Outstanding ad!
Many Americans these days delude themselves into forgetting how vital our nation is to protecting the ideals of liberty and freedom throughout the world. We cannot forget we are the good guys. (h/t – The Corner)
[youtube]JwAtNILh6uY[/youtube]
-Bruce (GayPatriot)
Powerfully done, and so true.
Of course, some viewers will find themselves going “Whoa. Hang on. A world where Stalin won / Israel is gone / Saddam won / people are poorer and ‘less materialistic’, is a good thing.”
great video, someone in England gets it, we aren’t entirely hated there. Thanks for spreading the good word.
Now, if “we” can do the same with China over the next 50-years….
#2 – Leah, I agree with your admiration. Yet I also have to agree with David Limbaugh’s assessment that we should not be trolling for international admiration. Particularly with respect to Europe, where it seems that all of the major industrialized nations (France, Germany, Italy, Russia for example) are in bed with their UN aiders and abettors.
The Europeans have mediocre militaries, pacifistic populations and extremely inflated views of their own importance. Other than Britain, they don’t have much to offer in a military conflict, yet even getting token forces from them that are minimally useful is like pulling teeth.
Getting large numbers of European nations to cooperate with us on military ventures that are important to American security will be nearly impossible at this point.
But no surpise here – Dhimmicrats place a higher priority on European approval than our national security, they will insist on future “cooperation” abroad. This, combined with the logjam at the UN, would hamstring any President, even if they have a (D) after their name.
Regards,
Peter H.
#3 Now, if “we” can do the same with China over the next 50-years…
We are doing it right now in China and the rest of Asia with expanded free trade.
I’m one of those people who are always puzzled by the assertion that the US and China will go to war in the future.
1 – I think we need to stop protecting Taiwan. The Cold War is over and we can’t protect every place from every other place.
2 – Other than 1, China has no history of expansion or agression
3 – The Chinese people do not show evidence of warmongering
And neither do we.
So I believe if item 1 can be resolved, then there would be no reason to think that war is inevitible.
This can all change if something happens in China to cause a deteriorization of stablity , I couldn’t even begin to speculate what might cause that.
So I think we’ll get along fine with China.
Peter #4: All those things about EUtopia are true. In addition, they have all begun thier population collapse. There isn’t one country in europe that has a increasing natural population , many of them have offset this with immigration from the fertile as rabbits hostile colonizing Muslims.
#6 – China has border disputes with 4 of its neighbors. It invaded Vietnam in 1979. And it is actively expanding its influence in the Third World, especially in Africa, as it competes ever more aggressively with the U.S. and Europe for natural resources.
And let’s not forget about Chinese arms sales to Iran and Syria.
(Cue inevitable “but Europe does it too!!1!” response. But that’s not the point. If it’s not OK for European governments to do it, it certainly isn’t OK for the Chinese to do it either.)
As far as Taiwan is concerned, you seem all too willing for its democracy to disappear beneath Chinese jackboots and/or missiles for the sake of… what exactly? The formation of an anti-European alliance with the Communist régime?
#8 – And I for one agree with you on this point, vaara. China should be watched and not trusted, especially given their history of (a) human rights abuses, (b) policy with Taiwan – which the UN laughingly calls “Chinese Taipei,” WTF does that mean and (c) their position as the largest Communist country in the world.
However, let’s not forget that without the Clinton Administration giving the Chinese access to WMDs and also those questionable Gore fundraisers at Buddhist temples, China would be not be as volatile an issue right now.
Regards,
Peter H.