One thing that gets in the way of understanding foreign policy as voters is that only a very small chunk of the population has access to all of the facts. The only information the average person has access to is unclassified, while the rest is understandably guarded closely due to things like "national security."
Assuming that this arrangement is mostly inevitable, it's kind of hard to discuss foreign policy in a way that intends to be balanced and comprehensive. We have very little ability to verify if the story told by our officials is accurate or if we're just being led to a conflict that profits the elite. In many cases, it could be both.
So, I guess my question for this thread is... is there any real point to discussing foreign policy given the fact that 99.99% of us only have a small fraction of the relevant info available?
Assuming that this arrangement is mostly inevitable, it's kind of hard to discuss foreign policy in a way that intends to be balanced and comprehensive. We have very little ability to verify if the story told by our officials is accurate or if we're just being led to a conflict that profits the elite. In many cases, it could be both.
So, I guess my question for this thread is... is there any real point to discussing foreign policy given the fact that 99.99% of us only have a small fraction of the relevant info available?