• Deceptichum
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    1031 year ago

    Because if it didn’t work the last 20 years the US was doing it, it’ll work the next.

    • @BrianTheeBiscuiteer
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      321 year ago

      Drones are effective at killing people, but they’re dogshit at killing ideology.

      • @ZeroTHM
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        21 year ago

        Ideas have to have heads to live in.

      • @daltotron
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        11 year ago

        More than that, drones are bad at constructing infrastructure, but they’re really good at destroying it. If you’re tearing through a housing complex to kill a terrorist, you’re going to make a lot more disillusioned people out of those who are now homeless. It’s really epic how people don’t understand this, and don’t understand how people might not look kindly to a military occupation generally, especially one that isn’t helping much to build out their infrastructure, or, maybe more importantly, position them in a way where they’re actually well off in the global market, since that’s something they have to worry about now in a neoliberal, globalized society. And then instead everyone’s just like, yeah, well, they don’t want our help, but they’re still a threat, let’s kill everyone, and then we can save the little girls that are never going into the classroom again after they’re fucking dead.

        I hate this place, bro.

    • @betterdeadthanreddit
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      -71 year ago

      If you kill enough of the right ones, it’ll work. When their leader’s first act in office is to hose what’s left of the last guy (and it will have been a guy) off of the floor and walls, I think they’ll gain some perspective and make better choices. Can’t be as polite and delicate as we were over the past couple decades.

    • @betterdeadthanreddit
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      -351 year ago

      You’re right, what I’ve described above is the same as what you’re talking about. Good job not noticing the differences which were clearly meant to mislead.

      • @Squizzy
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        31 year ago

        The US has caused this shit, why don’t you guys fuck off and stay out of conflict…just for like a week and see how it goes.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago

          The US is merely the latest to try and control the region. And their attempt didn’t end any better than any of the previous attempts.

        • @CAVOK
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          71 year ago

          The US caused radical Islam?

          • @[email protected]
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            381 year ago

            During the cold war, the US armed and supported radical islamist factions called mujihadeen because they were opposed to the communists. This didn’t help, but ofc there were other factors. When the US began its wars in the middle east in earnest, they killed a lot of people including civilians. As a consequence, they were probably the most effective recruiters for radical islam (when a foreign government kills your friends or family, you’d feel positively incluned towards fundamentalist groups fighting them too). Throughout the iraq war and the related conflicts analysts warned that us intervention was fuelling islamic terror. I was under the impression that by now this was common knowledge.

            • TheLastOfHisName
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              91 year ago

              I recommend the book “Charlie Wilson’s War” for those who want some insight into the funding of the Mujahideen.

            • @[email protected]
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              -21 year ago

              What an ignorant take. Radical Islam existed long before the US went there. Salafism and Wahhabism have been around for more then century at this point, to name two of several fundamentalist movements.

              Muslims have been infighting with fundamentalists and more secular members of Islam for centuries.

              The US surely didn’t help, but they are so, so far from being the sole or main cause for the turmoil in Afghanistan and the middle east in general.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                There is radical islam existing, and then there is radical islam being the dominant force it currently is.

          • @[email protected]
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            71 year ago

            For a big part, yes. Overthrowing democratic governments, funding radicals and bombing civillians tends to make people join the side that is seen as the enemies of the culprits of these crimes.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          What? This country didn’t allow education for women long before the US ever set foot there

        • Rikudou_Sage
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          -161 year ago

          That’s some mental gymnastics. I dislike the US going abroad with their military as much as the next non-US person, but if I had to choose one instance where they weren’t the biggest dicks on the battlefield, it would be Afghanistan.

      • @chitak166
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        -71 year ago

        It’s too late. Americans have adopted the ‘brown people need to solve their own problems’ mantra for this generation.

        Come back in 20 years when things are so shit we can no longer look away.