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Prairie Boy's avatar

Before we spend trillions on a scaled up defense we need to discuss whether the US wants to, and will be able in the future, to be a global hegemon with military dominance right up to China's beaches. After watching the U.S. blow trillions of dollars on misguided efforts to find a military solution to the Middle East's tribal problems. I have zero confidence in the U.S. military/foreign policy "blob" at this point.

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AS's avatar

What is the US getting for the money it spends? I couldn’t tell from this piece what the primary issues were, or how related the separate issues were. Is the primary issue that our defense industries need to import to many things from China or other places, so that currently with all our spending we are able to produce enough stuff, but we just can’t produce enough only domestically and with close allies? Is it that there’s too much waste in the defense spending for some of the reasons you mentioned above? Are higher wages in the US one of the reasons we spend so much?

I thought this was a good piece that runs counter to some commonly held beliefs, and I think it could have helped those of us who don’t pay as much attention to defense stuff to have a little more details about the disconnect between the apparent very high spending in the US compared to other countries and the inability to produce enough materials.

Are progressives less enthusiastic about military employment then they should be? The healthcare, pension, college/post grad tuition payments line up well with a lot of progressive goals, and for many conservatives it’s one of the main forms of big government they seem to tolerate. Similarly the industrial build out could target regions that would benefit from new industry which would bring blue collar jobs that progressives and “populist” conservatives like to push for. I doubt that support for the things your advocating for would be well received by such a coalition, but perhaps the public sentiment could push it that way.

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