arniegang wrote:K
I was really referring to acceptance by the general populous globally.
Lets take India for example. Please people i mean no offense here.
However much money/wealth/resources India has /likely to have, there will never be a day where India could ever been seen as any threat to up its stake into the "super power game".
A countries wealth has much more to it than the obvious. It is how a country survives on how it distributes its wealth. Lets take for example healthcare and state benefits.
In this respect there is already a huge divide between the US and UK and to some extent Canada and Aus. Now if we compare/transfer this to say India, the drain on the Indian national coffers would be huge. It is a false ideology to assume anything other than a like for like.
I havent even touched on "per capita income" mortality tables etc etc etc.
This is one reason why i say countries like India
Interesting points Arnie.
However, looking back at history - relative global strength has a habit of moving from continent to continent, peoples to peoples.
Looking at Europe and the near East, at one point the Greeks were the most powerful nation, then the Italians, now they both just local powers. Similarly Portugal, Spain and more recently the UK.
Go back only 200 years and look at the status of the US at that time. Lawlessness, un-tapped resources, rudimentary dwellings etc. Then look at who was the wealthiest nations around the world.
Go back 30 years and you could apply your arguments above about India to China. The place was economically defunct and 'made in China' was a derogatory term. People were defecting from China to the West. Now Western companies are clamouring to get into China and it is Chinese tourists that are visiting New York etc (ok, there is still economic migration.. but I am making a point of how quickly economic power can change).
India has the great advantage of intellectual strength - it is churning out engineers, doctors etc at a record pace. The wealth is not just 'trickling' back anymore, but being generated in the country in greater volumes- there is now a growing middle class there.
My despair, though, is for Africa and South America - there seems little prospects at the moment. Venezuela is making a good effort of breaking free from US imperialism, but it remains to be seen whether the reforms can improve the lot of the ordinary citizens.
Anyway - a great theoretical debate which I look forward to coming back to after Ramadan. I'm going to try and concentrate on the spiritual in the up coming month - see if I can break my addiction to this forum
Cheers,
Shafique