Questions I wish I could ask Obama and McCain
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Questions I wish I could ask Obama and McCain
Questions I wish I could ask Obama and McCain (II)
2008-10-03 16:37:50 - Besides the policies towards the Middle East, there are other complications on the foreign policy front. For example, illegal immigration</FONT></FONT> is a problem that seems to require the approach of a real maverick. If people would not have to leave their countries of origin as a last attempt to improve their lives, wouldn't it get rid of the immigration</FONT></FONT></FONT> problem? I think so.
VHeadline commentarist Elio Cequea writes:
But, how can an underdeveloped country, with half of its middle class making $300 dollars a month and the other half unemployed, ever hope to become developed?
What about the people at the bottom of the food chain? If the minimum wage in the US is $6 an hour, why do you allow the same US companies pay $0.30 an hour in other parts of the world?
That is considered exploitation in the US but it is not in Central America. A wage of thirty cents an hour is absolutely not an incentive for people to stay in their home countries.
Do you think Latin America someday will have the same standard of living of the US?
As leader of the free world, what would you do to make that a reality?
Do you think that encouraging companies to pay $0.30/hour to "developing people" is the way to go?
At the same time, however, the US wants to spread freedom and democracy around the world. According to the ideologist of the right, democracy and freedom go hand in hand.
First, isn't "freedom" something people obtain instead of something forcibly imposed onto them?
Second, how come every time a democratically elected government uses "freedom" and refuses to align with US policies, it immediately becomes a pariah state and a target for economic pressure?
The US is a big defender of human rights. How come prohibiting US citizens from visiting their parents in Cuba is not a human right violation?
How is it that squeezing the economy of a country for more than forty years, consequently lowering the quality of life of its population, is not an act of terrorism?
Last but not least, about my country of origin, The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
With regards to " leaders like President Hugo Chavez, how can he play the democratic game and win without ending up like Allende? Is that the fate of all of those who dare to turn against the US political and financial</FONT></FONT> establishment?
Well, he could also end up living in South Africa, like Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Elio Cequea
Feico57@att.net
ecequea@gmail.com
2008-10-03 16:37:50 - Besides the policies towards the Middle East, there are other complications on the foreign policy front. For example, illegal immigration</FONT></FONT> is a problem that seems to require the approach of a real maverick. If people would not have to leave their countries of origin as a last attempt to improve their lives, wouldn't it get rid of the immigration</FONT></FONT></FONT> problem? I think so.
VHeadline commentarist Elio Cequea writes:
But, how can an underdeveloped country, with half of its middle class making $300 dollars a month and the other half unemployed, ever hope to become developed?
What about the people at the bottom of the food chain? If the minimum wage in the US is $6 an hour, why do you allow the same US companies pay $0.30 an hour in other parts of the world?
That is considered exploitation in the US but it is not in Central America. A wage of thirty cents an hour is absolutely not an incentive for people to stay in their home countries.
Do you think Latin America someday will have the same standard of living of the US?
As leader of the free world, what would you do to make that a reality?
Do you think that encouraging companies to pay $0.30/hour to "developing people" is the way to go?
At the same time, however, the US wants to spread freedom and democracy around the world. According to the ideologist of the right, democracy and freedom go hand in hand.
First, isn't "freedom" something people obtain instead of something forcibly imposed onto them?
Second, how come every time a democratically elected government uses "freedom" and refuses to align with US policies, it immediately becomes a pariah state and a target for economic pressure?
The US is a big defender of human rights. How come prohibiting US citizens from visiting their parents in Cuba is not a human right violation?
How is it that squeezing the economy of a country for more than forty years, consequently lowering the quality of life of its population, is not an act of terrorism?
Last but not least, about my country of origin, The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
With regards to " leaders like President Hugo Chavez, how can he play the democratic game and win without ending up like Allende? Is that the fate of all of those who dare to turn against the US political and financial</FONT></FONT> establishment?
Well, he could also end up living in South Africa, like Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Elio Cequea
Feico57@att.net
ecequea@gmail.com
Sasaye- Super Star
-
Nombre de messages : 8252
Localisation : Canada
Opinion politique : Indépendance totale
Loisirs : Arts et Musique, Pale Ayisien
Date d'inscription : 02/03/2007
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Jeu de rôle: Maestro
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