In the case of natural disasters and the like, sure. But military? We would maybe get help from Norway, Denmark and Finland. Other countries would denounce it, but not assist openly.Kolby Jack said:I mean, not officially, but I think if Sweden were ever hit hard by some kind of trouble the US and many other countries would not hesitate to help out. Neutral or not, we can still be friends.Kirke22 said:Snip
OMFG WOWryessknight said:I live in the u.s. Didnt even know this existed till i saw this forum post. Dont really care much either, i wouldnt doubt that atleast half of that info is just either media fearmongering and/or republician freakouts like always here.
I've actually deleted my Facebook account and closed my USBank account and now instead only work with a local credit union (and trying to gather all my money in bills) and spread knowledge through posters / brochures. I suppose hell froze over than, because there are some people working like this, they just aren't able to talk about it since they've mostly deleted their online profiles / severely limit where they go.Reeve said:By the way: One thing we could all do to turn things around is stop using private banks. Take all of our money out and go back to the non-digital days. Maybe even return to bartering.
But let's be honest: Hell will freeze over before any sane person actually does that!![]()
But why would you expect that? Gringos are one of the most passive and stable societies, in the last 50 years they passed from being one of the best places to live to have social indexes quite similar to Mexico, especially in wealth distribution and social mobility (the second being probably the closest you can get to have a "freedom index").elthingo said:Anyway, what I was trying to say is, it's a much bigger part of US society than Egyptian society, or, well, the word anyway. Hence why I expected someone to go "Hey, the NSA did what? That's not freedom! Let's do all we can to stop this!" or something, even if their concept of freedom is a bit, well, strange and not too well defined, often being used as a meaningless buzzword.
It made me happy to read this, thanksDevil said:I've actually deleted my Facebook account and closed my USBank account and now instead only work with a local credit union (and trying to gather all my money in bills) and spread knowledge through posters / brochures. I suppose hell froze over than, because there are some people working like this, they just aren't able to talk about it since they've mostly deleted their online profiles / severely limit where they go.Reeve said:By the way: One thing we could all do to turn things around is stop using private banks. Take all of our money out and go back to the non-digital days. Maybe even return to bartering.
But let's be honest: Hell will freeze over before any sane person actually does that!![]()
There's a lot of protest going on. I left the Air Force ROTC program to train as an officer because of this breach of the constitution. Rallies are being organized around the country under the banner "Restore the Fourth." Visit their website here:
http://www.restorethefourth.net/
It's all peaceful. We're just rallying protests and using other legal means to show our displeasure sure as the petitions online and calling congressmen, but we need more help. Just gotta keep spreading the word!
Because we cannot afford to ignore it this time. Once this gets settled, then I'll happy return to ROTC and FB and crap again, but how long that will take is unknown.
EDIT: Post 1919, the end of the War to End all Wars. How.. well, actually not ironic but whatever. Maybe if this was my 1912 post or something instead that'd be more accurate.
If you are referring to WW2, that logic would dictate that Europe had more to thank the USSR for as they lost ALOT more blood than Americans retaking Europe.Mimsofthedawg said:What is unfortunately overlooked by many Europeans is that the peace you cherish so greatly was bought and secured with American blood. There is simply no way around this fact.Wenseph said:Hopefully one of your perceived "threats" will win in the end then. That's probably because soldiers seems to be celebrated as heroes in your culture. >_> Anyway, I find it meaningless to argue with the brainwashed.Kolby Jack said:Right, debt. Like how for every dollar we owe, we're owed 80 cents? Or how our debt is less than a percent of our gross worth? Our debt causes us issues when it comes to our economy, but it's not what will cause us to collapse. Try again.Wenseph said:I doubt that will happen. There's not many countries that are hostile to us. The world is moving forward, and becoming more globalized, with a better understanding and communication with other countries wars are less likely to happen. Few or no one goes to war to expand their borders anymore. Some countries aren't fear mongering. <_< Some even get rid of most of their military, to spend money on more important things, like Sweden has been doing since they stopped forcing military service on the young.
Also, haha, no. Only in the way that you'll one day end. Debt. >_>
I don't care. I have no love for humans.
By the way, The US hasn't had a draft since Vietnam. We're all volunteer, and yet we still have one of the largest militaries on earth. And I already said, that's fine for Sweden, but there are still threats out there and future threats to be prepared for, and somebody is going to have to foot a lot of the bill. The US is in the best position to do it.
Whether or not your misanthropy is genuine doesn't really matter. It's a futile standpoint and there's no point in me even addressing it.
Hold on, I thought the problem was the Gov. snooping on private conversations, not literally spying on people through their own devices? That seems like it'd be rather pointless, you know?TIMESWORDSMAN said:I've been telling people about it, as many as I can, but the most I can seem to do is convince them to put electrical tape over any device with a webcam.
That's a rather harsh viewpoint. I mean, the only "crime" they've committed is not caring enough. If it bites them in the ass then it shouldn't be a surprise, but I wouldn't consider it a justice.DoveAlexa said:Though really, while I like to be able to keep my person safe from BS like this, it seems like most people completely deserve whatever they get.
I don't buy it. There's so many outlets for news and communication, from newspapers to television to the world wide web, that it would be remarkable if the government could actually control it all. Not that it's impossible, just seems like such an enormous (and, if you're videos prove anything, futile) effort. Finally, accessible foreign newspapers like the Guardian are more than willing to report on our scandals and affairs, so rest assured those "young men" were capable of educating themselves on their country's motivations before joining the armed forces.Taurus Vis said:For so long, the populace has been asleep. The media will never let you understand the slow but cancerous changes that have been changing America for freedom to enslavement since the 1970s. They are on the governments payroll, taking stories pre-written for them by "government officials" who write both the left wing and right wing side of the story. They keep those even partially invested in government distracted by wedge issues like gay marriage or whatever else pushes buttons, all the while working to disarm the populace and sending young men to war to die for old men's money. It has to stop, but it can only stop if you decide to act. Please watch this, and please get involved.
Well from my experience people who take the stance against government on these issues tend to be quite arrogant and self-reinforcing. It's probably just a result of poor communication-you can't exactly be kind when telling someone they're being exploited beyond their control- but its rather irritating and distracting.Monster_user said:Are the "tin foil hat" guys the problem? Spend a hundred years screaming 1984, and let people get used to the concept. Then when it actually happens, well,... So the tin foil hat guys were right all along? That's cool.
Probably more likely that people are living in their own self-reinforcing bubbles, rather than discussing things with those they disagree with. Because disagreements are unpleasant.
There are a lot of questions to be asked, and discussions to be had. Who is discussing the benefits and ramifications of "Big Brother"? Who is coming up with solutions for real world problems, that don't create a high risk of a police state later?
I've never thought of it that way, actually. Perhaps our apathy is a result of more than just human laziness! That's the type of thing we should be doing studies on.Frostbite3789 said:It's like you don't understand that's part of the system and what makes it good. I didn't agree with either big candidate in the last Presidential election, so I didn't vote for either. And I'm not going to waste chunks of my day when I'm a poor college student and was working or studying instead, standing in line to throw my vote away on a third party candidate.thaluikhain said:Likewise, the US is, as a whole, very big on democracy, and how it makes them the greatest nation on Earth. And yet half the voters don't bother voting, and massive slabs of the nation truly despise other massive slabs.
If you want to have your arguments taken seriously, you're gonna have to have some sources to back it up; otherwise it's just a bunch of broad claims anyone could make.Therumancer said:snip
The way I see it, everyone's gonna have to stop caring about the world's problems at SOME point. Whether they draw the line at themselves, world hunger or government surveillance, people can only worry so much before turning apathetic. Of course, when all sorts of problems everywhere never get taken care of (how're those chocolate slaves [http://thecnnfreedomproject.blogs.cnn.com/2012/01/16/chocolate-explainer/]holding up?), then yeah. it's fucking disgraceful.omegaweopon said:Oh yeah, and also, so many people have so much apathy to this thing it's incredible. Seriously. The media sweeping it under the rug. The government witch hunt. Which celebrity is marrying whom. This place is the worst. I swear. (Lucky me. I just so happen to be residing in what I feel is the worst state of this terrible country. Also, I called this country terrible. I'm a terrorist now according to a lot of Americans.)
It seems simple, but it really isn't. The main problem I see is separating distractions from legit issues. We can all agree that sex, drugs, or rock n' roll are just wastes of time, but what about things like education, religion, or parenting? Even the aforemented rock n' roll could be a force for good if it highlights social issues in society. Of course, laziness is still a huge factor in apathy, which most people agree is a bad thing. Problem being they already see themselves as "doing enough".Abandon4093 said:What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egotism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in Brave New World Revisited, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions." In 1984, Orwell added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we fear will ruin us. Huxley feared that our desire will ruin us.
Genuine question: What would have to happen to humans to be worthy of respect or at least acquaintanceship?Wenseph said:Also, I wasn't propagating peace or acceptance. I don't care. I don't despise any single type of person. I hate everyone equally.
I think most "slacktivists" honestly don't care about the issues they support, and would contribute nothing to the cause otherwise. People who honestly care still get out there and protest like always. If they don't convince anyone join them, odds are they wouldn't of even without social media.DrunkOnEstus said:We have more distractions now than during the mass levels of protest the US experienced in the 60's and 70's as well. Back then, they didn't have a cell phone ringing or texting every minute, and they didn't have an MMO to get back to as soon as work was over. I imagine more people did their conversations and meetings in person and in groups far more often than we do today, where something like this NSA thing would spark a fire and mob mentality would make more people feel comfortable about "doing something about it".
This type of stuff has been going on since the Gilded Age. Considering how far we've come in the century since (like the existence of regularions, for starters) and the huge amount of support humanitarian causes get in the Western world, I'd say, bar complete social collapse, people won't let these tyrannies last much longer. It's not gonna be anytime soon, but the spark is certainly there.Greni said:Let the wishes of the few outweigh the needs of many -
In this land where money talks we have little chance if any.
Bring the nation back to basics -
Lionize Dickensian dreams,
Hide a heart that's grey and cold behind an image squeaky-clean.
Agreed. Glad I'm not the only one with some perspective!tofulove said:i am very morally against prism, but at the same time i want to play devils advocate just a little bit for fun.
im not talking about the justification of we need it to stop the terrorist. no im talking about if the worse thing i have to worry about is some one sitting in a room listening and watching me have phone sex, we as a society have came a long way. in the industrial revolution the worse thing we had to worry about was a long list, mutilated limbs, damaged lungs, working 14 hours a day 7 days a week and not making enough to feed my kids. in medieval society the worse thing to worry about was also a long list, being forced to fight in some lords war i care nothing about, being raped and pillage by said lord or another lord cause they wanted some thing i have, a huge portion of my children dieing at birth.
life sucks, and this is a gross abuse of our government. if you take a step back and look at the big picture you will see prism is bad, but it ant rapping you and steeling your food yet. we must be ever vigilant, because if they could get away with it you could bet your ass they would.
I Agree with you wholeheartedly, American values are some of the worst that I can imagine. As a citizen of the UK I often see America as a more twisted version of my own country, this is mostly due to the political process and the apparent foolishness of a large chunk of it's populace. I am sure that many Americans are quite aware of the failures of their country and actively engage these problems like I do in mine, cause we all know the UK is far from perfect.Wenseph said:I doubt that will happen. There's not many countries that are hostile to us. The world is moving forward, and becoming more globalized, with a better understanding and communication with other countries wars are less likely to happen. Few or no one goes to war to expand their borders anymore. Some countries aren't fear mongering. <_< Some even get rid of most of their military, to spend money on more important things, like Sweden has been doing since they stopped forcing military service on the young.Kolby Jack said:That's easy to claim until the shit hits the fan. The US is the biggest supporter of the UN and the largest military contributor in NATO. Like it or not, many countries depend on our support. How much support our allies need is always up for debate, no doubt, but the fact they they want it generally is not. France had one major interdiction into Mali, and they still needed United States support in the form of troop transport and other equipment. Your views about America seem pretty narrow-minded. Just because we have power means we're like the Romans or other ancient empires? I think you need to take a step back from your blind cynicism and see the bigger picture. I would certainly think again about wishing for the collapse of the US; That's over 300 million people you're wishing doom upon for entirely petty reasons, buddy, not even including how the rest of the world would be affected. When countries collapse, it affects a LOT more than just the government.Wenseph said:I'm pretty sure many of us don't want your "protection", or anything close to it. We had to protest when the piracy acts were being made, because one was almost forced on us, which is something that came from you. >_> We haven't been in a war since 1814, which is almost twohundred years by now.Kolby Jack said:And I have nothing against Sweden (I am of Swedish heritage, myself) but it's not really fair to compare it to America. Sweden is a fine country, but let's be fair here: it's small, less populous, and it has few enemies. America is a superpower, and the only one in the world by many accounts. We have many people looking to knock us down a peg or two, a very large military force which is large not only to defend us but also to provide hefty support to our less militarily capable allies (like Sweden), and a combination of a huge landmass and equally impressive population to keep track of. I'm not saying these are excuses for shifty dealings, but certain considerations have to made to keep us as secure as we've become accustomed to.
I think time will take care of America anyway, so I don't see why anyone would bother. Much more impressive superpowers didn't stand the test of time (Rome for example). Hopefully it'll be sooner rather than later though.
Also, haha, no. Only in the way that you'll one day end. Debt. >_>
I don't care. I have no love for humans.
I consider this an evasion. I'm addressing this less because of what you said than to make a general point to a lot of similar things said here over the years, including the *ahem* citation needed title attached to my profile as a title.secretkeeper12 said:If you want to have your arguments taken seriously, you're gonna have to have some sources to back it up; otherwise it's just a bunch of broad claims anyone could make.
Well, yes and no. As I've said before, if you follow this back to the beginnings of the most current issues the American people were hardly apathetic. Nobody came running up and said "give us your freedoms so we can make you safe" to be followed through by people sheepishly turning them over. If you go back to things like "The Patriot Act", the establishment of "Homeland Security", and everything else, you'll notice it was being viewed with suspicion and under fire since the very beginning. People have been hating on Gitmo and the way people were being thrown in there from the very beginning. Heck, they turned the entire Marvel Universe "Civil War" story arc away from the original idea to make it a huge analogy for the war on terror and these kinds of rights issues.Clive Howlitzer said:It is mostly because so much of the American population is apathetic to things that don't immediately impact their lives. Even worse, is a lot of them actually defend this kind of thing. More and more scare tactics and terror mongering are used to get the American public to practically beg for having more rights taken away so that they can have more 'security'.
It is pretty outrageous and sorta blows my mind but I am in the minority I suppose. Most people I know are fine with losing rights so that they can feel safe from all the big scary terrorists that lurk in every corner.
Ignoring the rest of your post (which i think has shaky basis as a whole, but some good points), I just wanted to point out that both Democrats and Republicans are quite against profiling; Republicans proved so with the recent IRS scandal, following simple profiling rules it would have made sense for the IRS to target more anti tax groups. Thus I would suggest stop blaming the "left wing", because all your organizations seem equally sensitive to profiling when it targets them.Therumancer said:The problem is largely that the left wing (which I blame a lot) got all uppity about the idea of profiling which is what the government wanted to do in the name of security to begin with.
Not really because of the way the definition has to be stretched for this to be an issue to begin with in the right wing's case. Mostly the right wing seems to use it as a defense figuring "turn about is fair play" when it comes to this kind of thing, by making a semantics based argument within the existing legal system when it comes up in cases like this. For the record I myself have been very critical of the right wind for not sticking to it's own principles for short term political victories because of arguments like this.Tanakh said:Ignoring the rest of your post (which i think has shaky basis as a whole, but some good points), I just wanted to point out that both Democrats and Republicans are quite against profiling; Republicans proved so with the recent IRS scandal, following simple profiling rules it would have made sense for the IRS to target more anti tax groups. Thus I would suggest stop blaming the "left wing", because all your organizations seem equally sensitive to profiling when it targets them.Therumancer said:The problem is largely that the left wing (which I blame a lot) got all uppity about the idea of profiling which is what the government wanted to do in the name of security to begin with.