that is only one form of aid for one year. And that is only one country. You asked me to provide examples, because maybe you were to busy to look examples up yourself or whatever, but it is common knowledge that this dictator, while elected "democratically" in 1979, has been ruthless since then. Any aid should be criticized. We (the US) don't give direct economic aid to Fidel Castro, seemingly because he does not promote democracy. Why should we give this country aid? Furthermore, why does this country need aid? According to that site and the CIA World Factbook site, this country has a higher GDP than the U.S.whittsend wrote:
Ok, let me see if I have this straight...
Equatorial Guinea is a nasty dictatorship? Given that their president has been in power since 1979, I can see that they are far from the ideal democracy...so ok. But I do find myself wondering what makes them worse than others. You also clam that the US is to be criticized for giving them on the order of $10E7? Well, that is a pretty piss poor aid package, but whatever, I guess I can see that.
Yes, there were irregularities reported in the latest election of Hugo Chavez, and I admit I didn't pick a shining example here. However, the US did not try to circumvent the election process in Equatorial Guinea like they did in Venezuela. There, the US government tried to oust Chavez in a coup, in direct violation of the Organization of American States. Breaking international law to place a political figure in power to benefit US interests is incredibly heinous in my opinion. So yes, while I did not pick the best example, I believe it was adequate for the point I am trying to make. And I agree, I do have an axe to grind. I am just showing the true intentions of our government as a whole, and this encompasses both the Democrats and Republicans in government. Our system has run amok. Instead of debating in society what we can do to help our government help us, we are arguing over immigration policy and social welfare. This is exactly what those in power want. If they (people in power) keep us (citizens) arguing over illegal immigration, abortion, welfare, social security, terrorism, etc., they don't have to worry about us questioning why they are taking insane amounts of money from lobby groups. Keep us bickering amongst ourselves, and keep us just happy enough to keep going, and give us those great $300 tax refund checks, and everyone will be happy and they can keep dragging the American name through the mud internationally.whittsend wrote:
Yet, the US is also to be criticized for opposing the "democratically elected" government of Venezuela? Wow. That's pretty generous, given the number of irregularities in that 'democratic election.
Why is it bad to support one questionable regime, and still bad to oppose a different questionable regime? You seem to have a preference for one regime that a lot of people find oppresive and nasty, over another. This is the same thing you accuse the US of doing.
Your viewpoint is inconsistent. You have an axe to grind with respect to US policy.
And I am not a liberal or a conservative, I am a human being. I don't subscribe to one theory or another, I look at each issue and try to come up with a realistic way to solve/develop that issue. What I do not agree with is conservatives calling people liberals like they are lepers. I don't agree with people (everyone, not just people in these forums) saying that if you are liberal you are a communist, because that is simply not the case. One can have political beliefs that are in line with one party or another without agreeing with that party across the board. Having progressive traits does not make you a liberal that wants to increase government handouts. That is all.