We give more than the next two countries combined. We could give more, but we already give way more in absolute dollars than any other country and those numbers don't count private giving.
I had originally asked "what is your point?" but I get your point. We could give more. Any country could always give more. The fact of the matter is that we don't have to give anyone diddley and we still contribute $26 billion dollars a year worldwide, not counting military spending, or private giving.
No, that's not my point. My point is that just saying 'the US gives more than anyone else' leaves out a big part of the story.
Coming in 21st or 22nd out of the richest 22 in giving as a percent of GOP is part of the story too, and it's not 'everyone can give more' blather.
That's a rather shallow way to look at it. The United States not only furnishes countries with money for weapons, but provides months of hands-on training. We teach other countries law enforcement methods, counter-terrorism methods, anti-narcotics methods, not to mention all the joint military training that goes on.
Yes, we have an interest in doing this. It brings countries closer to us, it improves global security, etc.
I guess that stuff doesn't count though because military aid isn't aid. Even though it is.
No, it's not, your way is. It's a little different when you realize the US doesn't always give military aid to the 'good guys', sometimes it's 'the bad guys' against the people.
That our military aid can often be seen as a substitute for our waging wrongful war on civilians for our own gain.
You need a history lesson that badly? Off the top of my head just a sampling over a century of the recipients of our military aid:
Batista, Chiang Kai-Sheck, Duvaliers, Saddam, Marcos, Pinochet, Diem, Trujillo, Mubarak, the Shah of Iran, Qadafi, Contra terrorists, D'Aubisson...
There are a lot more, including a lot who are not household names but fit the same pattern, including in places like Africa.
And our aid also included training thug security forces in repression, in torture...
Go read "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" for some idea of the type of activities our 'aid' was involved in, and then get back to me.
By ODA measure, Israel isn't in the top-10 for aid from the United States. Egypt is, but so are the Palestinian territories, Sudan, South Africa, Colombia, and Ethiopia. Most of that aid is categorized as education, health and population or as other social infrastructure.
Israel has long been the #1 recipient of the US government foreign 'aid'.
404 - war machine of repression serving our own interests not found.
Hit 'reload' after you read a little.
What is your point? Our military was one of the first responders to the crises and the country contributed a large amount of money to the disaster relief. To top it off, most of that aid money that was sent to global disaster like the tsunami or the Haiti earthquake was delivered by.... the United States.
The point isn't that the US doens't do a lot of good; we do. It was what I said, that this blanket 'we're the biggest giver' leaves out a lot of the story.
I notice you bring up the tsunami again without any response to my point that our initial response was $15 million until there was a lot of protest to raise it.
It was our country that flew in the vast majority of aid to Haiti and it is our country that is continually a first-responder to disasters and winds up providing logistical expertise and infrastructure that no other nation is capable of offering.
Yes, and we're also the country that has (our Republicans, when in power) repeatedly removed their elected President because we didn't like him.
Europe actually gave more aid than the US to Haiti.
Other nations help too - Cuba has sent hundreds of doctors *outside* of a disaster, and they were part of the first responders in the Earthquake.
Venezuela, too, has an aid program outside the earthquake, as Wiki lists:
Haiti has benefited from a solid economic partnership with Venezuela. This recently-forged friendship between Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez and Haitian president Rene Preval has resulted in various economic agreements.
After a visit by Chavez in March 2007, Venezuela and Cuba announced a $1 Billion fund to develop energy, health, and infrastructure in Haiti. As part of this deal, 4 power plants will be constructed in Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haitien, and Gonaives, increasing the country's power production by 160 MW by the end of 2007
An oil refinery will also be constructed in Haiti, with a production capacity of 10,000 barrels of oil per day. In the meantime, Venezuela has increased the amount of petroleum it provides Haiti to 14,000 barrels per day, at the same terms afforded to ALBA member countries - these terms are more favorable than the Petrocaribe terms.
That stuff doesn't count though, because it's not money directly spent on aid... even though without our infrastructure most of the giving done by the rest of the world would be less effective and arrive at a slower pace. Surely that counts for something?
Yes, it counts. It doesn't make the blanket 'the US is the largest giver' blanket statement not leave out a lot of the story.
No, Norwegians don't "give five times as much as Americans per person," their government does.
Whose money is that?
Like I said above, not counting private donations is ridiculous, considering how much money Americans give to charity every year. Plus, I'm glad the UN has recommendations, but what does it matter what their "ideal" number is for giving? Again, I'm not disputing your point that the US could give more than it does as a percentage, I'm disputing the dismissive tone your article takes with the fact that we give twice as much as the next country in raw dollars alone and that we provide critical global infrastructure which is a freaking thankless task.
And I agree the US gives the most in absolute dollars and sometimes 'provides infrastructure' (having a military with spending equal to the rest of the world combined and a global military empire of several hundred bases around the globe does allow for being in a position to offer some logistics). It's the simple blanket statement that the US 'gives more than any other country' without any mention of more of the story, like the rank by size of economy, that's the issue.
Your article's point is that we should give a higher percentage of our money to other countries. My ORIGINAL point is that we give a dickload more than most countries (in both absolute and relative terms).
21st or 22nd out of the 22 richest nations as a percent of economy isn't 'more than most countries', unless you count a lot of poor countries.