Bring U.S. military in line with new reality - CNN.com - 0 views
-
we should conduct a global posture review with the goal of closing at least 50 overseas military installations. The U.S. military maintains more than 700 installations outside the United States, the vast majority of which were opened during the Cold War. With a more mobile and flexible force, we simply don't need as many facilities overseas.
-
America alone cannot police the world. We should increase burden-sharing for the protection of the global commons among countries that share our values and security objectives. Unfortunately, we are not the only democracy stuck in a Cold War mentality. It is time for countries such as Japan and India to play a greater role in regional security matters. We must also throw out the old map and forge new security arrangements with regional partners such as Vietnam and Brazil.
-
For America to remain a global force for good, we must maintain the world's most capable military. And being the best is not simply a function of spending the most. Staying on top will increasingly depend on our willingness to adapt to the realities of the 21st century security environment.
Move over, Frank Miller: or why the Occupy Wall Street kids are better than #$%! Sparta... - 0 views
Empire: What Ruling the World Did to the British by Jeremy Paxman - review | Books | Th... - 0 views
-
periodic spasms of moral self-questioning, which is unusual for empires
-
"The British empire had begun with a series of pounces. Then it marched. Next it swaggered. Finally, after wandering aimlessly for a while, it slunk away."
-
At times he appears to be going along with what he takes to be the 19th-century historian JR Seeley's view, that the empire was accumulated "absent-mindedly". (In fact Seeley said the opposite. Everyone gets this wrong.) To his credit, Paxman repeatedly confesses his own puzzlement: "there was something inherently nonsensical about it … How could the ultimate purpose of colonisation be freedom?" Well, there is an answer to that. He might not agree with it, but he should try to understand it. Dismissing things as "nonsense" is a way of avoiding the bother of explaining them.
- ...3 more annotations...
The Duck of Minerva: R2Paternalism - 0 views
-
In the absence of any context, the image becomes an abstraction; it is an image of European soldiers, acting in the name of the international community and benevolently protecting a group of happy but poor, brown children in some nameless tropical locale. In other words, this is the new portrait of the white man's burden.
UK riots were product of consumerism and will hit economy, says City broker | Business ... - 0 views
-
the rioting reflects a deeply flawed economic and social ethos… recklessly borrowed consumption, the breakdown both of top-end accountability and of trust in institutions, and severe failings by governments over more than two decades
-
an over-consuming west has borrowed and spent the surpluses of the increasingly productive and under-consuming East
-
Saving needs to be encouraged, and private investment needs to be channelled into asset creation, not asset inflation
- ...6 more annotations...
« First
‹ Previous
401 - 420 of 485
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page