up over Tia Tequila. Even if she pisses em off and they see the end of all that is good and right in the world in her, it's still not enough to fly planes into buildings for. When they see "Made In The USA" stamped on the bombs falling on their heads, that's what makes the martyrs.

Actually, "Made in the USA" weapons were helping Muslims defend Afghanistan in the 1980s, and also Muslims in Kuwait and Kosovo in the 1990s.

The jihadists don't like Tia Tequila giving their women ideas. The first thing the Taliban did was outlaw VCRs and music and beat women who werent dressed properly. Then they started publicly executing prostitutes in soccer stadiums. It wasn't a big stretch from there to help AQ strike at the perceived source of all this iniquity - the liberated West.

Mick | May 12, 2008, 4:26pm | #

And what if in response to the Barbary Pirates we embarked on Operation Barbary Freedom and spread our form of democracy to the Libyans?

I know Reynolds the fucking retard would jump right on it.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:27pm | #

it is necessary that the State have a monopoly on force, else it can neither enforce the law nor implement the will of the people.

Wow that is wrong. Im pretty sure the 2nd amendment, for example, exists solely to prevent the state from having a monopoly on force.

In fact, you are so far wrong that you have everything exactly backwards. The thing that most guarantees tyranny instead of freedom is the state having a monopoly on force.

You are either an idiot or a fascist. Im nice, so I will assume the first.

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:27pm | #

PapayaSF,


Japan did have a brief history of democracy, much like the early German democracy pre-Nazism. Also, they had an established civil law system. That's besides the point though, as their society was not a repressed tribal system prior to US intervention (err...conquering).

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:28pm | #

The first thing the Taliban did was outlaw VCRs and music and beat women who werent dressed properly. Then they started publicly executing prostitutes in soccer stadiums.

Well, best we force liberalization on them then, at the point of a gun and to the tune of a trillion dollars, then.

Forced Freedom! It's the American Way!

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 4:28pm | #

Reynolds is no libertarian. He believes in human liberty except for foreigners and brown people...

Drink! And, charitably, you're quite wrong.

Ross Levatter | May 12, 2008, 4:30pm | #

PapayaSF: Ross: I see nothing in the piece indicating he thinks "non-interventionist foreign policy began with Rothbard." He's just using Rothbardian as a term for one strain of libertarianism."

First, what you quote as something I said is in fact something said in response to me.

Second, there already IS a word for describing the strain of libertarianism that argues for a non-interventionalist foreign policy. The word is "traditional".

It has only been in the last few decades that those associated with predominantly libertarian views were willing to accept a roll for American government abroad. The idea one can have a limited government with enough military and tax power to police the world is, as Rand would put it, a "contradiction in terms".

Tonio | May 12, 2008, 4:31pm | #

TallDave,

Sure, the Loonies in TMIAHM start a war, but the situation is hugely analgous to that of the American colonies of England in 1776. Once Heinlein's Loonies get independence from Earth, they stop the war, even though they could have probably used the catapult to get additional political concessions.

Anyway, all the wars which I can recall Heinlein writing about were wars of self-liberation or independence (TMIAHM, If This Goes On) or direct responses to invasions territory (Starship Troopers, The Puppet Masters).

Episiarch | May 12, 2008, 4:31pm | #

It took a while, but we finally got some good hating on Reynolds.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:31pm | #

We need to save the entire planet from itself. It's for the good of all people! And it won't cost us a dime.

Well, as a practical matter we can't save the whole world, but we can alleviate some of the worst oppression. In the long run it actually is usually less expensive to fight.

As expensive as WW II was, we'd all be a lot poorer if we hadn't been fought it: Japan would have been a Soviet vassal, no free Western Europe. And consider S Korea and Taiwan's inputs to our ecnonomy relative to the cost of defending them.

MK2 | May 12, 2008, 4:34pm | #

Ron Paul is a communist agent. You guys aren't very good at conspiracy analysis, are you? Look at the vocabulary he uses--revolution, manifesto. Why did Linder in Austin jump to his defense? Just who is Nelson Linder? the name Nelson linder is an anagram of Eds En Nil Lorn. Lorn was the Black Dragon of the Danish Illuminati! The International Communist Conspiracy has targeted the GOP ever since agent Eisenhower's failure. Working with the Illuminati, the commies have been grooming Ron Paul for years. The Illuminati-controlled NY Times can't endorse Paul openly, but it can and did get his book on its best seller list! Don't be fooled.

Jamie Kelly | May 12, 2008, 4:34pm | #

... but we can alleviate some of the worst oppression.

So I assume you're in favor of the United States invading and occupying most of the continent of Africa?

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 4:35pm | #

I support armed intervention on behalf of liberty for all people at all places and times their liberties are threatened, whether they be South Koreans, West Germans, Taiwanese, Poles, Iraqis, French, British, Kosovars, etc.

A libertarian friend once said that a free people have the right, but not the obligation, to do such a thing (tempered by reality).

Obviously the US has made zero effort to free the enslaved Chinese. It's because they have billions of soldiers and lots of nukes. Good choice.

It's like the biker neighbor who's pointing a shotgun at you, telling you to GTF off his property while yammering that he'll beat his Old Lady & kick the dog whenever he feels like it.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:35pm | #

"It took a while, but we finally got some good hating on Reynolds"

You knew it would happen. Unsurprisingly it falls into two categories; that fucker neocon racist Reynolds cares about liberty for everyone except for foreigners and brown people, and that fucker neocon Reynolds wants to enforce liberty on the whole world at the barrel of a gun. Oh well consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds I guess.

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:35pm | #

TallDave,

As very few people disagree with the US going to war in WWII, trying framing US victories abroad in terms other than that war.

South Korea was a victory of sorts, but was essentially a proxy war with China. All other wars we've engaged in have either inflamed or had little to no effect on underlying issues in various countries.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:36pm | #

Sure, the Loonies in TMIAHM start a war

Even beyond that, look how violent their own society is. There are all sorts of situations in which killing other people is accepted. It's much more violent than any libertarian would likely accept.

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:36pm | #

Japan would have been a Soviet vassal, no free Western Europe. And consider S Korea and Taiwan's inputs to our ecnonomy relative to the cost of defending them.

Put away your crystal ball, Kreskin. You have no idea how the whole thing would have turned out. It's convenient that your amazing Turtledovian abilities at history just happen to favor your favored foreign policy.

Want to play dueling invented narratives?

Brian24 | May 12, 2008, 4:39pm | #

The jihadists don't like Tia Tequila giving their women ideas. The first thing the Taliban did was outlaw VCRs and music and beat women who werent dressed properly. Then they started publicly executing prostitutes in soccer stadiums. It wasn't a big stretch from there to help AQ strike at the perceived source of all this iniquity - the liberated West.

Fair enough, they took action AMONG THEIR OWN PEOPLE to eliminate Western influence. But Osama himself says that what inspired him to take military action against the West was our occupation of "Muslim Holy Lands."

FWIW, I am in favor of doing whatever we can to bring liberty to any corner of the earth we can. However, I see no evidence that military actions are likely to accomplish that. If anything, it makes it easy for foreign governments to dismiss "liberalizing" ideas as being part of the evil influence of the invader.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:40pm | #

Wow that is wrong. Im pretty sure the 2nd amendment, for example, exists solely to prevent the state from having a monopoly on force.

As I said, all but the lightest arms. Go try to form your own army with missiles, tanks, and subs, and see what happens.

The thing that most guarantees tyranny instead of freedom is the state having a monopoly on force.

You can't have rule of law if you can't enforce the law. We seem to be free despite the average citizen being unable to purchase an ICBM.

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:41pm | #

Dueling invented narratives is a game the whole family can play.

BakedPenguin | May 12, 2008, 4:41pm | #

Here is a brief history of Taisho era (1912-1926) Japan. Their democracy was limited, but still better than say, Russia or Venezuela today.

Colin Clout | May 12, 2008, 4:42pm | #

PapayaSF,

Taishō period

Tonio | May 12, 2008, 4:43pm | #

Ayn Randian,

Well, best we force liberalization on them then, at the point of a gun and to the tune of a trillion dollars, then.

Er, TallDave identified a problem, he didn't offer a solution. Your criticism is really off-base.

Forced Freedom! It's the American Way!

Vile and childish. So, what would you have done about Afghanistan in the wake of 9/11?

Real-world problems need real solutions, not sullen eighth grader comebacks.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:43pm | #

Put away your crystal ball, Kreskin. You have no idea how the whole thing would have turned out.

I don't need to. It's obvious that whoever won would not be a liberal democracy, unless you think tiny Britain was going to conquer the entire Axis on their own.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:45pm | #

"Put away your crystal ball, Kreskin. You have no idea how the whole thing would have turned out. It's convenient that your amazing Turtledovian abilities at history just happen to favor your favored foreign policy."

That is a good point Randian. It is not like the Soviets occupied and enslaved Eastern Europe or anything. It is just utter speculation that they would have done the same in Asia. That whole Korean and Vietnam War thing was just a big misunderstanding I guess.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:45pm | #

You can't have rule of law if you can't enforce the law.

That doesnt require a monopoly, however.

I have more than enough firepower to take out my mayor whenever necessary (not that I have any plans too, for anyone reading this at the NSA or FBI).

ICBMs dont help in a civil war (especially a non-geographic one). If the US ever needed an overthrowin' the firepower exists in the hands of the US people to pull it off.

A "balance of power" exists between the state and the people. Places where that doesnt exist tend to slide into tyranny. Some would say we are, Im not that cynical, just quite yet.

Fluffy | May 12, 2008, 4:45pm | #

Paul's view, essentially, is that if we quit sending troops abroad, other people and countries would quit wanting to kill us. I'm not particularly persuaded by this.

Right! After all, look at all those countries that were trying to kill the US prior to 1914.

We had EXACTLY THE SAME number of threats from abroad before we entered the world of international power politics as we did before. [/snark]

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:45pm | #

You can't have rule of law if you can't enforce the law. We seem to be free despite the average citizen being unable to purchase an ICBM.

m4rk37 f41LUR3!!!!

Fluffy | May 12, 2008, 4:46pm | #

Sorry, one of those "befores" should say "after". Doesn't really matter which one.

Episiarch | May 12, 2008, 4:46pm | #

Even beyond that, look how violent their own society is. There are all sorts of situations in which killing other people is accepted. It's much more violent than any libertarian would likely accept.

It's a fucking hypothetical society in a book. Heinlein felt like doing a thought experiment in government-less society and revolution. Don't make too many assumptions, as that makes an ass out of you and...umption*.

* who can name the movie?

Jamie Kelly | May 12, 2008, 4:46pm | #

So, what would you have done about Afghanistan in the wake of 9/11?

That had nothing to do with "forcing freedom" on a country, and everything to do with eradicating a clear and present danger to the United States.

Gabe Harris | May 12, 2008, 4:47pm | #

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:26pm |
"The first thing the Taliban did was outlaw VCRs and music and beat women who werent dressed properly. "

Actually the first thing the Taliban did was cash their checks from the US Government to help "fight" the drug war.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:48pm | #

So, what would you have done about Afghanistan in the wake of 9/11?

Asked for a declaration of war.

Not shifted troops out of the country. Only fight one land war in Asia at a time (The Sicilian was probably right, but sometimes you gotta fight one).

Like WW2, Afghanistan was justified. But that is as far as that needed to go.

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:48pm | #

Real-world problems need real solutions, not sullen eighth grader comebacks.

you presume, of course, that other nations' lack of freedom mandates that we involve ourselves militarily.

WRT Afghanistan, that was a nation that harbored the 9/11 perpetrators and I feel that invasion and capture of said perpetrators is a justifiable and proper course of action.

In case you didn't notice, we weren't talking about self-defense; we were talking about finding unfree (and easy to invade) nations to promote "freedom".

TallDave identified a problem, he didn't offer a solution. Your criticism is really off-base.

If you had been paying attention, you would know the "solution" that TallDave has been proposing all along.

Look people, I get it: you think that failed, unfree nations export terror. I got it. I think that's contentious and even if it wasn't, it doesn't dictate remaking said nations into model republics.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:48pm | #

But Osama himself says that what inspired him to take military action against the West was our occupation of "Muslim Holy Lands."

Osama also said his Islamic movement was going to conquer the world, as long as we're taking him at his word.

Ironically, the troops he was referring to were positioned there to defend Saudi Arabia and Kuwait from Saddam, and have now departed as that threat no longer exists.

Tonio | May 12, 2008, 4:49pm | #

Even beyond that, look how violent [Loonie society in TMIAHM] society is. There are all sorts of situations in which killing other people is accepted. It's much more violent than any libertarian would likely accept.

Luna was a prison colony in the novel. Novy Leningrad was hinted to be a gulag.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:49pm | #

m4rk37 f41LUR3!!!!

Not sure on my h&r cliches, is there where I respond:

DEMAND KURV!!!

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:50pm | #

It is not like the Soviets occupied and enslaved Eastern Europe or anything.

Aided and abetted by Churchill and FDR. If I were Poland, I still wouldn't speak to the United States to this day.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 4:50pm | #

That doesnt require a monopoly, however.

It requires a sufficient monopoly such that independent forces are unlikely to be able to engage in effective defense of freedom abroad, which was the original point: that is something only the State can do.

Colin Clout | May 12, 2008, 4:51pm | #

Interventionism seems to be contingent in nature.

TallDave,

...but we can alleviate some of the worst oppression.

Do you support intervention into the Democratic Republic of Congo then?

Amakudari | May 12, 2008, 4:51pm | #

Wouldn't pre-1945 Japan count? They didn't have real elections or political parties before then, AFAIK.

They had liberalization (cf. kaikoku) beginning in the Meiji era (mid to late 1800s) and a legitimate democracy in the early 1900s. Expansionist military types remained powerful and came to dominate politics before World War II, but Westerners seriously underestimate Japan's pre-War institutions (and wealth).

On a more anecdotal note, Japanese laypeople overwhelmingly believe those wars were wrong. You don't see many hinomaru flags flying (and you damn sure don't see any of the Rising Sun sort) and politicians still won't amend the anti-war article of their Constitution. I'd say both the US and Japan felt that dismantling the old system and installing a secular democracy were mutually desirable, something that's not guaranteed in any particular occupation.

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 4:52pm | #

Japan would have been a Soviet vassal, no free Western Europe.

Instead, we got all of Eastern Europe enslaved for 50 years, a 10 year war in Viet Nam, Communist China and the constant threat of a good nuking from both the USSR and China. Not to mention, troops in Korea for my entire lifetime.

I know at least two people in every generation for the last five who've been stationed in Korea.

I'm not saying we had much choice about the BIG WAR, given Pearl Harbor, but there was an awful lot of bad that came out of it......

John | May 12, 2008, 4:52pm | #

"Look people, I get it: you think that failed, unfree nations export terror. I got it. I think that's contentious and even if it wasn't, it doesn't dictate remaking said nations into model republics."

That is true. We are not going to make them into model republics. But, we do have some interest in defending the Republics that are out there from predator nations. Further, when those lousy nations do export terror and cause trouble we ought to do something about them when we can. Look, we are not going to be doing jack about North Korea or China because doing so would kill millions of people. But, maybe we should do something about Darfur and we should definitely continue to tell the Chinese and the Norks to leave Taiwan and South Korea alone. Those actions are well beyond anything someone like Paul would support.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:53pm | #

that is something only the State can do.

No it isnt.

I have No, zero, zip, zilch, problem with allowing blackwater (for example) access to the weapons (if they pay for them) needed to overthrow piss ant dictatorships. Which is generally some quality rifles and a truckload of blue jeans.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:54pm | #

"Instead, we got all of Eastern Europe enslaved for 50 years, a 10 year war in Viet Nam, Communist China and the constant threat of a good nuking from both the USSR and China. Not to mention, troops in Korea for my entire lifetime."

But what were the alternatives? We could have done nothing and let the Soviets have the whole thing or we could have had World War III. Doing what we did strikes me as by far the best of the bad choices available.

Matt | May 12, 2008, 4:54pm | #

Again, you all are getting caught up in philosophical and semantical debates, ignoring the fact that our country is bankrupt, our military is breaking down, and our politicians are mindlessly promising more of the same.

Get over yourselves. Take action.

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 4:55pm | #

Let's amend generation to read decade.

Tonio | May 12, 2008, 4:56pm | #

you presume, of course, that other nations' lack of freedom mandates that we involve ourselves militarily.

No. How did you pull that out of what I've posted on this thread? Just because I don't agree with you doesn't mean I'm the convenient Straw Man you'd like to demolish.

You got caught writing something really indefensible, and are now turning to personal attacks.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:56pm | #

"I have No, zero, zip, zilch, problem with allowing blackwater (for example) access to the weapons (if they pay for them) needed to overthrow piss ant dictatorships. Which is generally some quality rifles and a truckload of blue jeans."

They are called Letters of Marque. I think they perhaps ought to make a comeback. Further, I think maybe the US needs its own foreign legion. A light infantry force of highly trained nonAmericans sent out to fight various dirty little wars in the name of US interests.

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:56pm | #

We could have done nothing and let the Soviets have the whole thing

We could have fought Japan (the nation that attacked us) and let the totalitarian hells of Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany wipe each other out.

robc | May 12, 2008, 4:57pm | #

TWC,

Decade/generation whats the difference? Okay, about 3 years. :)

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 4:57pm | #

You got caught writing something really indefensible

uhh, no. What did I write that was indefensible?

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 4:57pm | #

John, I said:

I'm not saying we had much choice about the BIG WAR, given Pearl Harbor, but there was an awful lot of bad that came out of it......

I also think Patton was right.

John | May 12, 2008, 4:58pm | #

Article I, Section 8, paragraph 11 of the U.S. Constitution authorizes Letters of Marque, at least in the navel context. Why not just contract out Afghanistan to Blackwater via a Letter of Marque?

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 4:59pm | #

m4rk37 f41LUR3!!!!

Not sure on my h&r cliches, is there where I respond:

DEMAND KURV!!!


DRINK!!!

John | May 12, 2008, 5:00pm | #

Wine,

We were broke and the country had no more stomach for war. The Army was worried that entire divisions migh mutiny had we had to invade Japan. I love the idea of their never having been a cold war, but I am not sure we really had the ability to beat the Soviets at the end of World War II.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:00pm | #

let the totalitarian hells of Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany wipe each other out.

How does that work, exactly? In the end, one or the other or both control Europe and Asia.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:02pm | #

I also think Patton was right.

The Cold War might have been a lot shorter had he been allowed to head into Eastern Europe before the Russians got there, and perhaps nonexistent without our massive Lend-Lease aid to Russia (something like 2/3 of their six-wheeled trucks, critical for logistics, came from the U.S.).

But that really is crystal ball territory.

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 5:02pm | #

We could have fought Japan (the nation that attacked us) and let the totalitarian hells of Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany wipe each other out.

That has a nice ring to it.

We would have had to give Uncle Adolf the finger when he declared war on us after Pearl though.

I often wonder, if we had stayed out if the Soviets and the Nazis would have simply extinguished themselves. We vanquished the Germans but at the same time strengthened the Rooskies and, handed over vast areas of land and countries without even a blink of an eye.

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 5:03pm | #

I'm not saying we had much choice about the BIG WAR, given Pearl Harbor, but there was an awful lot of bad that came out of it......

I also think Patton was right.


Never forget the 1st of the classic blunders ever made, "Never fight a land war in Asia"

Also, avoid going in against sicilians when death is on the line.

MP | May 12, 2008, 5:03pm | #

We could have done nothing and let the Soviets have the whole thing

What would've been wrong with that? Yes, certainly it would have been a more unfree world. But would it have been a more unfree U.S.? I don't think so.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:04pm | #

I have No, zero, zip, zilch, problem with allowing blackwater (for example) access to the weapons (if they pay for them) needed to overthrow piss ant dictatorships. Which is generally some quality rifles and a truckload of blue jeans.

Unlikely. Even Haiti has RPGs.

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 5:05pm | #

How does that work, exactly? In the end, one or the other or both control Europe and Asia.

Again, you don't know what would have happened.

I find deep irony that conservatives, who are usually the first (and rightly) to point out the atrocities of the USSR, are quick to defend our allegiance with them, and are additionally quick to gloss over the billions who lived in slavery for 60 years as a result of that fact.

robc | May 12, 2008, 5:05pm | #

Unlikely. Even Haiti has RPGs.

Yeah, you trade jeans for them.

Then you have them.

Win-win.

robc | May 12, 2008, 5:06pm | #

Never forget the 1st of the classic blunders ever made, "Never fight a land war in Asia"

Also, avoid going in against sicilians when death is on the line.


Im having flashbacks to 4:48. :)

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 5:07pm | #

perhaps nonexistent without our massive Lend-Lease aid to Russia (something like 2/3 of their six-wheeled trucks, critical for logistics, came from the U.S.).

I have never been able to comprehend why the US would align itself with the USSR for any reason whatsoever.

It's the equivalent of South Central LA's Korean shopkeepers joining East LA gangs because the Blacks in South Central don't like Mexicans either.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:08pm | #

Never forget the 1st of the classic blunders ever made, "Never fight a land war in Asia"

I don't know, it worked for the Mongols.

robc | May 12, 2008, 5:08pm | #

Oh, I have no trouble with Blackwater having RPGs for that matter.

robc | May 12, 2008, 5:09pm | #

I don't know, it worked for the Mongols.

Yeah, they control Mongolia. Whoopty-frickin-doo. Just because something seems to work for the first 1000 years....

Colin Clout | May 12, 2008, 5:10pm | #

TallDave,

For Patton to get into some part of Eastern Europe first Operation Market Garden would have to have been more successful.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:10pm | #

I have never been able to comprehend why the US would align itself with the USSR for any reason whatsoever.

Venona, Walter Duranty, etc. The Soviets had FDR convinced they were just aggressive socialist reformers rather than totalitarians.

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 5:12pm | #

sorry robc, missed that.

in any case, it was in reference to Patton's remark that we should have chased the Russkis back to moscow.

TallDave,

Raiding and pillaging is not the same as conquering and occupying. The Mongols hit and ran through asia, and never had nor needed a supply line.

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 5:13pm | #

We would have had to give Uncle Adolf the finger when he declared war on us after Pearl though.

Meh, well, let him go ahead and declare his war. We should have waited until it looked like he was actually going to do something about it.

Regardless, I'm not convinced that allying ourselves with the USSR was ever the right choice to make.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:14pm | #

Oh, I have no trouble with Blackwater having RPGs for that matter.

That's where the problems start. Say a local judge order a subpoena against them. They say "Come and get us." The police are heavily outgunned. No more rule of law. This is why it's not allowed.

Also, what are you going to do if North Korea invades South Korea with tanks and missiles and planes?

They either have to be so heavily armed they can't be controlled, or so lightly armed they can't intervene effectively. Thus, we're left with only the State.

Chris Potter | May 12, 2008, 5:14pm | #

I have never been able to comprehend why the US would align itself with the USSR for any reason whatsoever.

Two words: FDR.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:16pm | #

Raiding and pillaging is not the same as conquering and occupying

A common misconception. They did conquer and pillage, but they weren't as undisciplined as they've been made out.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongol_Empire

The Mongol Empire was governed by a code of law devised by Genghis, called Yassa, meaning "order" or "decree". A particular canon of this code was that the nobility shared much of the same hardship as the common man. It also imposed severe penalties – e.g., the death penalty was decreed if the mounted soldier following another did not pick up something dropped from the mount in front. On the whole, the tight discipline made the Mongol Empire extremely safe and well-run; European travelers were amazed by the organization and strict discipline of the people within the Mongol Empire

zoltan | May 12, 2008, 5:22pm | #

Do you support intervention into the Democratic Republic of Congo then?

For some reason, TallDave never answers questions like this. Only Iraq is worthy of democratic transformation at the point of a gun and trillions of dollars.

ChicagoTom | May 12, 2008, 5:24pm | #

That is true. We are not going to make them into model republics. But, we do have some interest in defending the Republics that are out there from predator nations.

Like Iraq?

Further, when those lousy nations do export terror and cause trouble we ought to do something about them when we can.

Like Iraq ?

Lost_In_Translation | May 12, 2008, 5:24pm | #

TallDave,

I said nothing of their military discipline, but honestly, the mongol empire was ephemereal at best, as they never tried too hard to hold it together once the army moved through and they never tried to hold supply lines back to mongolia. That's why the Mongol "empire" existed for maybe 50 years before it broke apart into many different constituents. There simply wasn't any strong ties nor an organized beauracracy left to manage it or an army inplace to enforce it.

The Wine Commonsewer | May 12, 2008, 5:26pm | #

Regardless, I'm not convinced that allying ourselves with the USSR was ever the right choice to make.

Couldn't agree more.

prolefeed | May 12, 2008, 5:26pm | #

Sure, the Loonies in TMIAHM start a war

Even beyond that, look how violent their own society is. There are all sorts of situations in which killing other people is accepted. It's much more violent than any libertarian would likely accept.


Ummm, many if not most of the Loonies in TMIAHM are libertarians. They start the war because the alternative is certain starvation -- not just going hungry, everyone actually DYING -- a few years down the road. And the "throwing perps out of the spacelock" stuff was for pretty flagrant violations of the social contract in a extremely harsh and unforgiving environment that couldn't afford the luxury of incarcerating people for decades, even if it doesn't seem justified viewed by the standards of our current wealthy society. Raping a women in a society where they are outnumbered by men 30-1 or more would be a really big deal, just like hanging horse thieves in the old West was in response to an action that could wind up killing the victim.

But seeing all that would require, you know, reading the book and understanding the context of the society Heinlein outlined -- Teh Hard.

Elemenope | May 12, 2008, 5:32pm | #

Episiarch --

Since everyone else around here appear to be movie retards, the quote is from the surprisingly excellent "The Long Kiss Goodnight".

Though, my personally favorite exchange from the movie:

"Ah, fuck this."

"Do you normally curse this much?"

"Why? Are you a Mormon?"

"Yes, I'm a Mormon. That's why I just finished two vodka tonics and a pack of Newports. What I'm saying is, when I met you, you were all like 'ah, phooey, I burned the darn muffins.' Now, you go into a bar, and ten minutes later sailors come runnin' out. What up with that?"

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:32pm | #

Do you support intervention into the Democratic Republic of Congo then? - For some reason, TallDave never answers questions like this.

Actually, I just didn't see it. But I'm happy to answer.

While they had their problems, it doesn't seem necessary to free the DRC at the moment, from what I can tell.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_Republic_of_the_Congo

After 4 years of interim between two constitutions that established different political institution at the various levels of all branches of government, as well as different administrative divisions of the country, politics in the Democratic Republic of the Congo are settling into a stable presidential democratic republic.

Of course, had we intervened in 1998, we might have prevented the largest war-related death toll since WW II.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Congo_War

Iraq was a unique confluence of factors: a regime that had invaded two neighbors to seize their oil fields, used WMD, and brutally repressed its own people. That made intervention there more acceptable to the international community.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:35pm | #

Ummm, many if not most of the Loonies in TMIAHM are libertarians.

Yes, that was my point. There was a question raised whether Heinlein became less militant and more libertarian. I would argue his vision of libertarianism was itself pretty militant, much more violent than any modern, real person calling himself "libertarian" would accept.

Ayn_Randian | May 12, 2008, 5:36pm | #

I hate arguing with neocons about Iraq because it always seems to devolve into entirely irrelevant WWII discussions.

Iraq was a unique confluence of factors: a regime that had invaded two neighbors to seize their oil fields, used WMD, and brutally repressed its own people. That made intervention there more acceptable to the international community.

So what? Nothing in there demonstrates that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States...nor does any of that have anything to do with the Global War on Terror.

Rick Barton | May 12, 2008, 5:42pm | #

Nick, your views here on foreign policy kinda surprise me cuz I remember you saying, while on a panel during one of your many TV appearances, that you thought that 9/11 was probably engendered by our government's foreign intervention.

Paul's view, essentially, is that if we quit sending troops abroad, other people and countries would quit wanting to kill us.

Not only sending troops abroad and also giving our money foreign governments who do things to folks with it that we certainly wouldn't want done to us.

First, even during the minimal-government era of Thomas Jefferson we wound up at war with the Barbary Pirates

This is different from our government's Iraq war and other current foreign interventions. Dr Paul's/Rothbardian foreign policy wouldn't object to the war on the Barbary Pirates cuz they were stealing stuff, taking slaves, and killing folks, unprovoked.


(in many ways, the spiritual antecedents of today's Islamic terrorists).

I don't think I see that cuz the terrorists are in more of a reaction mode. They're both Muslims but religious doctrine was not instrumental in the 9/11 attacks and I have no idea as to the Barbary Pirates. Note that some of the 9/11 hackers drank and went to strip clubs just prior to the attacks.

BTW, just last night I caught an interview on PBS with a Muslim gal who conducted a worldwide survey of Muslim opinion. Among her findings was that the 7% who approved of 9/11 the most (A 5 on a 1 to 5 scale) tended to be less religious than Muslims as a whole.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:44pm | #

Lost,

True, their success in Asian land war was attributable to their mobility and ability to forage:

In addition, soldiers of the Mongol army functioned independently of supply lines, considerably speeding up army movement.
...
Another advantage of the Mongols was their ability to traverse large distances even in debilitatingly cold winters; in particular, frozen rivers led them like highways to large urban conurbations on their banks.


So maybe the adage should go "Never get involved in a land war in Asia unless you're highly mobile and can re-supply."

J sub D | May 12, 2008, 5:48pm | #

Averaging ~1 comment/minute. I'll have to read some of them.

TallDave | May 12, 2008, 5:49pm | #

Nothing in there demonstrates that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States...

Except that he had his forces shooting at ours every day.

Also, at the risk of invoking WW II again, Germany and Japan invading various countries wasn't a threat to us either, but we started arming their enemies anyway, which they naturally took as an act of war.

Did you know the American thumbs-up gesture actually comes from China? Our soldiers picked it up there in WW II.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thumbs_up

The gesture's popularization in America is generally attributed to the practices of World War II pilots, who used the thumbs up to communicate with ground crews prior to take-off. This may have originated with the China-based Flying Tigers, who were among the first American flyers involved in WWII. The appreciative Chinese would say ”挺好“ ("ting hao"), meaning "very good," and gesture with a thumbs up, which in Chinese means "you're number one." High officials in Chinese government see it as a sign of respect. Any person from China will recognize this numerical gesture, and it can be seen in movies and photos of the era, though this has not been verified in print by AVG pilots. American GIs are reputed to have picked up on the thumb and spread it throughout Europe as they marched toward Berlin.

Rick Barton | May 12, 2008, 5:51pm | #

Nick:

And second, Paul is not an isolationist—he favors much more commercial and cultural engagement with foreign countries,

This has been a formula for peace throughout history.

...something which, if experience is any guide, is as likely to anger Islamic fundamentalists and other varieties of terrorists and tyrants as is the establishment of foreign bases....

I think that the evidence is just the opposite. Note that the three items of complaint on Bin Ladins 9/11 Fatwah all involved actions of our government. Note as well that the findings of the 9/11 commission reveal:

"Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the man who conceived and directed the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, was motivated by his strong disagreement with American support for Israel, said the final report of the Sept. 11 commission."

http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/news/nation/9222612.htm

Also, the chief exporter of pornography into the Arab world is Sweden. The Islamic clerics complain bitterly, but of course there were no 9/11 attacks on Stockholm. It took our government's interventionist aggression especially the taxpayer funding of the Israeli government's occupation of Palestinian land to motivate 9/11.









Rick Barton | May 12, 2008, 5:57pm | #

What Ayn_Randian said, which was:

Yeah, Glenn...national defense...not endless, open wars abroad that have nothing to do with securing the nation.

Perhaps the man should read what Miss Rand thought about WWI (and WWII pre-Pearl Harbor), Korea and Viet Nam before he drags us all in with this "Sword in One Hand/Credit Card in the Other" version of "Defense".

Ayn_Randian, do you have any quick citations for her views on those matters?