
If The US Really Was What It Pretends To Be
• https://www.caitlinjohnst.one by CAITLIN JOHNSTONIt's wild to consider how many of the world's problems would not exist if the US really was the thing it advertises itself as.
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It's wild to consider how many of the world's problems would not exist if the US really was the thing it advertises itself as.
First Afghanistan imploded and now it appears Iraq and Libya are about to follow suit. Syria simmers. The fruits of US interventionism are everywhere the same: chaos and death, not the promised "triumph of peace and democracy."
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's "surprise" trip to Taiwan last week should be "Exhibit A" as to why interventionism is dangerous, deadly, and dumb.
The 20-year U.S. war in Afghanistan ended with a bang in August as a terrorist attack killed a dozen Marines at the Kabul airport. For almost 20 years, The Future of Freedom Foundation has been one of the few organizations that stalwartly criticized
Some commentators are pointing out that former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, who recently passed away, played an instrumental role in the U.S. invasion of Iraq in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
In a letter to the Los Angeles Times regarding the Afghanistan debacle, Stephen Sloane, a retired captain in the U.S. Navy who served in the Vietnam War, is a perfect demonstration of how so many people, especially in the military, live lives of deni
Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, interventionists are learning the wrong lesson from their ongoing debacle in Afghanistan. They are coming up with all sorts of reasons why this particular intervention has gone bad. Undoubtedly, they will promise
The Pesticide-Induced Diseases Database, launched by Beyond Pesticides, captures the range of diseases linked to pesticides and tracks the latest epidemiologic and real-world exposure using peer-reviewed studies.
The theory of the "problem shark" has its origins in a series of attacks in New Jersey in 1916 that killed four people, shocking Americans at the time
What is the point of U.S. foreign interventionism?
This would be a good time for some introspection. Questions that deserve pondering are: Why must the U.S. government be engaged in foreign meddling? What good does it do? Are there harmful consequences? Are they worth it?
I'm a very long time reader and Daily Alert subscriber. You've published a few of my emails, comments, and articles on EPJ back before TL was created. Needless to say, your rationality and sanity covering world events is badly needed in this insa
Daniel McAdams joins us today to discuss his recent article, "The Koch-Soros Quincy Project: A Train Wreck of Neocon and 'Humanitarian' Interventionists."
Every time you go to the airport and are forced to undergo the TSA screening process, including the possibility of pat-down searches, keep in mind that this is for one reason alone:
Pandemic propaganda
There is something important to note about U.S. interventionism in faraway lands: None of the people that the U.S. government is killing, maiming, or destroying is invading and trying to conquer the United States.
There is no reason for the Pentagon to be depressed, despondent, or angry over the fact that Iraqi officials are kicking the Pentagon out of Iraq. The Pentagon doesn't belong in Iraq in the first place.
Everywhere you look, there are crises. Healthcare. Immigration. Social Security. Drugs. Violence. The Middle East. Afghanistan. Federal spending and debt.
Ron Paul Institute Director Daniel McAdams opens this year's Peace and Prosperity Washington conference with some thoughts on what anti-interventionism really means and why non-intervention is so important to our national security and our moral and f
American interventionists learned a lesson from Iraq: pre-empt the debate. Now everyone is for regime change...