Quote:
From Universal Mind
There is no sense of negotiation with their people anywhere in their minds. And yes, the decision to go to war is made very lightly by dictators. They are more afraid of other countries than they are of their people, and that keeps them in much better check than otherwise.
This is, I'm afraid, a generalization. Some dictators have a loyal following, others do not. Some are more afraid of other countries, some are more afraid of their own military. Caesar was killed by his own Senate, after all, and Saddam rose to power in a military coup. President Musharraf of Pakistan is too afraid of an insurrection to attack terrorists in his country.
Quote:
From Universal Mind
Do you have even the slightest fear that the United States, Canada, Britain, Japan, Australia, or France is going to invade your country? If you don't live in a terrorist state or some other type of dictatorship that is threatening one of those countries majorly and very unjustifiably, you have nothing to worry about. But imagine the world without those countries, unless you live in one of them (In which case imagine your country has no military.), and question how much you would trust Syria, the Taliban, the Hussein regime, the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, North Vietnam, North Korea, Lebanon, and Libbya not to invade your country for sinister reasons. Do you see the difference?
There is no economic benefit for any of the current crop of democracies to attack any other democracy. Does that mean a democracy would not be aggressive if there was? If I were the leader of a democracy with an abundance of vital resources, such as oil reserves, but no military, I would be afraid of military aggression by democracies and tyrannies alike. Ostensibly, democratic nations could move soldiers into the country to "protect" it from dictators(as the U.S. does), then peacefully enforce an economic servitude. Their reasons would be no more sinister than the dictators, only more subtle, cheaper, and more politically palatable to their people. I do see a difference.