by Tyler_JC » Tue 13 Nov 2007, 18:39:34
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('topcat', 'T')yler -
Thank you for correcting me.
I need to read more and take time to seach before I speak.
It is refreshing that others offered, disappointing that TPTB passed on some of the offers.
I realize that we/US is better off than some, worse off than others.
IMO, each should help the other when needed.
I'm glad we agree with each other.
I've always thought of foreign aid as another form of diplomacy...and one that costs far less than battleships or tank battalions.
There is always the opinion that floats around in the world that each country should go it alone at all costs.
I tend to think that cooperation can be mutually beneficial.
Even if one country is made only slightly worse off but another country can benefit enormously, the trade might be worth it.
For example, plans to provide debt relief to some heavily indebted poor countries in Africa and Latin America cost the G-7 and IMF relatively little money (a few dollars per person). By contrast, the benefit of eliminating the impossible debt burdens imposed on Zambia, Niger, Uganda, etc. are enormous.
Freeing these places to invest in their own domestic economies rather than send interest payments to rich banking interests will increase stability. More stability means less child mortality and less child mortality means smaller families (and less population growth in the long run).
If the West decides to be short-sighted and think only of next year's bottom line rather than the long term sustainability of the planet, hell, let the third world crash. Let them cut down their forests, pollute their rivers, strip their top soil to grow cash crops instead of food, and keep those interest payments coming.
Providing development aid helps to increase our carrying capacity (better crop yields and better agricultural techniques) and reduce overpopulation.
Sure, sometimes the money gets siphoned off to bad people so they can buy guns and attack their neighbors. But if the money is well spent, it can have a very positive impact. Not just for the recipient but for the entire world.
...
As a side note, screwing over weak countries can have an incredible backlash. Hitler used the German economic catastrophe caused by excessive war reparations as a launching board to build his political career. The terrorist attacks of 9/11 were justified in the eyes of some in the Muslim world because of poor US foreign policy in the Middle East.
Long story short, foreign policy matters. We can't just isolate ourselves behind two big oceans and tell the rest of the world to buzz off.