Yemen Houthi Spokesman Yahya Saree has reiterated that the attacks on ships in the Red Sea will carry on until Palestinians in Gaza are no longer under Israeli shelling. Earlier, the Houthis were accu...
I hear this a lot, but what would beating the Taliban involve? While the US was there, the Taliban was at best in hiding, it was not holding territory. If you mean removing the very idea of the Taliban from the world? That is both hard to do and arguably also a genocide, at least a cultural one. The US has been good at that, but it’s also frowned on in the current world - see Gaza headlines.
This is also why I’d suggest it’s kind of impossible to both not be the worst of the colonialist systems and stop terrorism (and it’s kind of unclear that even the colonial cultural suppression / conversion / excesses / crimes actually would stop terrorism).
Are you under the impression that the US military and the Taliban were engaged in friendly competition for no reason whatsoever, just a bit of international banter?
That would be what I assumed they were getting at too, but it doesn’t really pass the sniff test. The US spends more on healthcare (both per capita and as a percentage of GDP) than any country with universal healthcare-- by switching to a universal single-payer system, they could free up more money to spend on war.
Americans don’t have universal healthcare because that would mean insurance companies make less money.
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Americans with boots on the ground for 20 years in Afghanistan and could not beat the Taliban. But sure, this time will be different.
As the Taliban say:
“The Americans have the clock, but we have the time”
I hear this a lot, but what would beating the Taliban involve? While the US was there, the Taliban was at best in hiding, it was not holding territory. If you mean removing the very idea of the Taliban from the world? That is both hard to do and arguably also a genocide, at least a cultural one. The US has been good at that, but it’s also frowned on in the current world - see Gaza headlines.
This is also why I’d suggest it’s kind of impossible to both not be the worst of the colonialist systems and stop terrorism (and it’s kind of unclear that even the colonial cultural suppression / conversion / excesses / crimes actually would stop terrorism).
What about taking more than 5 minutes to the Taliban to come back in power after the us left?
That seems a strange definition to me - so if a boxer gets back up after losing the match, well his opponent didn’t beat him in that fight?
Are you under the impression that the US military and the Taliban were engaged in friendly competition for no reason whatsoever, just a bit of international banter?
When the US is the biggest purveyor?
How long did you spend in Afghanistan in the last 24 years?
In this context, being “completely wiped off the face of the planet”.
We don’t have healthcare because there’s profits to be made by exploiting our needs. It honestly has nothing to do with the military.
And why do you think that is?
The MIC takes the money to make bombs. At least I assume that’s the inference.
That would be what I assumed they were getting at too, but it doesn’t really pass the sniff test. The US spends more on healthcare (both per capita and as a percentage of GDP) than any country with universal healthcare-- by switching to a universal single-payer system, they could free up more money to spend on war.
Americans don’t have universal healthcare because that would mean insurance companies make less money.
bombs wedding, Osprey bricks into the ocean, Navy SEAL starts dealing meth
“So basically it’s like that but with hospitals.”