• @blackstratA
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    1317 days ago

    On a tangentially related note, this documentary series from BBC4 is a fascinating insight into the decision making process the US went through over dealing with foreign mass atrocities over the past 40 years: Iraq, Bosnia, Rwanda, Syria etc.

    Warning: they do not hold back with the imagery of these events.

    Corridors of Power: Should America Police the World?

    • @MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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      816 days ago

      Did they also go into mass atrocities committed and initiated by the US? If you go around lighting fires and then come back around to put them out after donning an official uniform, should others consider you a fire fighter or an arsonist?

      Is there a single instance covered that wasn’t a situation the US directly and purposely had a hand in creating?

      • @blackstratA
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        216 days ago

        You should watch it and find out for yourself.

              • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                115 days ago

                Your questions aren’t really questions now are they?

                Did they also go into mass atrocities committed and initiated by the US?

                Not OP, didn’t watch the series. This is the kind of question you could answer by watching and if you aren’t interested in watching unsure why you’d ask.

                If you go around lighting fires and then come back around to put them out after donning an official uniform, should others consider you a fire fighter or an arsonist?

                I guess if we’re talking about this literal situation, you’d be both? Is this what you claim is happening?

                Is there a single instance covered that wasn’t a situation the US directly and purposely had a hand in creating?

                They mentioned the Rwandan genocide. Do you consider the Rwandan genocide to be one of those “fires” that the US “lit”?