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This sounds horrible, sorry.
We need borders because people are different with different and incompatible values. Good fences make good neighbours isn’t just a pithy saying, it’s a strong statement about the need for people to respect each other’s boundaries.
Look at the state of the US right now. It’s a horrific clash of incompatible ideologies. It would be much better for everyone involved if the US split up and people on both sides of that divide went their separate ways.
I’m at a point right now where I’m beginning to think the internet was a mistake that has undone so much progress in peace and civility. The internet accelerates divisions and allows extreme ideologies to grow and fester. It’s awful.
Technology is not inherently evil, its how its being used.
For Example: Technology allows my parents to talk to our relatives across the world, where as letters would've taken months to get across the ocean. Its not even just words, if you have a good camera, you can even see each other in HD.
Internet allowed the spread of the video that documented George Floyd's Murder. The internet has solved cold cases of crimes. The internet brought down Nepal's corrupt government. The internet provided safe spaces for LGBT+ people. The internet provided discussion forums for many TV shows, especially niche ones where you have no one geographically close to you to discuss, and niche video games too. There are a lot of entertaining and educational youtube channels.
Talking to people across borders allow you to develop a more global perspective, instead of viewing the world solely from your small city/town.
So we should just let people from harmful cultures abuse children or women?
Because it worked out so fantastically well when the US invaded Afghanistan, right?
So we shouldn't even try?
To play world police? Hell no.
Afghanistan was a peaceful country until Soviet influence led to a communist coup that overthrew the government in 1978. Ever since then Afghanistan has had near-endless conflict as different factions (internal and external) have wrestled for control. The Taliban itself, first known as the Mujahideen, was armed and supported by Ronald Reagan’s government.
It’s a textbook example of outsiders ruining a country’s natural course of history and development. You can find the same story in Iran, much of Central and South America, and Africa. Foreign influence creates more conflict and suffering than it prevents.