Are western values beyond criticism?
And why is liberalism the arbiter of truth? — Swanty
And now pays more in servicing it's debt than in puts into it's military spending.The US has military bases all round the world. — Swanty
I think war and imperialism have been quite universal in human society, actually. Not something that the West enjoys a monopoly.Western values include war,economic oppression,imperialism and broken families. — Swanty
Europe and the US don't control either China or India, which have been in this Century the economic drivers of the global economy. Americans mainly consume and even if Trump wants the industry to come back, it won't. The UK is the perfect example of European deindustrialization as the country isn't even producing steel anymore. US economic power reached it's zenith at the end of WW2 when every other global competitor was either destroyed, bankrupt or attempting the ruinous experiment of Marxism-Leninism. From there it's been a steady decline, something irreversible as the decline of the UK after it's Empire collapsed.The problem is militant capitalism,led by Europe and it's British colony,the US. — Swanty
Importing a revolution only works if people want it internally.
Candidates don't run on aggressive foreign policy.
The American people have just elected an isolationist president who doesn't give a sweet ff about other countries.
conquest is far more expensive than aid, and many representatives oppose even the barely adequate level of aid that might prevent those bad effects you want to march in to remedy.
I absolutely do. By prevention - like, not propping up and arming bad leaders; like not bombing civilians or supplying bombs to those who will; like empowering the common people; like supplying medicine and technology. Not by conquest.
I'm opining that your subset is a pipedream.
A nation does not impose its values on other nations. The individuals in government impose their own values on individuals in another nation, whether the rest of the nation approves or not.
Human flourishing is not the goal of the state. Its goal is to secure its power and advance its own interests
Imposing values on another group of people is wrong for the same reason it would be wrong for them to do it to a western nation: it isn’t up to them. They have not been afforded any right to do so.
I'm not a moral realist, and I don't think this is how we should do ethics at all.
Why should it be so?
Sovereignty is one crucial thing for any nation. And
So are jingoism and ultra-nationalism also part of nationalism,
then why promote a term that has also such much negative aspects and can be misunderstood?
And how did that end up?
So what society is OK with their daughters being raped?
These "ideas" are really deliberate propaganda against non Europeans and especially Muslims.
There is no society at large that has these ideas that @Bob Ross is claiming.
Overall, I think yes. In many ways other cultural attitudes surpass more Western ideals.
Ehhh, then I submit to you that you should be amoral: don’t meddle into matters of right or wrong behavior—because you don’t think there is such a thing. I don’t know why you would even care if North Korea is committing mass genocide because you don’t believe they are doing anything wrong. — Bob Ross
and there is such a thing as having a view which should not be tolerated (e.g., a supporter of sex offenses). — Bob Ross
The first, in the sense that whatever nation you belong to you must have a vested interest in its flourishing and protection against other nations — Bob Ross
, if your country has substantially better politics than other ones, you should have a pride in it and want to expand its values to the more inferior ones (which leads to imperialism). — Bob Ross
Some societies are so obviously structured in a way antithetical to the human good ... — Bob Ross
... if we could take over North Korea right now without grave consequences (such as nuclear war), then it is obviously in our duty to do so—and this is a form of imperialism. Why would you not be a Western supremacist? — Bob Ross
Because it would require them to die and sacrifice.There’s nothing about a representative republic that prevents this [electing officials on their aggressive foreign policy]; nor why would it? — Bob Ross
Nothing vague about aggression. One country attacks another - as you propose they should. The population is usually not asked whether it wants to go to war; it's told (often untruthfully) why it should or must go to war.What do you mean by “aggressive”—that’s a very vague term here.
Oh, he doesn't care about the US, either. If he's convinced you otherwise, I've overestimated your acuity.It’s not that he doesn’t care: it’s that he cares more about America—as it should be. — Bob Ross
I'm rejecting it on all of the grounds I listed in my first post. If your principles cause innocents to be killed or bereaved, I reject your principles.This can be true, but isn’t always the case. I think you are denying my OP on the grounds of practicality, when it was meant in principle. — Bob Ross
I'll let you know when I've seen the results of the first five resorts. ATM, no.Do you think there’s a certain point where the Nation would have to use conquest, as a last resort? — Bob Ross
I do believe they are doing something wrong according to my own (non-realist/non-universal) moral framework, but I don't necessarily think that should be a or the (only) determining factor in deciding to go to war with another country.
I'm a social constructivist
so yes morality would typically only apply within a certain group
and there is such a thing as having a view which should not be tolerated (e.g., a supporter of sex offenses). — Bob Ross
One will become president of the US in a few months!
Why must we have a vested interest in its flourishing. How does this differ from cultural relativism?
Which is substantially better,
What we end up with is where the US is clearly headed plutocracy.
While I share your concern with the human good, there has always been a tension in Liberalism between the human good and what individuals may regard as their own good. Some regard the notion of a 'human good' as antithetical to the rights of the individual.
... if we could take over North Korea right now without grave consequences (such as nuclear war), then it is obviously in our duty to do so—and this is a form of imperialism. Why would you not be a Western supremacist? — Bob Ross
For one, because of the consequences
Two, because supremacy, whether it is some version of Western supremacy or some other, has more to do with power and domination than with ideology
Three, because ideology itself poses a grave threat when it is imposed through action. The lines between persuasion and coercion, no matter now noble one's intentions, blur whenever there is an attempt to move from an ideal to an actuality via political action.
The population is usually not asked whether it wants to go to war; it's told (often untruthfully) why it should or must go to war.
Oh, he doesn't care about the US, either. If he's convinced you otherwise, I've overestimated your acuity.
. If your principles cause innocents to be killed or bereaved, I reject your principles.
The in-group is more important than the out-group. Each group has to protect its own viability first and foremost. — Bob Ross
war — Bob Ross
I'm saying people don't vote for it.Firstly, people get told to go to war no matter what in a republic—that’s not unique to my position here. If my country goes to war, then I could legitimately get drafted—are you saying that’s bad too? — Bob Ross
If you convince them of what they should want, they'll vote differently.Secondly, the idea is that, just like a citizen should want equal rights for their fellow citizens (and to sacrifice potentially for it), so should they with helping people out from another country by taking them over or at least having influence there to help out. — Bob Ross
Everything he's ever said and done publicly.What makes you think that? — Bob Ross
A war of aggression, for me, is always immoral.So war, for you then, is always impermissible. — Bob Ross
Trump is not a supporter of sex offenses — Bob Ross
Cultural relativism is a form of moral realism such that moral judgments are evaluated relative to the objective legal or moral law of the society-at-hand; whereas being vested in the national-interests is just the idea that you should be interested in your nation prospering so that you can too. — Bob Ross
obviously degenerate, inferior societies ... like Talibanian Afghanistan, North Korea, Iran, China, India ...[,/quote]
then being interested in in its prospering it to be interested in degenerate laws and governance. If it is morally defensible because it is your nation of society is cultural relativism.
— Bob Ross
A meritocracy guided by secular values (e.g., of rights, liberties, etc.). — Bob Ross
Arguably, it is already a plutocracy and an oligarchy. — Bob Ross
upon deeper reflection, this is utterly self-undermining. — Bob Ross
In order to argue for this, we would have to claim that it is actually good to let people pursue — Bob Ross
The human good is what grounds, in my theory, why it is actually good to let people pursue their own good. It is just. — Bob Ross
... if we could take over North Korea right now without grave consequences (such as nuclear war), then it is obviously in our duty to do so—and this is a form of imperialism. Why would you not be a Western supremacist? — Bob Ross
For one, because of the consequences
:lol: — Bob Ross
Two, because supremacy, whether it is some version of Western supremacy or some other, has more to do with power and domination than with ideology
Yes, and you need that. This is exactly the absurdity with hyper-liberalism: it is hyper-tolerant. — Bob Ross
Are you really going to say that Hitler didn’t have inferior values to Ghandi? — Bob Ross
Three, because ideology itself poses a grave threat when it is imposed through action. The lines between persuasion and coercion, no matter now noble one's intentions, blur whenever there is an attempt to move from an ideal to an actuality via political action.
All I got out of this is that it would be difficult to implement; which I do not deny. — Bob Ross
I do believe they are doing something wrong according to my own (non-realist/non-universal) moral framework, but I don't necessarily think that should be a or the (only) determining factor in deciding to go to war with another country.
If there is no ‘objective’ morality, then your ethical theory isn’t really useful. It doesn’t matter if you believe that they are doing something wrong but not in the sense that it is actually wrong. — Bob Ross
Is that like moral cultural relativism? — Bob Ross
It sounds like, contrary to your previous statements, you are a moral realist. Moral cultural relativism is a form of moral realism—although I don’t think it works. — Bob Ross
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