T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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107.1 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Dec 29 1993 10:03 | 12 |
|
As I read this I cannot help but be reminded of those who say
"It can't happen here". As America merrily squanders the rights
and freedoms that were purchased by the blood and sacrifice of
so many. If you want government to take care of you. They'll
take care of you all right.... China looked to one man to fix
their problems and he turned out to be a monster. How blessed
we were that the man who could have had it all, George Washington,
had such a deep and undying belief in God and liberty.
Thanks for reminding us.
fred();
|
107.2 | We all pay... | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Wed Dec 29 1993 10:10 | 15 |
| All revolutions are BAD... and people suffer. Did you note what
happened to Stalin? he is first revered, then rejected and his statues
taken away, the same will happen to Mao... wait till his opponents are
in command... see what happens to him. Communism is a dying ruling, it
dissapeared from many places, Cuba is badly struggling, Russia
abolished it, so it will be a matter of time before people can stand to
themselves and choose their own method of government, if they CHOOSE
comunism it is fine, as long as it is NOT forced, if it does not work
it could be changed... but then, if it wasn't forced it means it COULD
work! and being forced... you know the answer. I wish Mao did too.
(Soon or later, we all pay what we do)
|
107.3 | tongue in cheek ;-) | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Dec 29 1993 11:14 | 21 |
| A failed revolution is not either particularly good or bad. The
existing government now knows exactly who their main enemies are, and
what their reasons for complaint are. They can afford to be
magnanimous, and if they are intelligent they can take steps to fix
the root causes for the (failed) revolution.
Revolutions seem a bit mixed. The U.S. has had a fair number of
them, starting with the revolution against the British, but with
varying names, like "Civil War", "Indian massacre", ..., so I suppose
they should be experts compared with the British who have had only two
or three in the last 400 years.
Revolutions happen usually *because* people are suffering, and the
end result after the revolution may be good or bad. Tha Americans, when
they were revolting against British rule were suffering from tea taxes.
A fair number of German mercenaries were killed, and I wouldn't like to
compare taxes on tea currently, so it may or may not have achieved its
objectives. It did permit the French to take over Corsica by
distracting the British fleet to the other side of the Atlantic, so
from the point of view of Corsican nationalists the American revolution
was definitely BAD.
|
107.4 | an advance apology | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Dec 29 1993 11:24 | 5 |
| Please don't think I am in the least light hearted about the base
note. I was answering the replies. I have known several people who have
been in situations similar to that described, and it is not a matter to
laugh about. I sometimes find it difficult to resist teasing members of
our former American colonies.
|
107.5 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Dec 29 1993 11:57 | 9 |
|
re last couple:
Thank God that the British have had the "former colonies" to bail their
tales out at least twice in the last century. Especially from that Hitler
fella whom Chamberlin was so fond of, or you probably wouldn't be so
jovial.
fred();
|
107.6 | how to fix a revolution | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:07 | 8 |
| re revolutions:
There two ways to deal with a revolution. 1) you can fix the problems
that lead to the revolution, 2) you can 'fix' the dissatisfaction by
shooting everyone that is dissatisfied (along with their families).
China tends to do the latter.
fred();
|
107.7 | History | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:12 | 6 |
| There is a saying: "Those who choose to ignore history, are doomed to
repeat history".
(I don't know the author)
Jeff
|
107.8 | What if? | LEDS::LEWICKE | Serfs don't own assault weapons | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:24 | 14 |
| re .0
I've often wondered why the people of Hong Kong haven't tried to
buy the land (or at least lease it for another 99 years) from the
mainland government. I'm sure that they could borrow the money from
commercial banks and pay it back over some number of years. The
chinese government can probably get a lot more benefit from the cash
than from trying to keep a few more unwilling citizens under control.
Alternatively, the people of Hong Kong could try to find another
piece of waterfront property within a thousand or so miles and move
everything that isn't tied down to the new place leaving the Chinese
with just the piece of land that they rented to the British 90 some
years ago.
John
|
107.9 | perspective | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:30 | 37 |
| In terms of history, Mao was one of the most significant leaders ever
to rise to power in China. For thousands of years various dynasties
have come and gone; the philosophical/religious systems of Confucianism
and Taoism supported empires; then along came Mao, and harnessed the
peasantry in a political cause. That had never been done before. The
corrupt government of Sun Yat-Sen against which Mao took The Long March
was no more legitimate to rule China than any other; and with the
peasants behind him, Mao actually had more legitimacy than any other.
What Mao did after securing power was, on the other hand, morally
bankrupt. The Cultural Revolution destroyed the intelligentsia, the
educated, the artists, leaving only the least capable alive to build
upon the ruins. Painful industrialization and central economic
planning proved unable to modernise China for over two decades of
failed plans and sullen decay.
Finally, since Mao's death in '78 or '79, China's powerful elite have
gradually moved away from totally centralized economic control,
experimenting in various regions with market reforms, and successfully
begun to join the global trading system. Banks are being forbidden
from propping up the failing state industries. Bank reforms are in
place to promote lending to private business ventures. Thousands of
small and medium sized companies have sprung up to replace the failed
state businesses. And China's growth since the early 80's has averaged
better than 9% per year; an utterly improbable result given the decades
of preceding decay. The elites have maintained a very tight political
control during this phase, though with inept understanding of financial
matters they allowed inflation to rob the Chinese people of their
spending power, leading to unrest just before the Tianamen Square
demonstration, which was suppressed at terrible cost. Such political
control is expected to gradually elude the elites as modernisation
provides more and more financial and informational avenues into and out
of China. Mao's death freed the elites from central planning, and they
have successfully begun the transition to market economics, which
should eventually free the rest of the people of China.
DougO
|
107.10 | but it feeeeeels soooo goood! | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:39 | 7 |
|
re .9
Funny how while so many countries are moving to Capitalism, America
is moving to Socialism.
fred();
|
107.11 | From the Microsoft Bookshelf CD ... | HYDRA::BECK | Paul Beck | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:47 | 7 |
| re .7
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
George Santayana (1863-1952)
American philosopher, poet
|
107.12 | re .10 | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:48 | 5 |
| I don't think we are, nor do I want us to. I'm a free trader,
capitalist all the way. But in Mickwid's note is hardly the place
to discuss it.
DougO
|
107.13 | Me too, Fred. | VICKI::CRAIG | No such thing as too many cats | Wed Dec 29 1993 12:51 | 9 |
| re .10
Funny how I was just thinking the same thing. :-(
Who was it who said that those who would sacrifice freedom for security
deserve neither?
- craig
|
107.14 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Dec 29 1993 14:10 | 9 |
| re .13
> Who was it who said that those who would sacrifice freedom for security
> deserve neither?
Ben Franklin
fred();
|
107.15 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Dec 29 1993 14:55 | 18 |
| Behind many great or infamous men and women are closets sckelotons
(sp). Look at our curent leaders and look at some or many of the pop
artist, athletes, and others. Perhaps its their blind side? How they
look at the picture as a whole.
Pick any famous leader and I am sure we can find some quirk. Again not
taking .0's note out of content. I too feel for this person, for there
are many who die at the hands of our leaders... Where else do we get
shot thinking of things that are against the state? Or where else do we
have our goverment give radio active cerial to the populas knowing full
well of its results. Humanity has certainly taken a wrong turn
someplace. We are supposingly to have advanced some place here.
suposhere
ug t of
|
107.16 | | GLDOA::SHOOK | Come along if you can | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:12 | 10 |
|
re .0
Hello basenoter. Back in the late 60's left-wingers all over the
U.S. were buying up little books which contained quotations of
Chairman Mao. Were these books required reading in China?
bs
|
107.17 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:35 | 4 |
| I had one of those books - my mother gave it to me. I found it interesting
reading.
Steve
|
107.18 | I empathize with the base noter... | VMSNET::G_CHANG | TheFaceOfADragonFlyIsNothingButEyes! | Wed Dec 29 1993 17:36 | 27 |
| In August 1986 my father took my family to his hometown in China
(Fouchow) to met our Chinese side of the family. My father is the only
one in his family to have left China. He left just as Mao was closing
China, he was 12 years old and had very unpopular political beliefs.
He also left becasue he needed to find a job to support his family.
Many of my father's friends were "purged" as teens and adults during
that period.
I think that my father had another reason for going back there and
taking us with him. He looked up as many of his friends as he could
still find. Many of them were since brought back from the labor farms
they had been sent to. Many of them the same age as my father looked
very much older. They still seemed to have their rebeleous (sp?)
spirit however and were very outspoken against the government.
My father and one of his friends went to the 2 story tall Mao Statue in
the square in Fouchow. My father spit on it. Then he mocked saluting
Mao in a kind of rude gesture. My father's friend would not even look
at it. The passersby watched them and gave no reaction. I felt a
better understanding of what makes my father the way he is.
My father had been back to China 3 times before since it opened back up
in 1972.
I think during *this* trip my father just needed to do that.
--Gina
|
107.19 | You can't believe *everything* you see from Hollywood! | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Dec 30 1993 02:04 | 23 |
| re: .5
> Thank God that the British have had the "former colonies" to bail their
> tales out at least twice in the last century. Especially from that Hitler
> fella whom Chamberlin was so fond of, or you probably wouldn't be so
> jovial.
Maybe you have been listening to the wrong tails ;-) Britain
fought for a couple of years before the U.S. took any interest in
Europe, with bombs falling on every major city in the country, and when
you did take an interest (on the war loans) it was excessive - charging
us money to fight an enemy that you would eventually have had to fight
anyway if we had lost. When the U.S. has had bombs hitting everything
apart from minor villages I hope to see you jovial too, and carry on
fighting.
(In case you didn't know, for the first couple of years the only
involvement the U.S. had with the war in Europe was to lend the U.K.
money, on the understanding that it would be spent on U.S. manufactured
weapons, and paid back later).
Dave, with an uncle and aunt that he never met, and a grandfather
he knew well who was permanently incapacitated from chlorine gas in the
trenches.
|
107.20 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Dec 30 1993 10:30 | 16 |
|
re .19
I know all about that British stiff upper lip and all that. The
fact still remains that without U.S. help, Britain would have
went under. Without U.S. help, the Soviet Union would have withdrawn
from the war. Then where would you have been? If the U.S. had waited
6 more months to enter the war, we'd be talking about London and New
York instead of Heroshima and Nagasaki. The U.S. may have been slow
to enter, but kicked some tails around when it did. Thank God the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor when they did.
But actually I was thinking more about the role that Britain had
in creating the modern day China through the tea and opium trade.
fred();
|
107.21 | Yalta with just Churchill and Stalin? | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Dec 30 1993 12:04 | 26 |
| I agree the opium trade business was rather despicable, but opium
was not really recognised as a "problem" drug in Victorian days, any
more than tea or tobacco. Sherlock Holmes was depicted as smoking it,
and it was on unrestricted sale in U.S. pharmacies 20 years after the
opium wars and Hong Kong became British. The British wars in China to
protect tea and opium trade are directly comparable to the more recent
war against Irak to protect the oil trade.
And to follow the rathole, the USSR was not likely to withdraw from
the war. Consider the casualties at Leningrad, and Stalin's behaviour
after the war. He wasn't going to give up an inch of land, and if he
possibly could he would gain some, as long as there was a single
Russian left alive to throw underneath a German tank. And Britain,
having survived for two years from a state of unpreparedness (remember
your own comment about Chamberlain) was, thanks to your loans, in a
much better state to fight a war than two years earlier. If Hitler
couldn't do it in two years he wasn't going to do it soon. If it hadn't
been for Pearl Harbour we would probably have won the war for you and
without you, provided you kept sending the money, guns, lawyers and
repayments bills, and you could have kept your soldiers at home.
Maybe you wouldn't have liked the world map if you hadn't sent
soldiers, though. Japan, *all* of Germany, Italy, Finland, Austria,
would have ended up as part of the USSR after British and Russian
forces met at the Rhine and discussed a a peace settlement that didn't
involve you.
|
107.22 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Dec 30 1993 12:33 | 27 |
|
re .21
Maybe we should start a different topic for this rathole, but...
What would you have done with a Germany that had "the bomb"?
And V2's, and ME262's? and you'd better go read your history
books (again?) because in 1939-40 the Soviet Union was ineed
prepared (after 10 million casualties) to cut a 1917's type
deal and withdraw had the U.S not provided them with equipment.
Quesion is, "If the U.S. had still been a 'colony', would it
have been strong enought to step in when it did (althought
belatedly) or to provide any kind of lend-lease"?. When
comared to other British "colonies" at the time, I think not.
> Maybe you wouldn't have liked the world map if you hadn't sent
> soldiers, though. Japan, *all* of Germany, Italy, Finland, Austria,
> would have ended up as part of the USSR after British and Russian
> forces met at the Rhine and discussed a a peace settlement that didn't
> involve you.
Could probably add the rest of Europe and England to the Soviet portion
of the map if it hadn't been for NATO and the billions the U.S. has
spent defending Europe during the "cold war". And if you think it's
over, don't look now, but there's a Screw Loose in Russia.
fred();
fred();
|
107.23 | Remember the days when the U.S. had competent leaders? | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Dec 31 1993 03:23 | 24 |
| Stalin's conduct *after* the war indicates that he probably did not
take 10 million casualties as too serious. Peace along his Western
front, and elimination of Britain as a force would have enabled him to
use his forces elsewhere, and would probably have given him India and
the warm-water ports the Russians have always wanted. He would probably
have picked up parts of China that Japan was unable to control, too.
The deal with the U.S. enabled him to get Eastern Europe instead.
Ever read Machiavelli? When others are fighting, make sure there
can be no outright winner, and then when all sides are sufficiently
weakened, go in and pick up the pieces.
Consider the results at the end of the war. Western Europe was
still split into many small countries that could be no threat to the
U.S., particularly since there were U.S. garrisons in most countries.
Japan was neutralised as a threat, partly because your support of
Britain ensured that Australia did not become Japanese and India
Russian. I don't think there is any need to assume that generosity
played any part in the motives of your politicians, though it may have
affected your ordinary people. Russia probably ended up with more of
Eastern Europe than you would have liked, but since the alternative was
probably India it was about the best you could have hoped for. And
during the first few years it only cost you money that you could well
afford.
|
107.24 | This doesn't belong here, and does not respect the base noter. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Dec 31 1993 06:32 | 4 |
| If there are no interested spectators, then maybe we should abandon
this, or continue it by mail. Otherwise, it might be better if a
moderator could move it to something like "U.S. policy and
contributions in WWII".
|
107.25 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Jan 03 1994 09:58 | 7 |
|
I'm for letting it drop except to say that it does tie into the base
note in a way. It provides an exdellent example as to why Americans
are getting increasingly fed up with sacrificing American blood and
American tax dollars to "police" the world.
fred();
|
107.26 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jan 03 1994 10:08 | 3 |
| Ditto Fred, I too am tired of spending badly needed dollars on
countries that drag our people thru the streets by their feet. Esp our
dead. Let them eat cake.
|
107.27 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 03 1994 11:00 | 4 |
| Of course, many of these countries didn't ask (or even want) Americans
to "police" them.
Steve
|
107.28 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jan 03 1994 11:06 | 1 |
| What about Margret Thacher (sp). Guess you missed that one.;)
|
107.29 | Feeling a bit grumpy today | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Jan 03 1994 11:50 | 28 |
|
re .27
>Of course, many of these countries didn't ask (or even want) Americans
>to "police" them.
I suppose you could find a bunch to go in front of a camera almost
anywhere that don't want to be "policed". And "news" reporters
gladly willing to accommodate them, (ie. "baby-milk factory" ).
Let some scumbag murder a million people and he world turns a blind
eye, but let one American bullet go astray and the "media" has a
field day. We rid the world of Hitler and his ilk and they complain
we didn't do it soon enough. We spend thousands of American lives
and Trillions of American tax dollars to try to bottle up oppression
and the "media" goes nuts when some over-stressed teenager in patrolling
the streets to keep a country safe goes over the edge and opens up
with an M-16.
Maybe George is right. Maybe we should "Let them eat cake". Maybe
it's time for the "Great Satan" America to pull our troops out of
everywhere in the World but the U.S. and the next time so jack-booted
sadist wants to take over the place, we let them keep it.
One thing about the base noter. He still understands the difference
between wackos like Mao and the Empire that has conquored more of
the World than any other in history--and set it free.
fred();
|
107.30 | Its worth it,isn't it? | SHIPS::ELLIOTT_G | truss my kangaroo up sport | Tue Feb 22 1994 08:34 | 23 |
| Hi Y'all,
I'm definitely not anti-american so don't take this wrong,but heaven
knows its your politicians who get you into these messes,
(Iraq,Granada,Somalia,Kuwait,Panama,Viet-nam,Korea etc.) They have a
standing excuse that they are acting in America's interest,if that is
correct then the money spent is on the American taxpayers behalf.So,
if you don't agree with them take it up with your representatives.This
is not to say the help hasn't been appreciated but the blame for the
cost has only one home. An isolationist America is not something I'd
like to see but if the majority wish it then thats their constitutional
right.The original noter would probably agree that this whole forum is
an expression of the rights we all enjoy in the free world.We shouldn't
forget that a discussion like this could not take place in China. When
talk comes round to "let them get on with it",take a good long look and
remember that all it takes for evil to flourish is for good men to do
nothing. Could you really see the kids in Sarajevo left to the guns of
the soldiers,where would it end? What goes around comes around but not
in my back yard?.
Who was it who said "Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom"?
I quite agree,and am willing to pay for it.
Geoff
|
107.31 | yes and no | ICARUS::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue Feb 22 1994 12:30 | 22 |
| Geoff,
I think I agree with you, but this looks contradictory:
.30> knows its your politicians who get you into these messes,
...
.30> all it takes for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing
Since I agree with the second part, as do most Americans, I don't think I can
just blame the politicians when things go wrong. I've got to take a lot of
responsibility for what my country does, even when I feel that our leaders are
not doing a good job.
> Who was it who said "Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom"?
Thomas Jefferson? And was he quoting some Roman? I no longer trust my memory
for quotes.
>Its worth it,isn't it?
Sometimes yes, and sometimes no. It is a good idea to look at the particular
case, rather than trying to create a universal rule.
|
107.32 | Involvement is optional...usually. | SHIPS::ELLIOTT_G | truss my kangaroo up sport | Wed Feb 23 1994 04:27 | 20 |
| Hi Wally,
What I was trying to say about "the messes" was that you can't blame
other countries for the cost of involvement.Because getting involved
was optional.Perhaps "messes" was the wrong word.
I think that getting involved is sometimes justified,all I,m saying is
that if that is the case we must expect to pay & sitting on the fence as
a matter of policy and never getting involved is ultimately dangerous
for us all.Hope that clarifies things.
Geoff
ps. I happen to agree that the UK's involvement in Bosnia is in the
best interest for peace.The soldiers there are facing terrible trials
in trying to bring humanitarian reief to the needy.They are not
involved in taking sides and in this I think they're right.There are no
absolutes in a civil war so who is right is a matter of opinion.
I only hope for the sake of the ground troops that air strikes aren't
called in as this would put all the vastly outnumbered UN troops in
terrible danger.The US is not involved on the ground to the best of my
knowledge,how do you feel about that with the US calling for the air
strikes against the Serbs? Am I opening a can of worms here?
|
107.33 | non-violent agreement | ICARUS::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 25 1994 11:40 | 12 |
| .32> What I was trying to say about "the messes" was that you can't blame
> other countries for the cost of involvement.Because getting involved
Right. It is silly for the US to blame other countries for the consequences
of our actions. We (people and leaders) need to accept the responsibility.
Same applies in other democratic countries.
> knowledge,how do you feel about that with the US calling for the air
> strikes against the Serbs? Am I opening a can of worms here?
Yes, and this can of worms is frequently opened in DEFENCE_ISSUES, which is
a better forum for the discussion.
|
107.34 | Dont be a Wally.(Ask an Englishman) | SHIPS::ELLIOTT_G | truss my kangaroo up sport | Mon Feb 28 1994 09:28 | 11 |
| Wally,
Where is defence_issues as you feel it innapropriate to have a
discussion on a sensible subject in this conference.Whats the
difference between the base note as a suitable subject and what I asked?
And who picked you as topic censor?I think maybe you ought to leave it
to natural selection,if people dont want to discuss it they won't.
Personally I couldn't give a rats ass about the has-been Tonya or the other
silly woman but I don't moan about other people spending hours debating
which one they'd take on a make believe date.Is this a more suitable
topic?Well excuse me.
Geoff
|
107.35 | | OKFINE::KENAH | Nobody knows you're a dog | Mon Feb 28 1994 10:24 | 1 |
| COMET::DEFENSE_ISSUES (KP7/Select, blah, blah, blah)
|
107.36 | two apologies | ICARUS::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:41 | 14 |
| > Where is defence_issues as you feel it innapropriate to have a
COMET::DEFENSE_ISSUES
Sorry I used the American spelling.
> And who picked you as topic censor?
Nobody, of course. I apologize for taking seriously the question
> Am I opening a can of worms here?
you asked in reply 32.
|
107.37 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Feb 28 1994 14:32 | 6 |
| I do tend to think that this is an issue more appropriate for another
conference. I'd prefer to keep MENNOTES for topics "pertaining to men"; that
is, some relevance to "being male". General political discussions belong
elsewhere.
Steve
|