I have a gun, you have the rule of law. But you get to choose how we work out our differences. What's your pleasure? I shoot you - my way? Or recourse to law - your way? — tim wood
Do I sense Hegel in the wings? — tim wood
And I think anarchy can break out, like a mold or fungus, like Trump. But most modern nations keep it in check one way or another. — tim wood
The communists would say it is the rest of the world that has been infected with capitalism. — Pfhorrest
has taken quite a beating lately. Be that as it may, if your point is that nations will act in their own interests and flout the law, to the extent it exists in international affairs, as needed I think you're correct. — Ciceronianus the White
I think that's actually true. The Bronze age system was similar to socialism. The workers brought their goods into the temple and the priests split it up and distributed it. Markets as we think of them were either a result of collapse of the bronze age system or they were one of the factors that precipitated the collapse. — frank
Yet thanks to the let's say the last functioning remnants of the Republic and it's liberties, the excesses do come to light in the US and are at least publicly debated, unlike in China.The US is guided by international norms when it feels like it, but does exactly what China is doing whenever it becomes convenient. — frank
I'm not sure this is the point of political realism. Yes, political realism sees the political system is anarchic because there is no authority above sovereign states and they all have their own agendas, which happily sometimes coincide. (If that was your point, OK.) Your definition would sound more like simple stagnant conservatism, where change is seen as anarchy.Political realism is a view of political entities that places all events against a backdrop of anarchy. — frank
China or Xi Jingping? I'm not familiar of this and Xi Jingpings crackdown on "tigers and flies", so I'm open to thoughts here.We would also look at Operation Foxhunt against that same anarchic background. This operation is a clear indication that China is stepping up as a source of law in itself. — frank
Corruption and bribes ought not to be common and everyday practice. There's also this point that if crimes happen, they do have to be solve and the perpetrators gotten. Crime doesn't go away by turning a blind eye to it. That side shouldn't be forgotten.The good news is that political realism foresees political stability in this. — frank
A political realist wouldn't recognize the US as being inherently different from other nations though and for the realist the correct lenses through which to view the international order is power. The US is just one source (although a large one) of power among many. — BitconnectCarlos
By American exceptionalism, I meant that the US does the things it condemns others for. — frank
So we aren't gorillas, we're civilized humans. — frank
Political realism — frank
Political Realism understands that exercising power can be a dirty business, but is nonetheless necessary. A realistic politician understand that he will get his or her hands dirty in the process, even when doing good. — Bitter Crank
I would say that China is a Great Power, but not a Superpower.The US has global influence, so it stands out as a great power. China isn't yet a great power, but is headed in that direction. — frank
Rumors of this have been circulating since the 1990's. It may be so.She said China uses convict labor, but advertises it as regular employment on billboards. — frank
I think we need to be careful not to conflate American exceptionalism with political realism. — BitconnectCarlos
A political realist wouldn't recognize the US as being inherently different from other nations though and for the realist the correct lenses through which to view the international order is power. The US is just one source (although a large one) of power among many. — BitconnectCarlos
Political Realism understands that exercising power can be a dirty business, but is nonetheless necessary. A realistic politician understand that he will get his or her hands dirty in the process, even when doing good. — Bitter Crank
This is the idea that the U.S. should remain somewhat isolated and try to influence, contain, and exert power on other nations while remaining 'off-shore.' — The Questioning Bookworm
This is exactly right. Power is what determines a realist's course of action. The world is a chessboard, and the nations that are playing the game are concerned with power and power alone. Cheers! — The Questioning Bookworm
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