nickcoons
Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2007
- Messages
- 828
We all agree that our government's job is to protect individual liberties, and our military is intended to defend Americans, not to go around policing the world.
With that said, there are many bad things going on in the world. There are evil dictators (and some of them probably got there without our help) oppressing their people, such as in Africa. I think the last group of people that should be involved in doing anything about this is the US government or the US military. They have no constitutional authority to do so, and that is not an appropriate use of taxpayer money.
Originally, this came up in a conversation I was having with someone yesterday about Ron Paul and non-interventionism. Of course, they bring up things like Darfur, and "I can't believe we have this stuff happening in the 21st century; we have to do something." I told her that the federal government has no authority to do anything about this, because it does not involve defending America or Americans.
But I agreed with her that we do have a moral obligation ("moral" meaning "my personal belief" and "not something to be legislated or pushed down anyone else's throat") to help people when they are in need whenever we can, including things like this that are going on around the world. I believe these sorts of things, even when they are on a large national or even continental scale fall under the realm of charities and voluntary work.
Just for an interesting discussion, does anyone have any ideas on how we'd be to attack problems going on in other countries without the use of the government or the military? Something that a sort of "grassroots effort against oppression" would do to not only accomplish the intended goal (or work towards accomplishing it), but actually do it better than government? On a side note, I don't see how it could actually be any worse.
With that said, there are many bad things going on in the world. There are evil dictators (and some of them probably got there without our help) oppressing their people, such as in Africa. I think the last group of people that should be involved in doing anything about this is the US government or the US military. They have no constitutional authority to do so, and that is not an appropriate use of taxpayer money.
Originally, this came up in a conversation I was having with someone yesterday about Ron Paul and non-interventionism. Of course, they bring up things like Darfur, and "I can't believe we have this stuff happening in the 21st century; we have to do something." I told her that the federal government has no authority to do anything about this, because it does not involve defending America or Americans.
But I agreed with her that we do have a moral obligation ("moral" meaning "my personal belief" and "not something to be legislated or pushed down anyone else's throat") to help people when they are in need whenever we can, including things like this that are going on around the world. I believe these sorts of things, even when they are on a large national or even continental scale fall under the realm of charities and voluntary work.
Just for an interesting discussion, does anyone have any ideas on how we'd be to attack problems going on in other countries without the use of the government or the military? Something that a sort of "grassroots effort against oppression" would do to not only accomplish the intended goal (or work towards accomplishing it), but actually do it better than government? On a side note, I don't see how it could actually be any worse.