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CTLesq
05-25-2004, 12:40 PM
America, Recuse Thyself!

By P.J. O'Rourke
1,040 words
25 May 2004
The Wall Street Journal
A16
English
(Copyright (c) 2004, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

John Kerry says America shouldn't cut and run. George Bush says America mustn't. But we don't have to retreat ignominiously from the war on terrorism and from our other international responsibilities and commitments; we can recuse ourselves. We can explain to the court of global public opinion that, because America possesses the largest economy, the widest network of business relationships, and the only effective military force on earth, we have too great a vested interest in world events to render fair and impartial judgment. On every issue of geopolitical adjudication, from 9/11 to the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change, America is a jury of cops and crime victims. A change in venire has already been called for by noisy street protestors, France and suchlike. Let's accede to the pre-emptory challenge and go home.

The benefits will be immediate. We can cut $300 billion from our defense budget. This will be almost enough to pay for the aging baby boomers' prescription drug benefits, which can now include Levitra, Botox and medicinal cannabis.

America will enjoy cleaner air and less traffic congestion as oil goes to $200 a barrel due to chaos in the Middle East. A U.S. withdrawal from the Middle East will cause chaos, of course. Then again, a U.S. intervention in the Middle East has caused chaos already. And, during those periods of history when the U.S. was neither intervening in nor withdrawing from the Middle East, there was . . . chaos. The situation is akin to the famous complaint women have against men: failure to acknowledge that not every problem can be fixed. Sometimes the best thing is just a little sympathy. America had everyone's sympathy after the World Trade towers were attacked. We can get that sympathy back if we limit our foreign policy objectives to whining.

One thing to whine about will be the fate of Israel. Without American safeguards that nation is certain to be militarily attacked. To judge by previous Israeli wars, in 1948, 1956, 1967, 1973 and 1982, the result will be serious headaches for Israelis as the Knesset furiously debates the status of Jewish settlements outside Damascus and on the west bank of the Euphrates.

Elsewhere, however, Islamic fundamentalists will likely triumph. Is this necessarily a bad thing? Our own country was founded by people who, today, would be considered religious extremists. Perhaps a bond of fellow-feeling will grow between puritanical Muslims and heirs to American Puritanism. Maybe cultural exchanges of the old U.S.-Soviet type can build people-to-people-based peaceful coexistence such as we had during the Kissinger era of detente. Visiting America on fellowship programs, even the most fanatical members of al Qaeda will be moved by the story of the Salem witch trials and their pious outcome. And while Hester Prynne was not stoned to death, her crime may be said to have been treated with the letter, if not the spirit, of sharia law.

Meanwhile various unpopular rulers who have held onto power with American support will be forced to submit to the will of their people. Tony Blair comes to mind.

Other positive effects are to be expected. The United Nations, freed from superpower interference, will assume its rightful role exercising peacemaking functions -- and getting plenty of exercise at it. Scores of belligerents, freed from superpower interference, will create opportunities for U.N. peacemaking functions such as sending numerous bureaucrats, functionaries, commissions and inspection teams to keep combatants too busy with meetings and paperwork to have time to fight.

A NATO alliance that does not include the U.S. will acquire a new sense of mission and purpose, especially in Gdansk, Istanbul and maybe Hamburg, when Russia resumes its historic quest for warm-water ports.

The threat of nuclear proliferation will abate as dangerous stockpiles of atomic weapons are quickly used up. The loss of life will be regrettable. But this will be counterbalanced by the welcome disappearance of long-standing international flashpoints when the India-Pakistan border is vaporized, Tehran disappears in a mushroom cloud, and whatever is left of the Korean Peninsula becomes reunited.

China will assume its proper role in the world. A booming China can be expected to concentrate on economic issues. Look for Beijing to create a "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere," so to speak. And China won't have to bomb Pearl Harbor. There will be nothing there but cruise ships -- all in mothballs as a result of $200-a-barrel oil.

America's protestors against globalization will be able to relax. An inward-looking America is bound to link military and diplomatic disengagement with higher trade barriers. There will be domestic political pressure to create jobs for the hundreds of thousands of returning military personnel, State Department employees, Peace Corps volunteers, network foreign-correspondents, etc. Unfortunately, the jobs will be mostly mowing lawns and taking care of the children of husband/wife lawyer couples, since a decreasing involvement with foreign affairs will lead to an increasing resentment of foreign immigrants. (At a theoretical level there may be no reason why Isolationism, Protectionism and Nativism should be conjoined. But we can hardly have Larry and Curly without Moe.) Yet in a sensitive, diverse 21st-century America, we probably will be spared past excesses. Perhaps we'll see the rise of an In-Klusive Klux Klan. Plus, an increase in the minimum wage will solve the problem of employment inequities.

And the best thing about Americans recusing ourselves from global entanglements is that we will be loved again. Imagine a world where American manners and mores set the standard almost everywhere, where American fashions, American ideas and American lifestyles are universally sought out and copied. A world where people avidly listen to American music, eagerly watch American TV and movies, and try to imitate Americans in every way. Imagine a world where the U.S.A. is so admired that people by the millions want nothing more than to come to America and recuse themselves from global entanglements.

---

Mr. O'Rourke is the author, most recently, of "Peace Kills: America's Fun New Imperialism," out next month from Atlantic Monthly Press.
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jmcc
05-25-2004, 12:48 PM
And?

x0thedeadzone0x
05-25-2004, 12:55 PM
Oh man.. another political thread?
I don't wanna get into this. debate all you want.

defender
05-25-2004, 12:59 PM
I hear Onimusha 3 is really good.

EggViper
05-25-2004, 01:04 PM
I hear Onimusha 3 is really good.

only seen the opening movie so far and that game looks promising.

RedvsBlue
05-25-2004, 01:14 PM
I hear Onimusha 3 is really good.

only seen the opening movie so far and that game looks promising.

The commercials alone make me want to play it even though I haven't tried either of the other 2 Onimushas.

Grave_Addiction
05-25-2004, 01:15 PM
I just pooped a 12" tard.

jmcc
05-25-2004, 01:24 PM
I just pooped a 12" tard.

Is that a misspelling or are you indeed pooping on the incredibly small mentally handicapped?

Cracka
05-25-2004, 01:26 PM
i've never played an Onimusha game, but i've always thought they looked like they would be fun...

what kinda gameplay is it? like... what do you do? also is it 1st or 3rd person...

Grave_Addiction
05-25-2004, 01:29 PM
I just pooped a 12" tard.

Is that a misspelling or are you indeed pooping on the incredibly small mentally handicapped?

Hahaha, I dunno why I spelled it that way. It just sounded more funny in my head than turd. I never even thought some people would take it as I pooped out a retard.

SevereTireDamage
05-25-2004, 03:19 PM
i've never played an Onimusha game, but i've always thought they looked like they would be fun...

what kinda gameplay is it? like... what do you do? also is it 1st or 3rd person...

3rd person. Think Resident Evil with slightly better controls and a much bigger emphasis on action vs. puzzle solving. Except, you're a samurai. But you still fight zombies, and that's okay in my book.

MrBadExample
05-25-2004, 03:37 PM
The commercials alone make me want to play it even though I haven't tried either of the other 2 Onimushas.

Same here. That commercial rocks!

x0thedeadzone0x
05-25-2004, 03:43 PM
Oh jeez. Does it scare the shit outta you like in RE?

Cracka
05-25-2004, 06:48 PM
one of my first couple of games for PSX was RE2. That game scared the shit out of me, and its not like they ease you into the scary shit, its like: game starts your in a street surrounded by all kinda crap thats on fire and a bunch of zombies coming at you. Games that are scary like that arent very fun in my opinion. When i'm playin em, i'm always scared that something is gonna jump out and scare the shit out of me.. (like they always do).. and so i cant just relax and have fun with the game.. but i guess thats kinda the point also.

But anyways I might have to pick up an Onimusha game.

bignick
05-25-2004, 06:54 PM
huh?

Tom
05-25-2004, 09:26 PM
The game that scared me the most in ps days was the dogs that jumped through the window in RE, i jumped like 10 feet.
So, Onimusha 3 is a good game? I guess i should pick it up when it hits $20 (although whenever I say that I end up never getting the game for some reason.)

Moxio
05-25-2004, 10:49 PM
huh?

I couldn't have said it better. :twoguns:

Cracka
05-25-2004, 11:29 PM
huh?

was it my post that confused u?

organicow
05-25-2004, 11:32 PM
wow! this has to be the weirdest thread ever! awesome!

XboxMaster
05-25-2004, 11:35 PM
I rented Onimusha 3 just yesterday and have enjoyed it since I started playing it. But, I, IMO, don't think it's worth more than $30. Although, it's definitely worth more than Red Dead Revolver, which I payed $30 for this past Friday. Actually, well, it's hard to say, but I'm kinda leaning towards $40 now.

bignick
05-26-2004, 12:03 AM
Sorry if this has been done already.

http://img9.imageshack.us/img9/4745/currentgames.jpg

Cracka
05-26-2004, 12:08 AM
lmao noice pics Nick

bignick
05-26-2004, 12:09 AM
lmao noice pics Nick

thanks! and i didnt even use photoshop! Who needs anything more than paint?

Mr. Anderson
05-26-2004, 12:10 AM
Lmao.