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Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!!

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To: epicure who wrote (34168)4/9/1999 11:50:00 AM
From: jbe  Read Replies (1) of 108807
 
"A country has a right to kill its own citizens."

Did Nazi Germany have a right to kill its own Jews? Was it just the Polish Jews and the Hungarian Jews, etc., that it did not have the right to kill?

Seriously: suppose Nazi Germany had never expanded, and put only German Jews in the oven. Should we have reacted or not? If we should have reacted, then in what way should we have reacted?

It is true that the principle of non-interference into other countries' internal affairs makes for fewer headaches. But there is non-interference, and there is non-interference....

Bombing is an extreme case, of course. (Although bear in mind that the bombing of Yugoslavia is not a unilateral US action; it is a NATO action.)

What about UN peacekeeping missions, for example? They too are often viewed as exercises in "interference." BTW, in Rwanda, the US opposed expanding the peacekeeping contingent that was already there, even though the local UN commander was pleading for more troops, who might have been able to stop the slaughter. This was right after the debacle in Somalia, and the US was wary of any more involvement in Africa.

jbe

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