Stripe said:
So your only suggestion to all would-be protestors under dictatorial regimes is to just keep trying to protest and keep getting shot?
On what point? If it's a peaceful protest and the gov't starts shooting people then there should be real moral outrage. And if it turns out this sort of carry-on is institutional then the neighbours need to start thinking about doing something about it.
And if they won't? (Which we know they won't, at least until it becomes civil war).
Also, what if your neighbours happen to be third-world or in cahoots with the dictatorship itself?
They should do so not because of their genes or some game theory, but because they are morally obliged to step into the breach for people who cannot help themselves.
But the people who cannot help themselves actually can. You just refuse to recognition armed resistance as valid.
Offering to give rabble-rousers guns so they can continue to perpetrate their illegal activities is a perverse replacement for what might be a nation's finest hour.
You think a nation's finest hour is better served by foreign occupation or invasion (on their behalf) rather than a home-grown overthrowing of their dictator? I would argue the complete opposite and add that we are stepping in because it is apparent that in this war, the rebels of libya may not win it.
Because of the precedent it sets. If a government knows that it will get beaten senseless by its neighbours if it starts oppressing its people then it is unlikely to go bad very quickly.
I agree. I don't disagree. Your point here? Both the international community
and the oppressed should both work to overthrow dictators slaughtering and/or oppressing its inhabitants.
If the aid solution is, "We'll send guns" it removes responsibility and accountability. When civilians are given weapons and encouraged to overthrow a government it teaches a disrespect for proper authority.
What "proper authority"? To the protesters and rebels, their leadership has no credibility. It certainly wouldn't have earned any popular support. It would rule purely by force it gained through a coup. Why should that authority have respect or even recognition?
The right people should be doing the work they are responsible for. If you have guns, use them. Don't hand them out willy-nilly and then try and claim some sort of moral high ground.
From that perspective, I agree. But of course, I don't remotely agree with the notion that only foreign invaders (local or otherwise) should be the only forces capable of intervening. I could just as meaninglessly state that foreign nations invading the nation preaches disrespect to their leadership and sovereignty. What would be the key difference between that and your argument?
What are you talking about?
As it stands now, we (that is the free world) have a policy of complete non-assistance to those living under tyrants
until they begin a violent uprisal. It would
necessarily require a violent uprising before foreign powers got involved.
They can use their voice. They can protest. They can proclaim their desire for justice.
And they should die for it?
What? The state determined that it would kill off its citizens. What was not self-determined about that?
But you insist that when a state does that, other states should merrily intervene. So for all your legalism, you freely forget the notion of 'self-determination' as it concerns states.
Uh, you don't have to be theocratic in order for God to be in authority over you, just as you don't have to hold the beliefs of your father in order for him to be in authority over you.
Do you think all states should agree with the notion of being accountable to 'God'?
People can be pretty smart when they want to be. I'm sure they'll think of something.
If this isn't saying "I don't know", I don't know what is. So you have no advice whatsoever for the downtrodden of the world. They can't protest, voice their opinion, or let people even know their affiliation - and you just expect them to stick with their lives being controlled?
And you think this time it'll be different?
Well, that depends on the outcome of the anti-government movements. It is our hands (if they succeed) to push for secular democracy.
Of course their citizens can rebuke them! You're quoting me, but whose posts are you reading?
No they can't. They can't free themselves through revolution. You've refused them the right to do that.