Dude, what's with this insistence on arguing from nationalistic viewpoint? How and why knowing from which one country a person is weighs here at all? Why must this be a "whose country is better" competition? Would webber being Pakistani or Eritrean add or dertact from the merits of his argumentation? Would him being American help condemn or justify USA?
That is the point exactly. It doesn't.
I should have gone to sleep long ago, but amounts of "LOL WE HEROICALLY DEFEATED ANOTHER SUPERVILLAIN" shit in this thread were too much to ignore.
This is an example in his criteria in determining what to reply to. He isn't choosing things on the merits of the argument, but on his perceptions that it's some uppity individual expressing a thought process he disagrees with. It's not even about the topic to him.
If I were to ask you what country you were from, I would probably instantly get it. It has no bearing on the argument, and you'd probably point that out, but it'd be provided. An American can disagree with America's foreign policy just as easily as a Argentinean. The thing is, he finds anything anyone says in defense of any American foreign policy as something worthy of discussion, and nothing outside that. He discounts any statements that are not related to NATO or the United States. Capitulates, ignores, or minimizes them. He does this while saying he's only acting on personal opinion and that nationality doesn't matter. He tiptoes around the question of declaring his own nationality quite cleverly. He's been careful to avoid saying so in other places as well. In the end, it shows the same level of nationalism that he declares he hates. He would not be able to stand an examination of his nation in the global leadership position. I admit that me pressing for the information was a little trollish, since I guessed this was probable and pressed him to try to get him to cease picking people who spoke up in support of a NATO or American action as targets for his collateral damage figures. Nation of origin actually doesn't have any bearing on this discussion at all. So yes, webber being Pakistani or Eritrean would add or detract from the merits of his argumentation, mostly detract since it is likely if he knew his country would be put under the same Microscope as the USA then he wouldn't have made the statements.
IT IS IMPORTANT TO NOTE:
1)
You can agree with a decision made by another nation and not be a part of that nation, as well as have opinions for and against other nations besides your own.2)
Agreeing with the actions of another nation does not make you automatically wrong because another person disagrees with that nation on general principleI will argue that #2 does not exist as it should often for America (Not Americans, America. To further eliminate any confusion here I am referring to the country, not the people in it. My Exact statement is along the lines of "If you say something nice about a Decision America has made, people often will assume you are automatically wrong on general principle.") and that is most of the "nationalistic" speech you see from me. I agree with some things my government does, and disagree with others that it does. I don't view America as inherently superior or inferior. I do feel it has a very good system of governance, and a very good strategic position. I also think it's in a world leader role, and is the #1 "police officer" on the global scale, encouraging local disputes to remain very local. You can say "America Sucks" all you want. I'll disagree because I don't personally feel it sucks, but I'd disagree if you said the same thing about many different countries. Just because you personally don't like America doesn't mean what I am saying is Nationalistic statements. I understand how it is easily confused as such, but it isn't true. Most of my statements would not change even if I was from a different nation. The key here is to leave my nationality out of things, as well as the nation I am choosing to defend out of things, and actually view the content of the discussion.
((Top half))
This deserves discussion and my attention, unfortunately I wasted a larger amount of time dealing with the bottom half than I wished to.
I do intend to address this, and my primary argument regarding this will be based on the instability caused by the Cold War, and how it was Churchill's policy to setup fighting against the Communist threat while it was Roosevelt's policy to return to the Isolationist Attitude America had adopted pre-World War 2. I will be back in about 4-5 hours to make these statements.