Tuesday, June 24, 2014

It does not much matter which tyrant we buy our oil from


Democracy is not realistic in the Middle East. It seems clear that disruptions and wars happen in the Middle East when tyrants are defeated and new tyrants seek to dominate, religiously caused or otherwise. America tried to impose democracy in Iraq but when the military left so did democracy.

In the case of our defense of Israel in the Middle East, which fights against the Islamic tyrants who hate the U.S., the enemy of our enemy has proven to not be our friend. Israel cares mainly about Israel and not the U.S., which is natural, and so also does Israel's neoconservative “amen corner” in the U.S.. Disconnecting from this so-called ally will be no easy task.

Nonintervention is what we want, not “isolationism,” which is used by the globalists to slander the non-interventionists, almost the way those who love their own people are slandered as “haters” of other people, which does not necessarily follow.

Nonintervention has had a problem being implemented mainly because global business in the U.S. has its fingers and toes involved in the natural resources and business of other nations. This meddling needs to be curbed if we are to ever have longer-term peace for the U.S.. Economic nationalism needs to rise again for the U.S, which is what once made our country strong and healthy---and this does not mean that we don't trade with other nations---another slander.

The U.S. needs to stop meddling in the Middle East and go home for good. It does not matter much which tyrant we buy our oil from. Healthy ethics are to be found in local and national ethics, not in trying to impose global ethics, which is usually only a front for greed or imperial dominance.

Once home, it should be made clear to other nations which may try to mess with the U.S. or its people that they will very much wish they had not.

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