Quote:
Originally Posted by Colonel Flagg
That's all well and good, but without doctors, nurses and knowledgeable staff for the hospitals or engineers to maintain the roadways (and adequate security for both) we'll find that all our good intentions go for naught. Plus, if we do all the work, with our contractors and our equipment, then leave - what has changed really? We have a desperately poor society with a really good hospital and some cool roads. How long do you think that hospital or those roadways are going to be useful in that situation.
We're right now trying to do this in Iraq. How is that working out?
My point stands - teach the people to solve their own problems their own way. Give them the tools to allow them to make their own decisions about how to go about fixing their country. Knowledge is power.
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Things like paved roads and hospitals that don't pile the dead in the hallways are things that might attract foreign investment which can lead to many jobs and opportunities for the people. And there are plenty of missionary doctors and nurses that I'm sure already worked in Haiti.
Also we didn't make the taliban in the 80s. They didn't exist in the 80s. The taliban formed out of the fundamentalists schools that the mujaheddin set up during soviett occupation.