Comments by "LancesArmorStriking" (@LancesArmorStriking) on "Bloomberg Television" channel.

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  7.  @frednicholson  Bahahaha, your grandfather was a wise man. Maybe you should listen to him for once. Explain to me how you, as an individual, "trying harder!" is supposed to conquer a cartel in your country. And while your release valve theory- known to the rest of us as brain drain- may be true, that doesn't absolve the U.S. of fault for starting and continuing this crisis. Bear in mind Augusto Pinochet was only overthrown in 1990. Almost every single person in Chile alive today remembers a time when the U.S. had backed a dictator in their own country. This isn't "ancient history." It's the United States opposing democracy as recently as the dawn of the Internet. How long ago was that? 29 years. Still wanna ask "how long ago was that?" Look to Haiti. The men who led the coup d'etat there in 1991 were trained by the CIA. Or Indonesia, in 1998. The president was ousted by the IMF, backed by the U.S., for trying to stabilize his country's currency, following a financial crisis that was lead largely by U.S. corporations laundering money and defrauding the government. Or Libya in 2011. How are they doing now? Should the rebel fighters stop and consider that they shouldn't blame the U.S. for what it did to them, 8 years ago? What about the hospitals and schools in Yemen that were bombed a few months ago by U.S. bought planes, sold to the Saudis with knowing intent? Should they just take responsibility for their laziness? This isn't even a forth of the list. You simply don't realize how much farther along the world would be without U.S. interference. It's been so common that it fades into the background, people forget why it happened, and instinctively blame the people in that country. It's not their fault. It's yours.
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