One country invading another to force a change in governance is a tricky subject but do you really think that those harmed in the other country don't deserve to have their rights considered?
I think a countries primary responsibility should be the consideration of those who live within that country. I think we should stop abusing our own people before even considering going on righteous crusades to liberate others. And even then - I think it's wrong. Their rights deserve to be considered, and I support us doing everything we can to support people that escape from countries where they are not happy - flinging our borders wide open to accept them, perhaps even running smuggling operations to help people escape.
I do not support waging war on a people to enforce my system of morality upon them. Practically and morally it is reprehensible.
Do we consider it 'might makes right' when our legal system incarcerates violent criminals since that is enforced through force?
Our laws are built as part of a society, and practically they require consequences to hold force and protect its members. There is no attempt to change the other persons morality, or assert that my own is superior and it must be followed because I am more powerful. We don't care about their morality, only their ability to follow the laws required to keep our society functioning. In most cases, we do not care if they act contrary to that when outside are borders, and if they move to another country we do not care at all. Criminal law is not about morality, it's about practicality and emotional justification.
Perhaps that could be considered "might makes right". I'll have to think about the rest of your questions. I don't think there are easy answers. But perhaps I can draw a parallel with criminal law - drug laws. I see them as a gross violation of morality, in bulk. A clear expression of might makes right. And why?
Interest. In a violent crime, we have a personal interest in incarcerating the criminal. He poses an extent threat to our social order and existence as a nation, and often a threat to our existence as individuals. To this end, I support countries waging wars of self defense, and action against invaders at the behest of those invading - to stop another from imposing themself on you is hard to quantify as a morally wrong imposition in and of itself.
But drug crimes are an effort, in a way, to save a person from themself - and within themselves, a person should maintain sovereignty.
So too with nations. So long as the nations do not seek to impose on others, and even more so if they let dissenters depart to other willing nations, I have trouble accepting the argument that we have any standing, any legitimate interest, in imposing our will upon them.
This is not an uncommon sentiment, in my experience. Willing participants are generally allowed to engage in what we would consider immoral activity with each other, such as fighting, so long as they show no danger to the social contract, so long as we have no legitimate interest in their actions - hence why boxing is not a violent crime.
I don't pretend to have easy answers about this though - but I think a naive "We should go and right the world's wrongs, and fix the problems in other cultures, whether they want us to or not" is not a good answer. I do not think we have a legitimate interest in stopping baby eaters from eating babies, though if a splinter sect were to come to us seeking refuge, we may have a moral obligation to grant it.
But yeah... definitely something I will think more about over the next several forevers, I think. It's a tough question.
on the gun control issue... kind ofI can understand that. It similar to the reason I can't bring myself to vote for the dems in good conscience, supporting as they do morally abhorrent and utterly unforgivable policies. Policies they have made abundantly clear. Of course, I'm in the situation you'd be in if BOTH parties were advocating gun control.