conversationpc wrote:MJM1959 wrote:Fear, healthy or not has no place in determining foreign policy. It is an emotion. Perhaps one of the more dangerous ones as it can lead to irrational behavior unless kept in check. I believe that there are certain people in the goverment and the media that continue to stoke the flames of fear, using it as a means to try and control people. As for myself, I believe that it is time for a little less fear and a little more common sense in dealing with the many problems that face this country.
Good, healthy fear leads to common sense.
That's your opinion and not a statement of fact. Again, I believe that people are used to being told that they should be afraid. They accept it without question. No one stops to take the time to examine what they are afraid of and why they are afraid or even if they should be afraid. A good many people in this country have crossed to line from a good healthy fear to just being scared shitless 100% of the time.
Getting back to the SCOTUS decision to provide Habeus Corpus rights to these detainees. Why should we be afraid of allowing these people to have access to what is considered my many to be a basic human right? Or are these rights something that we can turn off whenever we please? The Constituition was written as a means of governing the U.S. But the rights that are represented by that document should be applicable to everyone. Otherwise they are not worth the paper they were written on. Or are they good enough for the United States but too good for the rest of the world? That is my opinion and not a statement of fact. But... I'm sticking to it.
In the meanwhile, I will continue to be afraid of heights, maybe a hurricane blowing the shit out of my home or a multi-tasking SUV driver plowing over me becaue they were texting their BFF. But, I am not going to lose my mind over a couple hundred detainees having access to a lawyer. That is an irrational fear.