Lurnmoshkaz t1_j24romf wrote
Reply to comment by Mountain_Offer1348 in G7 tell Taliban to reverse ‘reckless and dangerous’ ban on female aid workers by misana123
Re-settle them where? Afghanistan has a population of 40 million people lol.
ToughQuestions9465 t1_j24suc7 wrote
Unfortunately most of them are ok with state of affairs. Resettling ones wishing to leave would not be all that difficult.
Gekokapowco t1_j2553x7 wrote
the world at large traditionally does not handle refugee relocation well. We should, but I think it'll be difficult.
I__LOVE__LSD t1_j25e7hm wrote
There are some good examples of mass refugee relocation though. Vietnamese were virtually nonexistent in the US until the post-war refugee surge, and they have since settled and integrated quite well. Median household income for Vietnamese Americans is now $72k, which is well above the average, and even above the $66k for White Americans.
Obviously income is not the end all be all number for how well it was all handled, but I think it's a pretty decent proxy.
NewPCtoCelebrate t1_j25v159 wrote
I don't really see a flood of Afghans settling in anywhere near as well as Vietnamese. The Vietnamese that left Vietnam were educated, well off, and cultural values aligned with success.
AllAmericanSeaweed t1_j27myp4 wrote
I don't think that the Vietnam War is a great example of good refugee evactuation
Many of those "rescued" children were kidnapped from their homes.
WikiSummarizerBot t1_j27mzva wrote
>Operation Babylift was the name given to the mass evacuation of children from South Vietnam to the United States and other western countries (including Australia, France, West Germany, and Canada) at the end of the Vietnam War (see also the Fall of Saigon), on April 3–26, 1975. By the final American flight out of South Vietnam, over 3,300 infants and children had been evacuated, although the actual number has been variously reported. Along with Operation New Life, over 110,000 refugees were evacuated from South Vietnam at the end of the Vietnam War. Thousands of children were airlifted from Vietnam and adopted by families around the world.
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ToughQuestions9465 t1_j25bcl7 wrote
Yes, just not anywhere near 40-million-difficult.
arlaarlaarla t1_j2633jv wrote
We've had one yes, but what about second refugee crisis?
DreamMaster8 t1_j27pm2b wrote
Because for every refugee walking away from this there's also one that is just take advantage and bring their outdated value with them.
Les us have a value test for everyone and il be ok with it.
38384 t1_j25uzn3 wrote
Stop talking out your ass. As someone who has worked there and is in close contact with people I've worked with there, the state of affairs is beyond horrendous for almost the entire population. Almost nobody likes it, except for the top Talibs in power.
KinzuuPower t1_j26imh4 wrote
They had all the means to resist the taliban, if they didn’t it’s because they didn’t want.
38384 t1_j26jova wrote
They actually did. 3 months of heavy fighting, thousands of fighters killed on both sides, civilians including women even volunteered to defend against Taliban. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Taliban_offensive
The international headline was that Kabul fell in one day without a bullet fired. It's very misleading not to take into account all the events that led to it in the months prior to it. Unless you were closely following the war, you wouldn't know of the lengthy battles fought in the provinces and border crossings.
AuroraFinem t1_j26v8hi wrote
No, it’s not just the headline. The afghani military gave up very quickly and surrendered in many areas. The harder battles fought were almost exclusively civilians picking up arms or small regional areas who wanted to remain independent from the taliban.
The military and defense fell faster than even the most conservative international estimates for how long they would hold out and it’s the main reason why we were scrambling at the end to get out before Kabul and the airport were entirely overrun. We had planned to have at a minimum months longer until they got anywhere near the capital.
Lubadbitches t1_j26wy81 wrote
The worlds top military tried to help for 20 years and couldn’t
38384 t1_j2fs83i wrote
To be fair they did weaken the Taliban considerably in 2001 and had the upper hand for the next few years until the fuck ups started that led to Taliban growing again and eventually winning. If Bush didn't have the "we don't negotiate with terrorists" mindset, they could've made peace with the weakened Taliban in 2001 and potentially prevent the 20 year headache.
Strident_Hood t1_j26tkiq wrote
3000 people died (including both civilian and military deaths). Given that they had 300,000 troops that should have been fighting for their country’s survival, this is quite a small number of casualties. Evidently they didn’t put up much of a fight at all..
krneki12 t1_j289zyf wrote
If you want to know how much efforts it takes to have a free and Democratic country, look at Ukrainians.
Nothing less will do when you deal with fanatics.
The Afghan had their chance and they gave up. Now they will have to deal with the consequences of their actions as no one will go there and die for them.
Relevant_Monstrosity t1_j2901xc wrote
They folded like pussies in months. You have to fight for your rights! A nation of 40 million people enslaved with only a few thousand dead -- with American backing? These people are craven and deserve no nation at all. Their modus operandi is child rape and opium abuse. Living under harsh Islam is their just returns.
Contrast with the Ukrainians.
[deleted] t1_j2cjeld wrote
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foki999 t1_j25nuie wrote
This is honestly just opening your arms up to widespread terrorism if anything too unfortunately
APsWhoopinRoom t1_j283u9g wrote
What else are we supposed to do? Invade again? Unfortunately, this seems to be what Afghanis are OK with.
foki999 t1_j285hgw wrote
The real answer is nothing unfortunately.
Yourmamasmama t1_j268xdu wrote
No, the vast majority WANT the current state of affairs. Only a very small minority living in the cities were anti-taliban. People have to remember that Afghanistan was a stone age society 20 years ago. We cannot force idealogical change.
rexo12 t1_j28p4wb wrote
>Afghanistan was a stone age society 20 years ago
Yeah no it wasn't.
Yourmamasmama t1_j28z8rh wrote
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Afghanistan#Contemporary_era_(1973%E2%80%93present)
A war lasting over 30 years in addition to the fact that they have kept the same societal values since the middle ages.
rexo12 t1_j2bgigm wrote
You seem to be getting your millennia confused
FlairUpOrSTFU t1_j27dusj wrote
I'm gonna go ahead and say 50% of the rural population also is anti Taliban (women). But they have no power.
Yourmamasmama t1_j27s52w wrote
I wouldn't be so sure about that. If you watch some of the early 1900s interviews of women talking about the right to vote, a surprising number were anti-suffrage. An entire system of oppression cannot be maintained without participation from both genders. Maybe 50% of young women in Afghanistan are anti Taliban but women in general are probably not anti Taliban.
THAErAsEr t1_j2645sp wrote
Hahaha. 95% of all countries would deny all help and the other 5% would face national backlash because their population hates foreigners.
Lilybaum t1_j263qtm wrote
What? The majority of the country is facing extreme food shortages, how are they ok with the situation there?
Environmental_Cake97 t1_j257414 wrote
Well, I’m a female in the US and I have a spare room. If someone could get an Afghan refugee to me there would be free accommodation, free food, and paid work to do when they felt up to it. I would dearly love to get a woman out of there and to safety.
The problem is all the goddamned bureaucrats between her and me.
I think assisting the ones who want to leave is all we can do. A people have to sort out their own internal problems because our attempts at intervention make things worse. Anyone who Nopes out of it is welcome at my place though. If they like dogs anyway.
I can’t solve everyone’s problems. I can’t bring out a whole family. I can assist one person, which is what I can do. Preferably female because I am female and that is my preference. You might take a male or a whole family.
If everyone did what they could do the Taliban would soon run out of victims. Doing nothing because you would prefer to solve a different problem is exactly that, doing nothing.
FiendishHawk t1_j25b2gh wrote
It’s not bureaucrats, it’s the entire society. Most people would not want to go without their family and you probably can’t fit her, her husband, 3 kids, cat and mother-in-law in your spare room.
mossiemoo t1_j25h67u wrote
In the meantime reach out to local women's shelters, there are many women in need of help to escape abusive situations. You can still transform the lives of many women, they just won't be Afghan. ♥️
Manicplea t1_j261dn7 wrote
Think globally act locally. It's easy to look at a news story of a far off place and say I would totally help them! Well that's great that you have a desire to help because there are neglected seniors, foster kids without homes and abused young folks of all kinds who could use a big brother/sister right where you are right now that would be thrilled with your help and require a lot less red tape. Start there!
tamurareiko t1_j25bzg3 wrote
That’s very nice of you!
Environmental_Cake97 t1_j25fgy6 wrote
Well it would be if there wasn’t a ton of officials to wade through first. I have no idea how to extract someone. It’s all good intentions right now, which achieves nothing :(
GoBeyondAte t1_j25c2kg wrote
I've noticed all you guys only want to get the women out and forget about the boys and men who are also suffering
mitchconner_ t1_j25e8oz wrote
Quit it with that shit dude. They aren’t suffering nearly as much as the women, who are being persecuted, and having their lives uprooted, and basic human rights revoked, just simply because they were born women. Men aren’t being told they will no longer have access to education. Men aren’t forced to cover their bodies head to toe. Men aren’t forced into a life of servitude just because of their sex.
Sure, there are men and boys who I’m sure are struggling. But they aren’t facing persecution simply because of their sex.
Get out of here with that dumbass shit.
Robodarklite t1_j25icqp wrote
While I agree with most of what you say, young boys do have a rough time over there as well, being male doesn't give them immediate protection, they get sold off to slavery and used for sexual purposes, check out bacha bazi for more information. Again, not disagreeing with what you said, just that if it's anything like other third world countries being male alone doesn't protect you, connections to powerful people are what keep you safe.
[deleted] t1_j25nb6v wrote
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[deleted] t1_j25c31w wrote
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38384 t1_j25ve2g wrote
Pakistan, since they bear a big chunk of responsibility in Af's affairs /s
McMacHack t1_j26llgc wrote
We can just pick a tiny Country somewhere with people already living in it then just start depositing them there and funnel lots of Military Aid and hardware to them for decades.
Mountain_Offer1348 t1_j26t0vh wrote
Very, very few actively wish to leave—“lol”
HolyFuckerony t1_j25kw89 wrote
Just send them to Germany. My country will take them gladly.
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