Topic: Democratic peace theory

Ap world history question? 10 pts to best answer!?

i answered the other 40..i jst cn’t get these..u dnt have 2 explain jst mention the letters in order if u can…thnks so much!..ten pts 2 right answer!

1.) Under both Han and Roman Empires
a. imperial roads were connected to the silk roads
b. new territories were added to the empires
c.a time of peace settled over both empires
d.enduring cultural traditions were established
e.All of the above

2.) The Hellenistic empire of Alexander
a.continued the competition with Persia begun under the Greek poleis
b.was successful in curbing foreign influence upon Greece
c. produced theories that accurately explained the nature of the universe
d.blended mediterranean and middle easterm cultures
e.strenghtened its hold upon the mediterranean world after Alexander’s death

3.)under gupta india
a. arabiz numerals originated in India
b.Slavery increased
c.HInduism and Buddhism became the official religions of India
d.the government of India became more centralized
e.the status of women improved

4.)The persians
a.Were noted for their harsh treatment toward conquered peoples
b. continued the traditions of ancient mesopotamia
c. introduced a new religion similar to the structure of Hinduism
d.Failed to establish a unified empire
e.focussed their commercial activity on trade with china

5.) greek society
a. was unified by the geography of the greek peninsula
b.was disrupted by the conquest of alexander
c.was extended through overseas colonization
d.extended the democratic ideal by relying on free labor alone
e.organized its faith around a monotheistic religion

thanks again, and if u cnt get some, thts totally ok

1. a
2. c
3. e
4.a
5. b

What do you think of my prediction of the next 4 years?

This is my prediction of the next 4 years.

1. The US government will uncover a large scale terrorist attack and probably many smaller homegrown terrorist plots right before the election.

2. A strong independent, like Ron Paul, will emerge which will take a larger percent of the democratic vote then the republican vote.

3. McCain/Palin will get elected by a small margin, democratic leaders will call foul, but conspiracy theories lead by black groups will be debunked by the republican party. Real evidence of corruption will be overshadowed by Israel bombing Iranian nuclear sites.

4. Bush will try to play the peace bringer between Israel and Iran, but Muslims across the globe will ignite into a frenzy. We will see more terrorist attacks fueled by Muslim fears of the Israel-US alliance and we’ll be thrown into a large scale war with Iran.

5. Russian businesses will fund the Iranian side and will use their UN veto power to block any sanctions against Russia. Also, while our military is completely overstretched Russia will re-invade the former soviet states. The US and EU will do nothing but use harsh words against Russia.

6. A draft will ensue since we wont have enough manpower, the stock market will collapse, unemployment will hit 10-20%, large scale civil disobedience will lead to Homeland Security putting millions of impovershed Americans in FEMA camps.

McCain will take power and expand use of the Patriot Act and the new Homegrown Terrorist Act to start a process of censorship and monitoring of citizens through the internet and television. (possibly why they made it mandatory for digital television this year).
Now that all opposition is contained in FEMA camps and jails WWIII will be underway. All the liberal leaders, even in the media, will flea to Europe and Asia for fears of being jailed. We will have a nuclear war with half the world perishing, and a New World Order will reign for 1000 years, with population control and a global fascism.

How many times have you read 1984?

Isn’t this disturbing?

CIA estimated in 1980s that the budget of Soviet propaganda abroad was between 3.5-4.0 billion dollars.[7]

Propaganda abroad was partly conducted by Soviet intelligence agencies. GRU alone spent more than $1 billion for propaganda and peace movements against Vietnam War, which was a "hugely successful campaign and well worth the cost", according to GRU defector Stanislav Lunev [8]. He claimed that "the GRU and the KGB helped to fund just about every antiwar movement and organization in America and abroad". [8] According to Oleg Kalugin, "the Soviet intelligence was really unparalleled. … The KGB programs — which would run all sorts of congresses, peace congresses, youth congresses, festivals, women’s movements, trade union movements, campaigns against U.S. missiles in Europe, campaigns against neutron weapons, allegations that AIDS … was invented by the CIA … all sorts of forgeries and faked material — [were] targeted at politicians, the academic community, at the public at large." [9]

Soviet-run movements pretended to have little or no ties with the USSR, often seen as noncommunist (or allied to such groups), but in fact were controlled by USSR.[10] Most members and supporters, called "useful idiots" by Lenin, did not realize the fact that they were unwilling instruments of Soviet propaganda.[10][11] The organizations aimed at convincing well-meaning but naive Westerners to support Soviet overt or covert goals.[12] A witness in a US congressional hearing on Soviet cover activity described the goals of such organizations as the: "spread Soviet propaganda themes and create false impression of public support for the foreign policies of Soviet Union."[11]

Much of the activity of the Soviet-run peace movements was supervised by the World Peace Council.[10][11] Other important front organizations included the World Federation of Trade Unions, the World Federation of Democratic Youth, and the International Union of Students.[11] Somewhat less important front organizations included: Afro-Asian People’s Solidarity Organization, Christian Peace Conference, International Association of Democratic Lawyers, International Federation of Resistance Movements, International Institute for Peace, International Organization of Journalists, Women’s International Democratic Federation and World Federation of Scientific Workers.[13] There were also numerous smaller organizations, affiliated with the above fronts.[14][12]

Those organizations received (total) more than 100 million dollars from USSR every year.[10]

Propaganda against the United States included the following actions [15]:

Promotion of false John F. Kennedy assassination theories, allegedly using writer Mark Lane.
Discrediting the CIA, using historian Philip Agee (codenamed PONT).
Spreading rumors that FBI director J. Edgar Hoover was a homosexual.
Attempts to discredit Martin Luther King, Jr. by placing publications portraying him as an "Uncle Tom" who was secretly receiving government subsidies.
Stirring up racial tensions in the United States by mailing bogus letters from the Ku Klux Klan, placing an exposive package in "the Negro section of New York" (operation PANDORA), and spreading conspiracy theories that Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination had been planned by the US government.
Fabrication of the story that AIDS virus was manufactured by US scientists at Fort Detrick; the story was spread by Russian-born biologist Jakob Segal
India’s first PM Jawaharlal Nehru was also a blind and gullible worshiper of the Soviet idea. He was known to stubbornly defend every issue remotly contacted with communism. When the Chinese attacked India he kept back the forces till eleventh hour, as per Soviet guidence, believing "a socialist state will never initiate a war"
-Wikipedia

Now, I know sometimes Wikipedia is a little innaccurate, but if this is true, what does that say about all the peace movements and such of the 1960’s and 70’s and such?

The very idea that all those well-meaning bubbleheads were being directed by soviets is highly disturbing to me….

yes but see history.

Is this an accurate description of being an Independent or Fence Rider? I am a former Republican of 27 yrs. ?

Please be kind… I am looking for clarity here? Not trying to prove anything… Does this description fall into the Independent Party or any party you know?

20 Reasons Why I Am An Independent

I am an Independent Because…

General Observation
1. …I believe that both the Republican and Democratic Parties have many strengths as well as weaknesses. Furthermore, neither party’s political platform totally encompasses the ability, discernment and insights to tackle the diversity and range of issues in today’s American Culture…

Relationship of the Church to Politics
2. …I believe that the Christian faith should not be privatized (i.e. Christianity kept out of the public life)
3. …I believe that the Christian faith should not be politicized (i.e. Christianity used for political interests)
4. …I believe that the Church should be freed from ‘Coercive Secularism’ (i.e. the attempts to ban the church from the public square)
5. …I believe that the Church should not embrace ‘Religious Extremism’ (i.e. using the church to force policies upon society with spiritual bullying)
6. …I believe that the Church has become known more for what it is ‘against’ rather than what it is ‘for’ due to its recent involvement in politics over the last 3 decades. In other words, the church’s political activism has blurred, clouded and gotten in the way of the gospel.
7. …I believe that when you mix the Christian faith with politics, that you get politics
8. …the Church of Christ cannot be captive to any political party. The Church has its ‘citizenship’ in the City of God while at the same time living in the City of Man.

Morality
9. …I believe abortion & homosexuality are important moral issues of our time. However, I do not believe that these two issues alone adequately encompass all of society’s moral dilemmas
10. …I believe that poverty, peace & health concerns (i.e. the Worldwide Aids Epidemic) are important moral issues of our time. However, I do not believe that these three issues alone adequately encompass all of society’s moral dilemmas
11. …I believe that neither major political party can claim moral superiority or monopolize all of morality

Fiscal Issues
12. …I believe that we need a national fiscal policy that rewards those who work hard
13. …I believe we need a national fiscal policy that is compassionate to those that struggle (i.e. the least of these)

War
14. …I do not believe in a Pre-emptive War Strategy (i.e. Neoconservative Republican War Strategy)
15. …I do not believe in Pacifism (i.e. Aggressive-Progressive Democrat War Strategy)
16. …I believe in The Roman Catholic’s Just War Theory (i.e. Self-Defense, War at Last Resort, Etc…)

Foreign Policy
17. …I believe that a Foreign Policy founded upon isolation and silence never solves conflicts
18. …I believe that we need to have talks with unfriendly nations with certain preconditions set before hand
19. …I believe that we need to reinforce our border for national security while at the same time recognizing that illegal immigrants are God’s Children.

Media
20. …I believe that Fox News is ‘Fair and Balanced’ in the context of a conservative worldview and that MSNBC gives a ‘Fuller Spectrum of News’ in the context of a liberal worldview.

I am a born again christian, was a conservative democrat back around
1979-80, Jimmy Carter made me a Republican[his shoddy admin] I highly respect Zell Miller of Georgia[retired senator] he was the kind of democrat one was not ashamed of. I feel Ronald Reagan was the best President we have ever had, I have even ran in our local elections as a conservative Republican, but our party has filled up with
moderates like McCain[a liberal] and also fell into corruption and immorality to the point we can no longer point a finger at the democrats. we were the party of family values until the last four years or so, I have as a result decided to brand myself also as an Independent, would not vote for a democrat liberal, had a difficult time voting for McCain this time, actually voted for Sarah Palin, without her,
he had no campaign, she was a good 60 % of it, his campaign tried to cast blame on her at the last for McCain’s loss, he lost when he was
nominated to be the party front runner, we had no candidate this time,
Huckabee was my choice all along, I feel he would have been a great
President, I would like to see him and Palin on a 2012 ticket. God Bless you Montana, seems we have something in common, truth is
it was more common than we think, an awful lot of Republicans bailed out on account of a poor choice candidate this time.

With the invention of the internet, institutions such as cubs and guides and David Cameron talking up his ‘big?

society’ we were the first institution to point out to the coalition ‘democratic’ government that if it wanted to change the culture of Britian to prevent it from decending into civil war then the cuts it ‘reluctantly’ embraced were going to have to happen intelligently.

Step 1

Affirm that the British culture is moderate and multicultural, public sector cuts should not have been planned without the fears of the workforce being somewhat addressed by, for example, not cutting benefits as peace and freedom should be part of the social security package, be a decent citizen (learn some local history and road names), don’t resort to crime and, due to automation, workers enjoy lower insurance premiums and can be free. Not a bad deal but as democracy only represents a training issue on those who voted for the right wing…

Step 2

Once it’s been established we live in a multicultural tourist town (see above) issue a code book on how to bring up and/or educate children to the degree that they ‘do as they are told’ by business (you can leave the best practice and rewards structure for compliant with human rights businesses to us, we do exist for a reason don’t you know) at whichever level they enter the workplace and put in place theory and practical exams for the retired, capable disabled (decided using common sense), law abiding and risk assessed ‘volunteers’. For too long professionals within the public sector have been put under pressure to prove that the right wing does not cause attrocity and are unfairly targetted for the ills of the worl while the fanatical social worker (‘I LOVE children; and money’) fail to spot lies pre prepared by abusers, these people are mostly female for heavens sake.

Step 3
Close the secondary schools and flog off the land.

Anyway to our question, semantics aside, how much money do you think that will save:

a) Year one

b) Year five

c) Year one hundred

We have found this link on the net and until the coalitian takes the site down (it’s apt at censorship (removing freedom) already!)

http://towson.edu/heartfield/images/Don%27t_Worry_Vegetarian.jpg

i have read most of this, but British culture, that has been rubbished by people who have no thought for Britain, or indeed any idea of actually being part of it. I only have to look around me to see that.
Multiculturalism hasn’t worked well so far, the same applies, open ears, eyes. Sections of London are now almost entirely asian, where did the folks go that lived there 30/40 years ago, many dead, but those other elderly still live there, but have largely been forgotten.

The internet has been with us for a long time now, and can be a force for good, but as we have seen a force for such evil, people who do harm not just to children, but adults who do not agree with their ideologies. There is a good deal of hatred, dislike in people in this country now. When you have so many cultures all clashing, and fighting for their little bit of territory.

Public sector has become a white elephant, if i can use that phrase. it is so over staffed that it has become a law unto itself. And the foolish political correctness that has invaded our society has caused untold damage, common sense has gone almost entirely. I am not talking about something i know
nothing of but having witnessed all this and more.
I live in this city, am part of it, but don’t recognise it at all. Nor the country that my forefathers fought for, democracy, and believe it or not freedom. To express ones views, to say what needs to be said, and believe me when i say that what i witness now, with CCTV monitoring our every move, phone, e mails possibly being monitored, and that so often the legal system failing at every turn to jail those that make other peoples lives a misery.
I believe in the following, that for any one to come to a host country, whether its Brits who live abroad, or people who settle here, you fit in, obey their laws, and try and be a responsible member of that society. Not demand that everyone else should see things your way.

David Cameron has his work cut out in modern Britain, as many are leaving for the reason that they see the land of their birth being cut to ribbons and handed piecemeal to others who have proved themselves unworthy.

INDIA a new fascist GERMANY?

After the demolition of Babri majid the COMMUNAL forces strengthened in INDIA.The BJP have gained from it’s saffron agenda.
The circumstanses in INDIA now is very digusting everyone .The fascist ideological forces of RSS,VHP AND BAJARNGDAL under the BJP government in Gujarat successfully divided people on the basis of religion and now they want to impliment its "DIVIDE AND RULE" theory in ORISSA and KARNATAKA.
The basic ideology of RSS and BJP is "ONE COUNTRY AND ONE CULTURE",they wants to divide people and with a fascist country like Hitler formed in GERMANY.
Every Indian have to Beware from the communal paries and know about their atrocities and we have to annihilate the RSS and BJP so that every Indian will live with peace.It’s every Indian duty to protect communal harmony.So what we have to do is "SUPPORT SECULAR PARTIES".So that our nation will survive like "THE LARGEST DEMOCRATIC COUNTRY IN THE WORLD".

you posed a very good question. I congratulate you for that. You have compared it with Germany. Germany has highly civilised people of very-very good & efficient brains. Indian can not have such ones in next 1000 years. German system now is much better. Fascism in India now is much worse that the same of Germany in the past you have mentioned. You have mentioned few names of Indian fascist forces , according to you but I tell you there are many more ones , having ten times in number. Worst is Sangh Parivar, the biggest terrorist organisation of the world. Unless that kobra is killed, there can be no peace in any part of the world.

best answers to whomever answers most of these us history questions correctly?

1.As World War II was drawing to a close the first serious conflict between the United States and representatives of the Soviet Union occurred over

a)Greece
b)Iran
c)Czechoslovakia
d)Poland

2.Which diplomat sent the famous “long telegram” from Moscow to Washington in 1946 and wrote the “Mr.X.” article coining the term “containment”?

a)Dean Acheson
b)Paul Nitze
c)Henry Kissinger
d)George Kennan

3.President Eisenhower first talked about the so-called “Domino theory” in reference to

a)Europe
b)The Middle East
c)Latin America
d)Asia

4.Melanson referred to the “foreign policy establishment.” Who were they?

a)members of a college fraternity from Yale University who became foreign service officers.
b)experts on China who wrote critical reports on the Chinese Nationalist forces during World War II
c)a foreign policy elite who emerged after World War II and influenced the creation of United States cold war policy
d)none of the above

5.President Eisenhower said he saw no reason why nuclear weapons could not be used. What did his Secretary of State call this military policy?

a)containment
b)liberation
c)massive retaliation
d)limited war

6.Using advice from experts in the administration, President Eisenhower adopted a program of covert interventions in selected Third World countries. In the mid-1950s the United States was responsible for the overthrow of regimes in which of the following countries?

a)Iran, the Dominican Republic, and Guatemala
b)Iran and Nicaragua
c)Egypt and Guatemala
d)Iran and Guatemala

7.The Eisenhower Doctrine “regards as vital to the national interest and world peace the preservation of the independence and integrity” from communism of which area of the globe?

a)Indochina
b)the Middle East
c)Eastern Europe
d)Southern Africa

8.In 1956, after Mr. Khruschchev’s 20th Party Congress speech, the Soviet Union sent troops into which country to put down a rebellion?

a)Hungary
b)Czechoslovakia
c)Poland
d)the German Democratic Republic

9.The Gaither and Rockefeller Reports called for a new military doctrine based upon

a)the primacy of the threat of the use of nuclear weapons
b)building up land armies to fight future wars
c)a graduated deterrent
d)the primacy of counter-insurgency tactics

10.In April, 1961 President Kennedy authorized a policy that had been developed during the Eisenhower administration. It involved

a)sending covert operatives to Bulgaria
b)unleashing an anti-Castro Cuban force to invade Cuba
c)overthrowing the regime of Jacob Arbenz in Guatemala
d)all of the above.

11.Among the following statements, which one is not considered a relevant reason for the Soviet/Chinese split?

a)the Soviet Union and China had different interpretations and practices of communism.
b)the Soviet Union prevented the Chinese communists from “liberating” Taiwan.
c)Mao Tse-Tung disagreed with Khrushchev’s criticism of Stalin.
d)Moscow and Beijing competed to be the center of the international communist movement, particularly among Third World peoples.

12.The event that led President Truman to go to Congress to present his famous Truman Doctrine speech was the

a)Greek Civil War
b)failure of Poland to hold free elections
c)Berlin Blockade
d)North Korean invasion of South Korea

13.According to Targ, National Security Council Document 68 became United States policy from the 1950s to the end of the Cold War. A central recommendation of that document was that

a)a healthy domestic economy was central to winning the Cold War
b)nuclear weapons should be the primary source of deterrence of communism
c)defense expenditures should be the first priority of every president as he allocates national resources and federal budgets
d)despite the global tensions of the 1950s, each president should prioritize the pursuit for peaceful relations with the Soviet Union

14.In 1968, President Johnson ordered a review of a request for an additional 204,000 troops for Vietnam. His Secretary of Defense at the time, Clark Clifford, recommended that the troop request not be granted. This review was ordered by the President and carried out shortly after

a)the Gulf of Tonkin incident occurred in 1964
b)the U.S. military installation at Pleiku was assaulted by Vietnamese guerrillas
c)the Tet Offensive
d)the invasion of Cambodia

15.When President Kennedy discovered that the Soviet Union had placed nuclear weapons on Cuban soil he created an advisory group to come up with recommendations for how he should respond. He then acted. He

a)bombed the Soviet missile sites on Cuban soil
b)ordered an anti-Castro Cuban force to invade the island
c)ended diplomatic relations with Cuba
d)launched a naval blockade of all incoming Soviet ships to Cuba

16.The policy of “Vietnamization” was initiated by which president?

a)Eisenhower
b)Kennedy
c)Johnson
d)Nixon

17.President Nixon and his key fore

Try asking each question separately. You might get more answers.

why international community recongize somaliland republic?

SOMALILAND
In Africa, an island of democracy asks: Where is US help?

Posted by: Khadar Mohamed Abdikare
Originally Posted by The Christian Science Monitor

Hargeisa, Somaliland – Under the Bush administration’s theory of creating regional stability by supporting islands of democracy, leaders in Somaliland say it should be a shoo-in for official recognition as Africa’s newest nation state.

Instead, this breakaway republic, which declared independence from Somalia in 1991, is marooned in diplomatic limbo. Having not yet achieved statehood, it is without access to formal trade agreements or international financial institutions such as the World Bank.

"The international community has abandoned us," says Hussein Ali Nur, editor of the weekly English-language Republican newspaper published here in Somaliland’s capital, Hargeisa. "America talks about supporting democracy, but everything is distorted by the fight against terrorism. Our success is overshadowed by [US] strategic interests in Somalia."

During the last 16 years, as Somalia has torn itself apart, Somaliland’s leaders have disbanded a guerrilla movement, drafted a constitution, and held multiparty elections.

Development consultant Mark Bradbury, who monitored parliamentary elections in 2005, says the republic performs as well as, if not better than, other countries in the region, such as Ethiopia and Eritrea, on public participation in the democratic process and freedom of speech. Said Noor, the foreign minister, goes one step further: "We have created a modern, African parliamentary system. It’s a model for the region."

The house of representatives is directly elected and the upper house, the house of guurti, is composed of clan elders. Both houses are based on ethnic power-sharing quotas. Bradbury says the arrangement has helped to foster stability by accommodating traditional social structures.

While Somalia is fractured by tension between numerous clans, Somaliland is more homogenous – dominated by one single clan, the Isaq. This social cohesion has played a large part in defining Somaliland’s sense of identity and promoting the notion of a separate future.

But not one country has endorsed its claims of sovereignty.

Political scientist Roland Marchal at the Center for International Studies and Research in Paris says the US – and the rest of the international community – may well support Somaliland to achieve independence in the long run, but "timing is everything. What’s to be achieved by recognizing a breakaway region in the middle of a bloody and protracted civil war?"

For now, the US State Department seems content to follow the lead of the African Union, which says it’s focused on resuscitating failed states such as Somalia – not breakaway republics.

Some African analysts believe Somaliland’s independence could form part of a future peace deal within a solution for the whole of Somalia – but fulfilling Somaliland’s ambition prematurely could undermine Somalia’s fragile Transitional Federal government (TFG), still fighting to establish control over the capital, Mogadishu.

A former British protectorate, Somaliland achieved independence in 1960, but quickly joined with former Italian territories to form Somalia. "We jumped too soon," says Mr. Noor. "It was a mistake."

Key posts in the new unity government went to southerners from Mogadishu and Somalilanders rapidly felt excluded. Their mounting resentment gave birth to a rebel movement that Somalia’s dictator, Said Barré, attempted to crush. His bombing raids of the main urban centers in 1988 killed 50,000 people and left Hargeisa in ruins.

Mr. Barré was ousted in 1991, starting the civil war in Somalia that is still raging – but Somalia’s implosion was Somaliland’s moment of opportunity. Now its population of 3 million Sunni Muslims wants nothing more to do with rule from Mogadishu.

Noor, a former guerrilla, says that memories of Barré’s repression are still so bitter that "any political leaders who agreed to reunification would be killed one by one by our own people."

Bradbury thinks foreign diplomats could learn a lot from Somaliland’s experience of reconciliation and reconstruction. He notes that Somaliland "has made huge strides with minimal outside interference, and that hasn’t been allowed to happen in Somalia."

While the international community maintains a close interest in Mogadishu’s future, Bradbury is concerned that Somaliland is not strategically important enough for foreign governments to invest the time and resources required in recognizing and sustaining independence. "Paradoxically," he says, "that may have contributed to its achievements to date."

Forget it.

There is not much chance the US will do anymore foreign intervention or ‘help’.

The American people consider it war of choice, immoral, illegal and unconstitutional. They no longer have the stomach nor the budget for it.

No politicians in our future will have the courage to risk their legacy like Bush did.

You and every other country in the world is on their own dealing with all the pocket dictators. Good luck.

Pass it on

Our entire society and culture is based around a lie?

We’re used to thinking that we’re "special", we’re "different", and we’re "unique". But in reality, none of us matter as much as we think. From a macroscopic view, we may be different than everyone else, but certainly not in a irreplaceable manner. Take me for example. I’m an engineering student, and the society and my family have invested heavily in my future as a successful career, but if I failed to accomplish this, replacements are easy to find. Another engineer trained in the same manner may look, sound, and act differently than me, but he/she will serve the society just as well as I would, so what does it matter?

The entire capitalist system of our society revolves around this idea of individualism and pragmatism, resulting in a system (ideally) maintained by nothing but laws, and people acting in whatever manner they wished within the confines of those laws, always placing self-interest (I’m special, I’m important) at the forefront. What if those laws break down? What about its loopholes?

Even our political system is centered around this idea of self-importance. The Western style of democracy, at least in theory, stresses the importance of individual participation: that the will of individuals, when accumulated, bears great weight. While this is true, note that the focus is placed on the society, not the individuals. In other words, it’s the general consensus of the society that matters, not what each of us think. To think that "my vote matters" is nothing but self-indoctrination.

Speaking of self-indoctrination, what is more obvious than that imposed on us by the Western religion? The one religion that dominated the Western society for over a thousand years, Christianity stresses the importance of each individual to God, even going so far as to state that angels rejoice every time a sinner accepts Jesus as his/her "personal Lord and savior". This gives a mystical correctness to the philosophy of individualism, placing it on the altar of universality.

Ironically, this sense of self-importance, overinflated and utterly false though it may be, is integral to the proper functioning of our society. It is these lies that drive the various features our society possesses, such as the Western democratic system, the capitalist economy, etc.

What if, instead of these ideals, we adopted a communitarian belief system? Not communist in that it does not have to show its effects immediately, or ever, but rather a philosophical framework that stresses the importance of the community? A universal (to one community) sense that we’re all working toward one goal, may that goal be unity, peace, power, or general utilitarianism? People may be naturally selfish, but societal indoctrination, I believe, can be a strong tool. Just as it amplifies the natural instinct for survival, twisting it into selfishness on which our society is built, I believe it can also minimize, if not eradicate this particular desire, and unify the members of a society in the ultimate test of civilizations: time, i.e. survival of the society.

I know this is absolutely massive and probably goes against everything you’ve ever been taught, but please tell me what you think about what I wrote. Keep in mind this is just a bunch of thoughts I jotted down while having nothing better to do, so please forgive spelling mistakes or logical inconsistencies. In fact, if you find any, don’t hesitate to point them out. Long responses are OK so long as they’re coherent, I’d truly like to improve my way of thinking.

It seems that cultural values go along with how much society values the individual freedom versus the collective goals, so it’s hard to judge this. But I think that if you had an ideal culture, with ideally conscientious people and ideally functional uncorruptible institutions, able to transmit values stably over long periods while still advancing your moral goals, then individualism, maximal individual freedom, would have more potential for superiority. Simply because nature made us the basic conscientious agents. Each of us is a decision maker and basically free. Artificial arrangements that transfer decision making authority to institutions, IMHO, ultimately must reduce the overall moral functioning capacity of a group, in proportion to how much freedom and responsibility they take away from the individual conscience. Institutions so far have had a life of their own that is out of hand to some extent – they have their own kind of selfishness, and less conscience than individuals. Not to say that society would survive without some source of "authority," because we are naturally selfish as well as being conscientious. But in a hypothetical ideal world, that source would not resemble today’s governments, IMHO. It would be purely "societal indoctrination," as you say — purely cultural, and virtually all voluntary.

I agree that Western individualistic narcissism and greed is a problem. But I can’t say I’m in favor of Western society just "going communitarian," at least not until we can somehow create an institution of societal authority which can’t be corrupted and which actually values individual lives and experiences equally. That is politically just plain impossible … people are too selfish; and I think that the impossibility of real-life morally authoritative institutions, is the real reason individualism exists in the first place. So I think the struggle for balance between individual freedom and the "good of all humanity," the dream of establishing universally held moral priorities and the humane and "successful" arrangements to promote them, will just be ongoing. It’s the human condition, as they say.

can anyone help me answer these us history questions to the best of your ability?

you don’t have to answer all of them just the one you for sure know. they’re past exams questions but the answer key are not posted.

1.As World War II was drawing to a close the first serious conflict between the United States and representatives of the Soviet Union occurred over

a)Greece
b)Iran
c)Czechoslovakia
d)Poland

2.Which diplomat sent the famous “long telegram” from Moscow to Washington in 1946 and wrote the “Mr.X.” article coining the term “containment”?

a)Dean Acheson
b)Paul Nitze
c)Henry Kissinger
d)George Kennan

3.President Eisenhower first talked about the so-called “Domino theory” in reference to

a)Europe
b)The Middle East
c)Latin America
d)Asia

4.Melanson referred to the “foreign policy establishment.” Who were they?

a)members of a college fraternity from Yale University who became foreign service officers.
b)experts on China who wrote critical reports on the Chinese Nationalist forces during World War II
c)a foreign policy elite who emerged after World War II and influenced the creation of United States cold war policy
d)none of the above

5.President Eisenhower said he saw no reason why nuclear weapons could not be used. What did his Secretary of State call this military policy?

a)containment
b)liberation
c)massive retaliation
d)limited war

6.Using advice from experts in the administration, President Eisenhower adopted a program of covert interventions in selected Third World countries. In the mid-1950s the United States was responsible for the overthrow of regimes in which of the following countries?

a)Iran, the Dominican Republic, and Guatemala
b)Iran and Nicaragua
c)Egypt and Guatemala
d)Iran and Guatemala

7.The Eisenhower Doctrine “regards as vital to the national interest and world peace the preservation of the independence and integrity” from communism of which area of the globe?

a)Indochina
b)the Middle East
c)Eastern Europe
d)Southern Africa

8.In 1956, after Mr. Khruschchev’s 20th Party Congress speech, the Soviet Union sent troops into which country to put down a rebellion?

a)Hungary
b)Czechoslovakia
c)Poland
d)the German Democratic Republic

9.The Gaither and Rockefeller Reports called for a new military doctrine based upon

a)the primacy of the threat of the use of nuclear weapons
b)building up land armies to fight future wars
c)a graduated deterrent
d)the primacy of counter-insurgency tactics

10.In April, 1961 President Kennedy authorized a policy that had been developed during the Eisenhower administration. It involved

a)sending covert operatives to Bulgaria
b)unleashing an anti-Castro Cuban force to invade Cuba
c)overthrowing the regime of Jacob Arbenz in Guatemala
d)all of the above.

11.Among the following statements, which one is not considered a relevant reason for the Soviet/Chinese split?

a)the Soviet Union and China had different interpretations and practices of communism.
b)the Soviet Union prevented the Chinese communists from “liberating” Taiwan.
c)Mao Tse-Tung disagreed with Khrushchev’s criticism of Stalin.
d)Moscow and Beijing competed to be the center of the international communist movement, particularly among Third World peoples.

12.The event that led President Truman to go to Congress to present his famous Truman Doctrine speech was the

a)Greek Civil War
b)failure of Poland to hold free elections
c)Berlin Blockade
d)North Korean invasion of South Korea

13.According to Targ, National Security Council Document 68 became United States policy from the 1950s to the end of the Cold War. A central recommendation of that document was that

a)a healthy domestic economy was central to winning the Cold War
b)nuclear weapons should be the primary source of deterrence of communism
c)defense expenditures should be the first priority of every president as he allocates national resources and federal budgets
d)despite the global tensions of the 1950s, each president should prioritize the pursuit for peaceful relations with the Soviet Union

14.In 1968, President Johnson ordered a review of a request for an additional 204,000 troops for Vietnam. His Secretary of Defense at the time, Clark Clifford, recommended that the troop request not be granted. This review was ordered by the President and carried out shortly after

a)the Gulf of Tonkin incident occurred in 1964
b)the U.S. military installation at Pleiku was assaulted by Vietnamese guerrillas
c)the Tet Offensive
d)the invasion of Cambodia

15.When President Kennedy discovered that the Soviet Union had placed nuclear weapons on Cuban soil he created an advisory group to come up with recommendations for how he should respond. He then acted. He

a)bombed the Soviet missile sites on Cuban soil
b)ordered an anti-Castro Cuban force to invade the island
c)ended diplomatic relations with Cuba
d)launched a naval blockade of all incoming Soviet ships to Cuba

16.The policy of

I am going to say c for everyone and let you fail