Posted on 09/24/2015 10:22:09 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said she is worried too many Americans want to insulate themselves from the Syrian refugee crisis and other conflicts around the world.
I have long said that Americans are the most generous people in the world. But we do have the shortest attention spans and, when it comes to global crisis today, I fear that too many people in the United States believe we can insulate ourselves from the worlds problems and leave it to the countries of the region and Europe to sort out, Albright said at the U.S. Institute of Peaces Beyond Refugees event.
The idea we can stand aside or wait for others to act is an illusion mocked by the lessons of history. It would be naïve to expect that a solution to this crisis will arrive soon or that when it does take shape, it will be implemented quickly and without further pain. But it will not come at all if we fail to uphold our own standards and values, she added.
Addressing Americas response to the crisis, Albright said the U.S. should not ask other countries to take in a significant number of refugees if it wont do the same.
I think in terms of the density you gave and those of us that fly across this country a lot theres a lot of space here. I do actually think that the United States needs to we cannot ask other countries to be taking on a burden if we dont do it ourselves, she said. I did quote the Statue of Liberty statement on purpose. I do think this is what we are about. I think there needs to be more public outcry about the fact that we have to share in responsibility for this.
Nancy Lindborg, president of the U.S. Institute of Peace, pointed out that the U.S. has spent about $4 billion on the civil war in Syria in addition to several billions of dollars of financial support to Jordan and Lebanon.
The U.S. has been a leader in providing the financial assistance. I think the bigger question is what is the role of the U.S. in seeking to really get at the roots of this and solving the Syrian crisis? she said. None of this is going to staunch the flow of people fleeing so its really looking far more seriously at the diplomatic approaches.
Albright, who served in the Clinton administration, encouraged the public to call their members of Congress about the issue. She said the Syrian refugee crisis would eventually get worse if the U.S. does not take action.
This is not a task we can accomplish alone but it is a responsibility that we cannot in good conscience ignore or refuse to accept, she said.
The refugee crisis hits home for Albright. Born in Czechoslovakia two years before Hitlers troops marched into Prague, Albright said she left with her family for England. She returned to Prague when she was 8 before the communists took over the region.
My family was forced into exile in a new and welcoming home, the United States of America, and I will never forget sailing by the Statue of Liberty on November 11, 1948. For much of my life Ive been described as a refugee, which is accurate, but in contrast to many who came to America before and after, my family was not a hardship case, she said.
We didnt have to escape through barbed wire. We didnt have much money but we did come on diplomatic passports, and so I cant pretend to know what its like to endure even a fraction of what so many millions of people are going through today, she added.
According to Secretary of State John Kerry, the U.S. plans to accept 85,000 refugees from around the world next year and 100,000 in 2017.
Albright said the U.S. and Russia should work together to address the Syrian refugee crisis.
I think we should work with Russia on Syria but we cannot forget what the Russians have done in Ukraine and it would be a mistake if we decided all of the sudden to forget all of that, he said.
To date, Congress has approved $500 million to train and equip about 5,000 rebels. The head of U.S. Central Command recently told [2] Congress only four or five rebels have been trained so far.
It is taking a bit longer to get things done, but it must be this way if we are to achieve lasting and positive effects, Gen. Lloyd Austin said.
According to multiple reports [3], ISIS has intercepted some of the U.S. weapons that were meant for Syrian rebels.
In September of 2014, PJ Media asked Albright if the Obama administrations decision to arm Syrian rebels could backfire in the future.
I hope not, because basically what has to happen is the president of the United States needs to have partners with us there. This is not this is their story. This is a regional story and obviously of great interest to the United States and I know that a lot of care has been taken in terms of figuring out which members of the opposition and they need to be a part of solving the problem and so I think its the right thing to do, Albright said.
Article printed from PJ Media: http://pjmedia.com
URL to article: http://pjmedia.com/blog/albright-flyover-country-shows-theres-room-for-more-refugees/
URLs in this post:
[1] Image: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Twdulp-u6ME
[2] told: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-34278233
[3] reports: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2014/10/21/u-s-accidentally-delivered-weapons-to-the-islamic-state-by-airdrop-militants-allege/
The war is long over, why didn’t she return to Prague?
“end” not “and”, dammit
LOL!!! Fantastic! Thanks.
No.
The end.
Shut up and go away.
Actually they still have one battle to fight.
According to Secretary of State John Kerry, the U.S. plans to accept “85,000 refugees from around the world next year and 100,000 in 2017”.
Not if Trump is elected.
Wyoming’s population is only 584,153.An Arab migration to Wyoming could create the first Sharia run state in North America. Legally.
Vote Trump
She can start by taking in 100 into her house.
House them in gracie mansion, the governor’s house, Albright’s house, etc.
They’ll change their tunes real quick.
Take a hulking young Muslim into your private home Madeleine.
I think in terms of the density you gave and those of us that fly across this country a lot theres a lot of space here.”
If she would DRIVE across this county, she’d see why people aren’t clamoring to live there.
If she would BUY some of the land across this country, she’d discover people aren’t allowed to live there.
Most of that “lot of space here” is very hard to live on. It’s hot & dry in the summer, and buried in deep snow all winter (and much of spring & fall). It’s a long drive to anywhere, it’s expensive to transport anything there, communications & power networks are sparse, etc ... and that’s not considering the high percentage which is rank wilderness (tall mountains, impassable terrain, parched deserts) nigh unto impossible to live in.
All that aside, vast tracts are owned by the government (!) which isn’t selling, much of that checkerboarded with private property, with much of the latter in logistically inaccessible tracts which you are by law not allowed to build residence on.
Mme. Ex-Secretary, kindly tell your current contemporary to put most of that BLM land up for sale (cheap), revoke the prohibitions on residing on one’s own property, and make ownership thereof contingent on foregoing all gov’t welfare handouts. Just like this nation started: you’re welcome to come in, available land is thataway for cheap, government involvement is no more than ensuring you don’t screw things up for others, and you survive by the sweat of YOUR brow and not that of others’.
There’s population density, and then there’s mental density. Albright is an accomplished practicer of the latter.
Jabba the Hut went to Korea? I did not know that.
FU, Mad Maddy Halfbright (and Halfbright is being generous.)!
Albright, just piss right off, you leathery old bat. If you absolutely insist on bringing those so-called refugees in, take them directly to one of the dying cities, like Detroit, and wall it off. Many parts of that place are a lot like what they’re used to anyway (no infrastructure, crumbling buildings, etc.) so they should feel right at home. Until they can pass proficiency tests in English, both reading and writing, and prove they can support themselves, they won’t be allowed to travel outside the wall and they will receive a subsistence level of support. No thriving on welfare allowed as we all know we have an glut of people living that way now. On second thought, no. Just no to letting these people in. We can’t afford the garbage clean up that will be necessary.
There may be plenty of physical space on which to dump these pieces of human refuse, but why can they not be just as easily dumped in Saudi Arabia or Afghanistan?
I mean, there is a lot of room there too, as the population density is low, and not much of the land is overloaded with environmental hazards.
Rather than DC or Martha’s Vinyard, how about an offshore island in the Aleutian chain up near Alaska, until they can be fully vetted? Or maybe the Dry Tortugas west of the Florida Keys?
I believe that was what Ellis Island was originally intended to be used for.
Brilliant! Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas will be taken by Mexico. Fill up the Mid West with Muslims who will form their own Caliphate. The North East will be taken by Canada. The South may remain independent until conquered by one of the other countries occupying the continent where the United States once governed.
FU. Stick them next to the coastal elites, only in DEEP BLUE zip codes. They want em.
Yea under Clinton bringing Somali;s really worked, I mean there has been no trouble and they have assimilated.
SARC
This is their chance of putting more muslim Dems in certain states to change the demographic.
BTW: even the very air is hard to breathe in much of that “flyover country”. I recently came back from a week in Colorado, feeling oxygen-deprived much of the time given the high altitudes (elevation 1 mile _minimum_).
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