The US Empire doesn’t care who is president

The indomitable strength and hegemony of the United States Navy is the single biggest reason for our interconnected global economy, which has deepened ties across the world, thus leading to a more stable international environment, enabled the fast and easy shipment of resources, including food and oil to allow countries to feed and flourish, etc. etc.
This needs to be stated more often.
 
Both the OP and the article are agitating for socialist/communist revolution, so you're thinking too deeply into their motivations.

Which gets me because if you look at socialist/communist nations they are far more prone to militization and waging war on their neighbors or themselves. Hell, the USSR is prime example of that, it's one of the most murderous nations in human history.
 
Since the author seems to be jostling for a world without nations or borders (Pixy?) I will put forward my opinion that this is impossible with humans alone. Tribalism is inbuilt, it's a feature not a bug. Therefore the only way to be rid of empires would be a) an off world species or race for us to join together in opposition to, or b) a worldwide government enforced by AI to stamp out human quirks.

A human-run world government would not work. Getting rid of existing tribes would only result in the formation of new tribes to replace them.
 
The indomitable strength and hegemony of the United States Navy is the single biggest reason for our interconnected global economy, which has deepened ties across the world, thus leading to a more stable international environment, enabled the fast and easy shipment of resources, including food and oil to allow countries to feed and flourish, etc. etc.

But such facts have been preemptively dismissed as a "defense force".

It's threads like these where I realize just how extreme elements or this board are.

...and stuck in sophomore year of college,

Yeah, of course the defense of "for the sake of capitalism" ... maybe it's not the mana from heaven you are taught to think it is. We slaughtered millions of people that had nothing to do with our country but it's okay because now you have 2 day free shipping from Amazon! And those Native Americans too, think how much BETTER the world is since the good and REAL Americans bested them.
 
Already knew this, pretty sure a lot of Americans do, and I still care who's president. Doesn't really matter if they aren't omnipotent. I don't really understand what the point of this article is, but it kind of comes off as "voting is pointless" garbage.
 
Yeah, of course the defense of "for the sake of capitalism" ... maybe it's not the mana from heaven you are taught to think it is. We slaughtered millions of people that had nothing to do with our country but it's okay because now you have 2 day free shipping from Amazon!
Trade only exists in capitalist global economies? You reduce the exchange of goods like food between states to an Amazon prime joke? How old are you?
 
The indomitable strength and hegemony of the United States Navy is the single biggest reason for our interconnected global economy, which has deepened ties across the world, thus leading to a more stable international environment, enabled the fast and easy shipment of resources, including food and oil to allow countries to feed and flourish, etc. etc.

I mean, can't you make the same argument for literally any empire? Rome brought roads, concrete, political organization. Britain brought education and post-enlightenment ideals to all corners of the planet. The US has brought stability and wealth.

Empires create a more centralized political environment which increases development within their sphere of influence. Empires are also built on violence and maintained by regular, liberal use of that violence. You can't separate those two ideas.

You can even argue that the world is by nature violent and corrupt, and that there's no alternative to empire, and that we, as a species, are incapable of building anything better. But I don't get why people feel the need to jump in and throw out any criticism of a hegemony build on the corpses of millions.
 
Since the author seems to be jostling for a world without nations or borders (Pixy?) I will put forward my opinion that this is impossible with humans alone. Tribalism is inbuilt, it's a feature not a bug. Therefore the only way to be rid of empires would be a) an off world species or race for us to join together in opposition to, or b) a worldwide government enforced by AI to stamp out human quirks.

A human-run world government would not work. Getting rid of existing tribes would only result in the formation of new tribes to replace them.

Yeah, I agree here. There are ways to deal with tribalism, though. We've kinda done it, though not completely.

Thousands of years ago you would've never imagined hoards of people from different "tribes", nations, in this case, sitting peacefully in flying aluminum cans. But it happens thousands of times per day.

The human species is much more peaceful today.
 
It's a bit weird to fixate on the powerlessness of the US president to change things when the fact is, the US president could very easily change things if he campaigned and won on that platform. The blame for the bad behaviour of the US abroad lies squarely at the feet of the US people, who continue to vote for the same old ideas.

Also, don't try to say that the two party system limits peoples' choices. If people really cared about changing things, it wouldn't take long for a suitable candidate to rise up through the system.

Finally, it is the lamest excuse to say that the world would be worse if Russia or China were in charge. Of course it would be. That's no reason for the US to continue to be so shitty.

In the abstract you're absolutely correct, but in the article's argument it... actually kinda is. By folding ALL US military behavior into the bloodthirsty imperial model (Korean War equated to Iraq and Vietnam, military bases mentioned alongside drone strikes, involving WW2 at all), the article creates a premise that the US being in charge necessitates all the shitty stuff, and by blithely waving aside the idea of Pax Americana, it suggests that a Pax Russia or Pax China would be just as good (or, rather, just as bad).
 
I mean, can't you make the same argument for literally any empire? Rome brought roads, concrete, political organization. Britain brought education and post-enlightenment ideals to all corners of the planet. The US has brought stability and wealth.

Empires create a more centralized political environment which increases development within their sphere of influence. Empires are also built on violence and maintained by regular, liberal use of that violence. You can't separate those two ideas.

You can even argue that the world is by nature violent and corrupt, and that there's no alternative to empire, and that we, as a species, are incapable of building anything better. But I don't get why people feel the need to jump in and throw out any criticism of a hegemony build on the corpses of millions.
Yes, you can, and you should.

Use of the word empire by this think piece - calling it an article is undeserved -- is meant to bring about negative connotations and scare the reader.
 
Yes, yes you can.
Which is why empires aren't inherently, absolutely, evil.

Yes, you can, and you should.

Use of the word empire by this think piece - calling it an article is underrated -- is meant to bring about negative connotations and scare the reader.

But the arguments against it - that there is more nuance to empire and that it's not a unilateral force for evil - doesn't really undermine the arguments against it.

Like, you can say: empire is inherently violent, but it brings progress. And my retort is: shouldn't we try to figure out a system that brings progress and ISN'T fundamentally violent?

Like, this article is essentially just a "don't forget that the US does heinous shit all the time" reminder, which isn't exactly earning a Pulitzer, but I think it's valuable. We should avoid becoming complacent and happy with a world where the status quo of "acceptably oppressive" is some sort of high bar.
 
The current web of world security has been created with the goal of preventing another world war and it's been successful for over 70 years. There have been conflicts in that time but none even touching the scale of the world wars which is the whole point of the world setup we have. Who would have thought that nearly all of Europe would be united under one military alliance including France, Britain, and Germany? Bitter rivals for longer than a lot of countries have existed. I think a lot of people take a united Europe and a more united world as a given when it's really atypical and has taken lives, money, and effort to get here.
 
Peaceful Kim Il Sung was just taking a walking tour of Korea with his closest friends when the evil Americans attacked!

Yeah. What the fuck. My grandmother was a school teacher before the Korean War, and if wasn't for the US she would have been hunted down and killed. She had to flee to the mountains and hide. The "evil" United States saved her life.
 
Doesn't matter how you campaign, you have to walk in lock step with whatever the *real* folks in power want you to do.

A good example is both Obama and Trump being vehemently against the war in Afghanistan and they both had tweets and soundbites denouncing the war as dumb and unwinnable and then they get elected and announce surges. Nothing Stops This imperial war machine, especially no damn president!
 
I'm pretty skeptical you can blame the US for Korea, as well as the fact that the majority of countries the US stages their military in tend to want them there.

But I do agree the US is a bit too interventionist and even when it should be it's track record isn't great.

Also:
Any sufficient vision of socialism, any better world we speak of, is one where there is no president and no empire at all. "The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains," says Marx. We're the chains. "They have a world to win," he says. For that, we'll have to plan for how our own masters lose.

Uh huh.
 
US does get itself into many complex issues that just can't be stopped, but are much more easily continued. The empire is massive afterall.
 
I'm pretty skeptical you can blame the US for Korea, as well as the fact that the majority of countries the US stages their military in tend to want them there.

But I do agree the US is a bit too interventionist and even when it should be it's track record isn't great.

Without the US the North Koreans would have won and the war would have been over. The same can be said for WW2.
 
Doesn't matter how you campaign, you have to walk in lock step with whatever the *real* folks in power want you to do.

A good example is both Obama and Trump being vehemently against the war in Afghanistan and they both had tweets and soundbites denouncing the war as dumb and unwinnable and then they get elected and announce surges. Nothing Stops This imperial war machine, especially no damn president!

Is it possible those were the best options?
 
The article is making the assumption that reality without American hegemony would be some peaches and cream land of milk and honey where everyone is joining hands and dancing together in mutual respect and understanding.


No, American hegemony is the best of a lot of bad options.

And we can't speculate what life would be like without that but I'm pretty sure letting land grabbing China or Russia dictate the rules, then articles like that wouldn't be allowed to exist in the first place, author included.

For whom?
 
Doesn't matter how you campaign, you have to walk in lock step with whatever the *real* folks in power want you to do.

A good example is both Obama and Trump being vehemently against the war in Afghanistan and they both had tweets and soundbites denouncing the war as dumb and unwinnable and then they get elected and announce surges. Nothing Stops This imperial war machine, especially no damn president!

Or campaigning on platitudes is easy and actual governance is hard? That is the theme of 2017 after all.
 
The author is a real glass half empty kind of guy. He may still get his wish from Trump pulling out of NATO and abandoning the South China Sea. Next stop world peace.
 
Is it possible those were the best options?
It's possible but I don't buy it. I read somewhere that the generals purposely gave Obama three options. Two of them were so ridiculous only the surge option was plausible. Ending the war would be the best option no matter what but the war machine, Wall St., and ideological neocon Hawks make these decision. Prez has no say. They do as they're told.
Or campaigning on platitudes is easy and actual governance is hard? That is the theme of 2017 after all.
The real challenge is doing what you believe to be right and carrying out policies that the majority of the population wants (which is to stop all these wars). The "deep state" does not want that, so who wins in this scenario?
Hint: it's never the people.
 
The current web of world security has been created with the goal of preventing another world war and it's been successful for over 70 years. There have been conflicts in that time but none even touching the scale of the world wars which is the whole point of the world setup we have. Who would have thought that nearly all of Europe would be united under one military alliance including France, Britain, and Germany? Bitter rivals for longer than a lot of countries have existed. I think a lot of people take a united Europe and a more united world as a given when it's really atypical and has taken lives, money, and effort to get here.

This is a great point. I also wonder how much the development of nuclear weapons has helped us maintain the "Long Peace". We've reached a point where any large scale conflict brings the possibility of almost unimaginable destruction. That's a pretty good incentive to avoid total war.
Sadly this hasn't done much to prevent sectarian and regional conflicts in much of the world. But things are still getting better, look at the recent treaty in Colombia!
 
Thankfully we have a large number of intellectuals arguing the same point all throughout their entire lives. Someone already brought up Chomsky, but there is also Bill Moyers, Sheldon Wolin, Chris Hedges, Thomas Frank, Thom Hartmann, Cornell West, Adam Curtis, etc etc etc who have all been shouting the same thing.

For those that have a few hours, this interview with Sheldon Wollin is illuminating on how we have gone wrong as a country:

Chris Hedges and Sheldon Wolin: Can Capitalism and Democracy Coexist? Full Version
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGc8DMHMyi8

One clear thing that every American should understand is that American hegemony is rooted in the worldwide hegemony of the US dollar. Modern colonialism is done by forcing nations to rely on US dollars to borrow and survive, and the control comes from all the covenants/conditions/impositions that come with that debt.

The dollar is now officially on its way out, and the balance of power is tilting eastward. The US dollar is absolutely not immune to history:

global-reserve-currencies2.png


On the military front, since Henry Kissinger and his disciples started playing war games for power and profit, the US Empire became a very dark force in the world. The aim was not world peace, but domination of markets to enrich the empire. The world is suffering the consequences of that today in many ways.
 
The issue of the American hegemony, concerning if the US has made the world safer and more wealthy or brought avoidable violence to countless millions is, like many things, hopelessly complex. Which is why I can't take articles like this seriously when they try so hard to appeal to your emotions.

It sure is easy to say things like "America is evil" and "the world would be a better place without empires" from the safety of a Western Democracy. But how are we going to get there? How are we going to stop countries like Russia or China from filling the power vacuum?
 
I mean, can't you make the same argument for literally any empire? Rome brought roads, concrete, political organization. Britain brought education and post-enlightenment ideals to all corners of the planet. The US has brought stability and wealth.

Empires create a more centralized political environment which increases development within their sphere of influence. Empires are also built on violence and maintained by regular, liberal use of that violence. You can't separate those two ideas.

You can even argue that the world is by nature violent and corrupt, and that there's no alternative to empire, and that we, as a species, are incapable of building anything better. But I don't get why people feel the need to jump in and throw out any criticism of a hegemony build on the corpses of millions.
I don't disagree with your goal of finding an alternative to empire

I'm thoroughly convinced the goal is unobtainable in any meaningful timeline in our lives, barring unforeseen science fiction-like events that send the international order into upheaval, because it required a sort of post-force world.

Because I think it's essentially impossible, I'd say the effort is best left to devising methods of improving the current model (I.e. improving America the Hegemon) rather than trying for a new one.
 
It's possible but I don't buy it. I read somewhere that the generals purposely gave Obama three options. Two of them were so ridiculous only the surge option was plausible. Ending the war would be the best option no matter what but the war machine, Wall St., and ideological neocon Hawks make these decision. Prez has no say. They do as they're told.

So just leaving Afghanistan as we left it was the best option for everyone? Blow it up then say "sorry everyone" and high tail it out of there?
 
China and India will be the world leaders in a century or so.

Unlikely, India is a large but still a poor country in a per capita sense. Their overall economy just isn't developed enough to be a true world power.

China is only sustained by being integrated with the US global trading system which still requires them to use oppressive tactics on their people to keep them under control.
If the US ever quits protecting china's trade routes then china needs to get past Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea who can blockade China and cut off not only trade but China's oil supply.
If they can get past that first chain then they have to negotiate a way past the straits of Malacca and the myriad of countries that can apply pressure to that region.
Should China fail to secure trade routes to the rest of the world on their own then the drop in the quality of life for its people would lead to China breaking apart into several independent states as it usually has done throughout history.
 
How are we going to stop countries like Russia or China from filling the power vacuum?
You can't.

In my opinion, the rise of China and Russia is inevitable. But l would no one would be able to completely dominate like the US does now bit there be a multicolor world based on mutual respect where there are enough checks and balances where you won't have one nation just recklessly invading and sanctioning every other nation if doesn't like or doesn't do what it's told.

That's the best case scenario.

So just leaving Afghanistan as we left it was the best option for everyone? Blow it up then say "sorry everyone" and high tail it out of there?
You would make the assumption of an immediate pull out, but I think a time table to withdrawal, which Obama initially tried to set, would be a start. Certainly not the "we will be there for decades to come!" rhetoric coming out of the Beltway now.
 
Like, you can say: empire is inherently violent, but it brings progress. And my retort is: shouldn't we try to figure out a system that brings progress and ISN'T fundamentally violent?

Like, this article is essentially just a "don't forget that the US does heinous shit all the time" reminder, which isn't exactly earning a Pulitzer, but I think it's valuable. We should avoid becoming complacent and happy with a world where the status quo of "acceptably oppressive" is some sort of high bar.
Acknowledging that this is the best we've got isn't condoning the evils committed by the system. What alternative is there, realistically, to this? I don't believe for a second that any government won't be constantly attacked and harrassed, or infiltrated by power seekers who care only for personal gain.

There is a better solution for the world, but it does not involve humans in charge. We will either be goverened by AI or climate change/war/disease will have wiped us off the planet. If there is such a solution that can be had without those outcomes, I'm open to hearing it. The article's intent is clear, but its offered fix is far too idealistic to be taken seriously. Thus it's point is blunted.
 
You can't.

In my opinion, the rise of China and Russia is inevitable. But l would no one would be able to completely dominate like the US does now bit there be a multicolor world based on mutual respect where there are enough checks and balances where you won't have one nation just recklessly invading and sanctioning every other nation if doesn't like or doesn't do what it's told.

That's the best case scenario.

We already have Russia invading and annexing territory from other countries. China is on the verge of committing to a military intervention over the South China Sea. How exactly are we going to check that behavior from intensifying?
 
You would make the assumption of an immediate pull out, but I think a time table to withdrawal, which Obama initially tried to set, would be a start. Certainly not the "we will be there for decades to come!" rhetoric coming out of the Beltway now.

There have always been timetables. What do we do during that time? Sit around? Try to make it better in the time we have left? How?
 
We already have Russia invading and annexing territory from other countries. China is on the verge of committing to a military intervention over the South China Sea. How exactly are we going to check that behavior from intensifying?
The same way we have to check US from invading, sanctioning, drone striking, cruise missling, and meddling everywhere... have counterbalanced where no country is above international law.

There have always been timetables. What do we do during that time? Sit around? Try to make it better in the time we have left? How?
Not really. Timetables are gone, it's all perpetual war now. Last time we had a timetable was when Obama said we'd be out in 2014. Never happened and now people are saying US forces will be there indefinitely. The only way to end this is set a real timetable and stick to it. Unless you want the war to last forever, then well, you're currently getting your wish.
 
Slightly off-topic but what's the "ur-right?" The article doesn't go into it and google suggests a bunch of memes on sarcastic image-macros of "you're right."
 
China and India will be the world leaders in a century or so.

China and India are saddled by the two largest peasant populations on the planet. India has zero chance to put forth a modern economy capable of leading all nations in that amount of time. China is joined at the hip to the US. They're completely reliant upon continued economic success stateside to stay relevant themselves.
 
We already have Russia invading and annexing territory from other countries. China is on the verge of committing to a military intervention over the South China Sea. How exactly are we going to check that behavior from intensifying?

Russia is actually dying off from systemic neglect and theft from the people. Birth rates have mostly been below replacement levels for nearly the past 3 decades. 25% of russian males die before age 55. Tuberculosis and rampant heroin and alcohol abuse have ravaged the russian people. They are on borrowed time and the recent land grabs are an attempt to narrow their borders (Europe gets more narrow the further west you go) and forcibly insert healthier populations and economies into the russian system to stave off disaster for a couple of decades.
 
The same way we have to check US from invading, sanctioning, drone striking, cruise missling, and meddling everywhere... have counterbalanced where no country is above international law.
I am skeptical that Russia and China (or any nation) would be content merely just being balancing forces. Nor do I believe that is a realistic outcome. The resource disparity alone renders it impossible.
 
Kind of hard to do without a strong, centralized global super power.
US is the strong Global superpower and that's why it can get away with all this. Russia annexed Crimea and got sanctioned and condemned for it. If US decided to annex, say, Haiti... no one could do anything. And US officials know that. That's why we got Lindsay Graham and several retired generals on weapon manufacturer payrolls all over MSM advocating for war with DPRK no matter the consequences. They go on live TV in front of the whole world and spew some of the most racist and bellicose rhetoric because they know they don't have to answer to anyone. This is a power dynamic that should not exist anymore.
I am skeptical that Russia and China (or any nation) would be content merely just being balancing forces. Nor do I believe that is a realistic outcome. The resource disparity alone renders it impossible.
You could be right. Don't know what the future holds in this regard. But right now, this is what it looks like will happen.
 
Yeah...as much as I and others around here dislike Trump, when people go back and quote his old tweets re: Afghanistan or Syria following his decisions as President and call him a "hypocrite" or "liar" that's clearly not quite the case.

What he wrote/said back then were his real thoughts, what he does as President are not actions taken based off of any of his thoughts/plans. He's not masterminding anything.

We saw the same thing with Obama. While he did attempt to deliver on his word to close Gitmo, he also spoke about peace while dropping more bombs on the ME than any previous president...because those weren't his decisions. America gonna America, there will always be reasons to pay for moar war.
 
Not really. Timetables are gone, it's all perpetual war now. Last time we had a timetable was when Obama said we'd be out in 2014. Never happened and now people are saying US forces will be there indefinitely. The only way to end this is set a real timetable and stick to it. Unless you want the war to last forever, then well, you're currently getting your wish.

The US had always had a timetable. The current 13k troops are part of a NATO mission with US troops making up about half that.

Just walking away isn't a viable option. Something has to be done before everyone picks up and leaves. You want a timetable but you're short on ideas about what should be done as it winds down.
 
Top Bottom