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Old 05-27-2015, 07:08 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by DwnWthVwls View Post
and how do you think our country would fair with China? It's a two way street.
Of course it goes both ways. Economically it would be devastating on both sides. China owns roughly 1.3 trillion of the US's debt, which is not as massively devastating when considered that we owe 6 trillion to ourselves. On the flip side of the same coin, China owes the US roughly 1 trillion. Forbes estimates that China's economy is 175% dependent on ours.

The economic devastation is the main reason that war with China is basically the US military's biggest nightmare. The secondary concern is the massive amount of people that China has. Due to their gov't style, they could just conscript everybody into service. Of course, they wouldn't have anything to pay the soldiers.
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Old 05-27-2015, 07:13 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Nevertheless, Saddam aside, it's true that the reason the UN couldn't do anything but wag its finger at Assad was because Putin kept blocking the resolutions and using his veto. Russia and Syria are allies in that, so if Syria had been invaded Russia would have had to intervene, on their side, which is (unless I totally misread the news) the reason why we couldn't, and still aren't, intervening and this poxy civil war has been going on for years and that **** is still in power.
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Old 05-27-2015, 08:46 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Nevertheless, Saddam aside, it's true that the reason the UN couldn't do anything but wag its finger at Assad was because Putin kept blocking the resolutions and using his veto. Russia and Syria are allies in that, so if Syria had been invaded Russia would have had to intervene, on their side, which is (unless I totally misread the news) the reason why we couldn't, and still aren't, intervening and this poxy civil war has been going on for years and that **** is still in power.
putin was wagging his dick at the west, trying to make the statement that russia is still relevant. would he actually go to war over syria, if it really came down to it? kinda doubtful, tbh. but likewise the US wasn't trying to be too provocative towards russia, by actually invading their allies in syria, after pursuing a good decade of mid east adventures that russia was vocally opposed to. the syria situation is basically in russia's backyard, and deals with one of their allies, so they have a good deal more at stake than the US does regarding the outcome of that conflict.

so yea... we were bound to do nothing in syria. it wasn't the only mid-east regime we watched repress uprisings with bullets and bombs... but since it was such a high profile slaughter and was veering into the direction of the use of chemical weapons, the US had to 'take a stance' and try to look dominant, which is how obama ended up with egg on his face cause ultimately we were never going to commit to that cause. all we could spare in our arsenal in that conflict was empty threats, and assad/putin basically called obama's bluff.

likewise, we did nothing when russia invaded georgia and the ukraine... cause those were of real strategic interest to the russians, and while the US has to posture to try to 'contain' russian power, ultimately it means much more to them than it does to us, so they are willing to go much further over the future of those countries than the US is.

but i sorta get the idea maybe you think the US/russia beef has its roots in the mid east adventures? in all honesty, there was never much more than the facade of friendship between these two powers in the post-cold war world. they are natural rivals in the current geopolitical order. as such, they are bound to try to undermine the ambitions of the other at every opportunity. that's why russia cared about iraq in 2003, and that's why the US cared about georgia/ukraine just recently.

i have posted these videos before... i'll post em again, cause i never know who watched what. just a good background for understanding modern russian/us relations

Spoiler for russia:



the first video basically gives a decent historical background for understanding the russian strategic approach, in terms of which plots of land are key to their empire and why they came to value them as such.

the other two more specifically deal with modern day US/russian relations

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Old 05-28-2015, 05:33 AM   #4 (permalink)
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No of course I don't think the trouble between Russia and the US comes via the Middle East. I'm 52 after all: I know my history. It began when Russia became a superpower after WWII and Stalin grabbed all he could of Eastern Europe, even up to part (half?) of Germany, resulting in East/West Germany. Then the Cold War, the Space Race and so on all helped fuel tensions. But Gorbachev was doing a lot, against stiff opposition in the Kremlin no doubt, to help thaw relations between the two powers. The collapse of communism and the fragmentation of the USSR left Russia with few bargaining chips and their power much reduced, but Putin is doing his best to drag us all back to the days of the Cold War. If Russia had not vetoed the resolution something could perhaps have been done about Syria. The US has done it before in, oh, 2003? Little place called Iraq?
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Old 05-28-2015, 08:14 AM   #5 (permalink)
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So what does this thread think of this?

Man Threatens Suicide, Police Kill Him - The Daily Beast

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On May 11, Justin Way was drinking and threatening to kill himself. His father, George Way, said his son was a recovering alcoholic and had been alcohol-free for five weeks.

“He just lost his job, and he had a setback,” he said.

Way’s live-in girlfriend, Kaitlyn Christine Lyons, said she’d caught Justin drinking a bottle of vodka, which she took away from him to pour out. She said he was drunk, lying in their bed with a large knife, saying he would hurt himself with it. She called a non-emergency number in an attempt to get her boyfriend to a local St. Augustine, Florida, hospital for help—and told them she did not feel threatened.

“My brother has been Baker Acted three times because he was threatening to hurt himself so I figured that would happen with Justin,” said Lyons. Florida’s Baker Act allows the involuntary institutionalization of an individual, and it can be initiated by law-enforcement officials.

“The only person Justin threatened was himself and I honestly don’t think he wanted to die.”

Minutes later, two St. Johns County Sheriff’s deputies, 26-year-old Jonas Carballosa and 32-year-old Kyle Braig, arrived at the home, armed with assault rifles, and told Kaitlyn to wait outside.

“I thought they were going into war,” she remembered thinking when she first saw the large guns. Within moments, Justin was shot dead.

George Way said the initial report he received from Det. Mike Smith detailed an incident wherein his officers said they were attacked by Justin with a knife. Way said Smith told him Justin had threatened Kaitlyn. Kaitlyn denies this.

Denise Way, Justin’s mom, said that the detective relayed to her that “they told Justin to drop the knife and he didn’t—so they shot him because that’s what we do.”
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Old 05-27-2015, 07:47 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Of course it goes both ways. Economically it would be devastating on both sides. China owns roughly 1.3 trillion of the US's debt, which is not as massively devastating when considered that we owe 6 trillion to ourselves. On the flip side of the same coin, China owes the US roughly 1 trillion. Forbes estimates that China's economy is 175% dependent on ours.

The economic devastation is the main reason that war with China is basically the US military's biggest nightmare. The secondary concern is the massive amount of people that China has. Due to their gov't style, they could just conscript everybody into service. Of course, they wouldn't have anything to pay the soldiers.
honestly.. when you look at things like the amount of US debt that china owns... you can come to some misleading conclusions. like that china has the money and we don't so they lend it to us. in reality the US in the position to ask for credit on an international basis because the world economy runs in large part on the basis of the US petrol dollar. so the US can say to china hey lets have some credit and china considers this a worthwile investment, because their entire economic infrastructure is based primarily on international trade and largely on trade with the US. so their current economy is literally dependent on the continuing prosperity of the american economy. because we are their consumer base.

as for it being a two- way street.. it might be, but there are more lanes going one way than the other. the US economy benefits from outsourced cheap labor abroad and china is the perfect candidate to fill that role. likewise, the chinese economy benefits from exporting goods to a rich economy, and the US is the perfect candidate to fill that role. however, china isn't the only possible candidate for outsourced cheap labor. they have a lot of potential competition throughout the developing world. on the other hand... while there are other prominent markets to sell their goods to like europe and russia and south america and such, china literally couldn't survive without doing business with the united states.

the US would certainly take a hit as well. the world economy would probably take a hit as a result. but i would wager the US could manage such a hit much better than china could. my guess would be that their civilization would most likely literally collapse, and we'd either see some new revolution to take out the old regime and try to keep china together under a new order or we'd see the country balkanize into several different territories.
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