ok so the final tally from my true love is actually quite generous image ...but do I need to now provide room & board for the 40 maids-a-milking, 36 ladies dancing, 30 lords a-leaping, 22 pipers piping, and 12 drummers drumming?? ...who are these people? ...have they been vetted?
Unapologetic noninterventionist.
Rust's 'ownership rules': - each value has an _owner_ - there can only be one owner at a time ... woke crustaceans in disbelief 😂
"The Revolution Was" The U.S. went from Republic to Empire 100+ years ago View quoted note →
> Between 1898 and 1919, a certain idea of America was let go and another put in its place. The older idea was of a nation dedicated to the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness of the people who comprise it. Crucial to this image of America was our traditional foreign policy: its aim and limit was to keep America strong enough to prevent attacks from abroad, or, if they occurred, to fend them off, so that the people could return to their peaceful pursuits. It was a foreign policy custom-made for the **American Republic**. > The new idea of America, nurtured by McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt, and brought to fruition by Woodrow Wilson, was of a nation made immensely powerful by its free institutions and dedicated to projecting its might in order to achieve freedom throughout the world. In this conception, we would be perpetually entangled everywhere on earth where we could do good. The American people would not be allowed to return to the peaceful enjoyment of their own rights until the whole world was at last free. This was — and is — the foreign policy of **America as Empire, the negation of Republic**. At the end of the twentieth century, it is not clear that the American people still have the power to choose between the two. -- the great Ralph Raico https://mises.org/articles-interest/american-foreign-policy-turning-point-1898-1919
> Of all enemies to public liberty, war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few. -- James Madison