YellowKing wrote:I've been one of the biggest critics of Obama's foreign policy on the entire board, and even I think Drumpf would be worse.
Maybe today isn't the best day, but some day I want to explore this.
Not that you were a critic of Obama's foreign policy, I'm fine with that. But as I get older, I find myself being a lot more aware of the difference between what I think and what I know - and in the case where I legitimately have no basis to "know" something, to be a little more lenient of other viewpoints (at least in so much as me being personally opposed to them).
I've pontificated a lot on these boards about foreign policy in the past - but the reality is that I have virtually no qualifications at all towards having an informed opinion. I mean, I read stuff - but there are plenty of times where I have to wonder - who the F am I to judge "yay" or "nay" on this guys opinion? And if I end up in the "yay" camp, I'm really just parroting someone else's opinion. It's not my own educated opinion, because I'm not a foreign policy expert.
I mean, yeah, I *think* that Trump would be an epic disaster in terms of foreign policy because he sounds like he knows even less than the average citizen, and the average citizen doesn't know jack shit (about almost any complex topic). But do I know that? I'm no Rip, expert extraordinaire in all topics under the sun. How can I hope to "know" all of these things?
And if I just think, and don't know, maybe I should keep that in mind when talking with others and be a bit less forceful in my language?