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When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure.
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On January 06 2011 14:38 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 14:32 InvalidID wrote:On January 06 2011 14:25 Superiorwolf wrote: The spending on DoD is clearly way too much, and since conservative platform is cutting spending, I don't see why we don't cut in this sector. The United States is not threatened by anything, the chance of a major attack is basically zero, and as such it is really unnecessary to have the excessive budget for defense that we have. Ron Paul says that the United States has to stop massive spending on DoD and imperialistic overseas expenditures and I agree with him completely.
Edit: As Phoenix says above me, we haven't seen a massive threat in 65 years. A good reason why we haven't seen a major threat in 15 years(I would call the soviet union a fairly major threat, we were close to global thermonuclear war on many occasions), is our defense spending. We don't magically have the worlds most powerful army by spending nothing, and defense technology is not acquired over-night. Non operational DoD spending has already been cut majorly. The DDG-1000 program was scaled back to a few ships. The F-22 program was majorly scaled back. The next generation bomber programs were canceled. The future warrior systems programs were delayed. I don't know what more cuts you can ask for? Pretty-much all the money is going into replacing things that are so old they can no longer be retrofitted, and active operations. My family, and many families of my friends in the area work in the defense sector. Defense research is getting massive cutbacks already. It is much harder to cut back the size of a standing army overnight, and it is also extremely dangerous to cut back on task forces and operational military. However, the cutting of defense research has the most profound and lasting effects on our ability to stay in power as the #1 military. Remember, china has way more people, and a bigger standing army. If anything, more money needs to be going into DoD research. It creates jobs and it helps secure our position as the globally dominant military. Also, it's far less money than people think. We could spend 10x what we do on military research and development and it'd be a fairly small overall budget increase. There's a limit to how useful some of these projects can be and pork barrel spending has been associated with some defense spending.
A question that begs to be asked is that in this post-Cold War world of vast stockpiles of nuclear weapons and globalized economies: How important is a conventional army?
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On January 06 2011 15:04 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote: SNIP The real point is that we spend a good bit to keep ourselves safe, but we clearly can spend a lot more. People should look at history and see that we're well within norms to spend money on national safety at these levels currently.
I agree whole-heartedly with this point, in spite of my disagreement with how you portrayed the Tea Party earlier as something other than a Republican front.
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On January 06 2011 14:52 Krikkitone wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 14:38 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote: If anything, more money needs to be going into DoD research. It creates jobs . BAD, EVIL ARGUMENT... All government spending creates "jobs".... even a person on unemployment has the "job" of showing up and saying that they were looking for work. Arguably defense spending pays people for doing something slightly useful. The issue is how useful it is. Especially when military superiority is threatening out economic superiority (excess borrowing or taxes required to pay for it)
Well, you're right on some level.
HOWEVER, in this particular case there is one niche that military spending does excel in over private sector. Military contracting for classified level work can only be funded by the gov't. The private sector is not allowed to do some things, nor is there a big demand for them). In this case increases military R&D funding actually does yield a net increase in jobs.
In EVERY SINGLE OTHER CASE you are correct though.
edit:
I should clarify. Military R&D creates unique jobs for a unique demand. The funding could in theory be spent elsewhere and still create jobs. However, in all other situations private funding could create those same jobs. In this way military R&D is not "wasted" money taken from the private sector and thrown into bureaucracy.
However, some poster above me has mentioned a tie to pork spending in the defense budget. I wouldn't exactly call it pork, but there is definitely a large amount of waste spending due to bureaucracy in general. This I cannot defend, and it has to be weighed vs the benefits of the unique job sector R&D provides for. No such thing as a free lunch =[
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On January 06 2011 15:11 thehitman wrote: When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure.
And if the US cut entitlement spending by 5-15% it would have the same effect on the budget.
However, I do think the idea of abandoning a conventional military is a good idea Replace with
-Nukes to fight Nation states
-"Police Infantry" for fighting non-nation state groups in weak nation states (with solid air/drone support)... However this would still be very expensive... as it would require multiple well trained+equipped individuals.
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On January 06 2011 15:19 Krikkitone wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:11 thehitman wrote: When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure. And if the US cut entitlement spending by 5-15% it would have the same effect on the budget. However, I do think the idea of abandoning a conventional military is a good idea Replace with -Nukes to fight Nation states -"Police Infantry" for fighting non-nation state groups in weak nation states (with solid air/drone support)... However this would still be very expensive... as it would require multiple well trained+equipped individuals.
A conventional military is required for many reasons:
Occupation and assistance: We cannot give aid to our allies or give aid in foreign disasters without a conventional military. We also cannot actually man our holdings in other parts of the world. If we want to push back China out of South Korea, we cannot do that with nukes.
Nukes = gg:
You cannot rely on nukes as your only deterrent. No nation wants to commit to using them. If we have no conventional army, we have no way to deter enemeis from taking small bites at us repeatedly. We cannot respond to such aggression with nuclear force, so we'd be forced to take a loss for no reason. In addition, nukes are an awfully heavy solution to any war, and even a war hawk is going to be cautious about using one ever.
Tactical strikes:
It is really hard to take out a specific terrorist camp without leveling a city with a nuke. You need conventional forces to take out key targets and perform small scale assaults. In the end, if you wanted to only rely on nukes you'd just be blanketing a country with them to take out every military target you need to take out. That's no way to win a war (unless it's against zerg).
Edit:
It's like trying to defend all your expansions with nukes, and hit nydus worms in your allies' bases without hurting them with nukes. Try it sometime and tell me how that one goes. =D
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On January 06 2011 15:19 Krikkitone wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:11 thehitman wrote: When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure. And if the US cut entitlement spending by 5-15% it would have the same effect on the budget. However, I do think the idea of abandoning a conventional military is a good idea Replace with -Nukes to fight Nation states -"Police Infantry" for fighting non-nation state groups in weak nation states (with solid air/drone support)... However this would still be very expensive... as it would require multiple well trained+equipped individuals.
Hypothetical war with North Korea: nuke them. What an awful foreign policy.
Unfortunately, nobody wants to even touch entitlements because of the political environment today, as they say "talk is easy".
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On January 06 2011 13:59 Lefnui wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 13:58 Froadac wrote:On January 06 2011 13:56 Lefnui wrote:On January 06 2011 13:53 furymonkey wrote: Simply put, USA is much richer than rest of the world, so they also need to spend much higher amount to protect their assets. That is a 100% baseless notion. It makes sense to a certain extent. We have more stuff, so we can spend more to protect it. I think a better argument is because we disclose all our defense spending and about no other countries do we actually spend less than it would seem. (Still too much IMO) It is absolutely ridiculous with not a hint of logic behind it. How are our assets being threatened? How is our military spending protecting our assets? Sorry but "we got more stuff so we need more stuff to protect our stuff" isn't an acceptable argument.
There actually is an interesting theory, supported by some compelling correlations that could imply the Iraq war was purely about trading oil in USD versus Euro's, and future energy blockading of Pakistan via regional control of Eurasian pipelines . You could Google it to get many sites but I will list a few below ,
www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Iraq/Iraq_dollar_vs_euro.html -/
(this one was written awhile ago but gives a decent brief history)
http://www.hellenesonline.com/go/2010/02/dollar-vs-euro-weapons-of-mass-destruction/
(this one was a little more current )
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On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:19 Krikkitone wrote:On January 06 2011 15:11 thehitman wrote: When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure. And if the US cut entitlement spending by 5-15% it would have the same effect on the budget. However, I do think the idea of abandoning a conventional military is a good idea Replace with -Nukes to fight Nation states -"Police Infantry" for fighting non-nation state groups in weak nation states (with solid air/drone support)... However this would still be very expensive... as it would require multiple well trained+equipped individuals. A conventional military is required for many reasons: Occupation and assistance: We cannot give aid to our allies or give aid in foreign disasters without a conventional military. We also cannot actually man our holdings in other parts of the world. If we want to push back China out of South Korea, we cannot do that with nukes. I disagree... we could definitely push China out of south Korea with Nukes... or at least the threat of nukes. provided we gave sufficient warning to China before they moved into South Korea.
A full conventional military action between nuclear powers is likely to become a nuclear war anyways.
A nonnuclear power would definitely be deterred.
On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:
You cannot rely on nukes as your only deterrent. No nation wants to commit to using them. If we have no conventional army, we have no way to deter enemeis from taking small bites at us repeatedly. We cannot respond to such aggression with nuclear force, so we'd be forced to take a loss for no reason. In addition, nukes are an awfully heavy solution to any war, and even a war hawk is going to be cautious about using one ever. "Small bites" that consist of conventional enemy forces could definitely be countered by nukes
On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:
It is really hard to take out a specific terrorist camp without leveling a city with a nuke. You need conventional forces to take out key targets and perform small scale assaults. In the end, if you wanted to only rely on nukes you'd just be blanketing a country with them to take out every military target you need to take out. That's no way to win a war (unless it's against zerg).
If the enemy is attacking in a non conventional way, ie guerilla forces/terrorists.... then conventional forces are not what you want, you want those "Police Infantry"... people that know which 'civilian' to shoot, and the way to have them shot.
Basically any Country using conventional military forces can be safely handled with nukes Any Country using nukes can Only be safely handled with nukes
Organizations (including countries) using non conventional warfare such as terrorism/guerilla warfare should be handled differently... and a conventional military isn't what is needed in that case. What you need is a militarized version of a police force.
Hypothetical war with North Korea: nuke them. What an awful foreign policy
Why?... if it has been previously stated that that would be our response... The "local ally" South Korea would still have their own conventional forces.
You wouldn't necessarily only have ICBMs either... and you wouldn't have to drop them all at once either...one per day until the survivors surrender.
Both the "Nuclear" portion and the "Police" portion of the military would have many things similar to current conventional forces.... "Nuclear" would need: fighters/nuclear bombers/carriers/subs for more tactical nukes on minor conventional powers "Police" would need armored transports (in land, air, and sea), gunships, drones
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On January 06 2011 15:52 Krikkitone wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:On January 06 2011 15:19 Krikkitone wrote:On January 06 2011 15:11 thehitman wrote: When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure. And if the US cut entitlement spending by 5-15% it would have the same effect on the budget. However, I do think the idea of abandoning a conventional military is a good idea Replace with -Nukes to fight Nation states -"Police Infantry" for fighting non-nation state groups in weak nation states (with solid air/drone support)... However this would still be very expensive... as it would require multiple well trained+equipped individuals. A conventional military is required for many reasons: Occupation and assistance: We cannot give aid to our allies or give aid in foreign disasters without a conventional military. We also cannot actually man our holdings in other parts of the world. If we want to push back China out of South Korea, we cannot do that with nukes. I disagree... we could definitely push China out of south Korea with Nukes... or at least the threat of nukes. provided we gave sufficient warning to China before they moved into South Korea. A full conventional military action between nuclear powers is likely to become a nuclear war anyways. A nonnuclear power would definitely be deterred. Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:
You cannot rely on nukes as your only deterrent. No nation wants to commit to using them. If we have no conventional army, we have no way to deter enemeis from taking small bites at us repeatedly. We cannot respond to such aggression with nuclear force, so we'd be forced to take a loss for no reason. In addition, nukes are an awfully heavy solution to any war, and even a war hawk is going to be cautious about using one ever. "Small bites" that consist of conventional enemy forces could definitely be countered by nukes Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:
It is really hard to take out a specific terrorist camp without leveling a city with a nuke. You need conventional forces to take out key targets and perform small scale assaults. In the end, if you wanted to only rely on nukes you'd just be blanketing a country with them to take out every military target you need to take out. That's no way to win a war (unless it's against zerg).
If the enemy is attacking in a non conventional way, ie guerilla forces/terrorists.... then conventional forces are not what you want, you want those "Police Infantry"... people that know which 'civilian' to shoot, and the way to have them shot. Basically any Country using conventional military forces can be safely handled with nukes Any Country using nukes can Only be safely handled with nukes Organizations (including countries) using non conventional warfare such as terrorism/guerilla warfare should be handled differently... and a conventional military isn't what is needed in that case. What you need is a militarized version of a police force.
Then what was Vietnam? Why didn't we just use nukes? How do you fight something like that without conventional troops?
Also the US does not have a policy of using nukes against non nuclear threats just because we can. I don't think that's about to change.
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On January 06 2011 15:58 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:Show nested quote +On January 06 2011 15:52 Krikkitone wrote:On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:On January 06 2011 15:19 Krikkitone wrote:On January 06 2011 15:11 thehitman wrote: When the new congress cuts military spending it will be a good sign. Otherwise all these new legislation's are crap.
If the USA are to survive and all non politically engaged economists say so, they must stop the wars.
If the USA pulled out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Columbia it would cut the expenditure by about 15%
If USA closed all their military bases and returned all soldiers home it would cut 25% of the expenditure. And if the US cut entitlement spending by 5-15% it would have the same effect on the budget. However, I do think the idea of abandoning a conventional military is a good idea Replace with -Nukes to fight Nation states -"Police Infantry" for fighting non-nation state groups in weak nation states (with solid air/drone support)... However this would still be very expensive... as it would require multiple well trained+equipped individuals. A conventional military is required for many reasons: Occupation and assistance: We cannot give aid to our allies or give aid in foreign disasters without a conventional military. We also cannot actually man our holdings in other parts of the world. If we want to push back China out of South Korea, we cannot do that with nukes. I disagree... we could definitely push China out of south Korea with Nukes... or at least the threat of nukes. provided we gave sufficient warning to China before they moved into South Korea. A full conventional military action between nuclear powers is likely to become a nuclear war anyways. A nonnuclear power would definitely be deterred. On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:
You cannot rely on nukes as your only deterrent. No nation wants to commit to using them. If we have no conventional army, we have no way to deter enemeis from taking small bites at us repeatedly. We cannot respond to such aggression with nuclear force, so we'd be forced to take a loss for no reason. In addition, nukes are an awfully heavy solution to any war, and even a war hawk is going to be cautious about using one ever. "Small bites" that consist of conventional enemy forces could definitely be countered by nukes On January 06 2011 15:31 [Eternal]Phoenix wrote:
It is really hard to take out a specific terrorist camp without leveling a city with a nuke. You need conventional forces to take out key targets and perform small scale assaults. In the end, if you wanted to only rely on nukes you'd just be blanketing a country with them to take out every military target you need to take out. That's no way to win a war (unless it's against zerg).
If the enemy is attacking in a non conventional way, ie guerilla forces/terrorists.... then conventional forces are not what you want, you want those "Police Infantry"... people that know which 'civilian' to shoot, and the way to have them shot. Basically any Country using conventional military forces can be safely handled with nukes Any Country using nukes can Only be safely handled with nukes Organizations (including countries) using non conventional warfare such as terrorism/guerilla warfare should be handled differently... and a conventional military isn't what is needed in that case. What you need is a militarized version of a police force. Then what was Vietnam? Why didn't we just use nukes? How do you fight something like that without conventional troops? Also the US does not have a policy of using nukes against non nuclear threats just because we can. I don't think that's about to change.
Well the US has never said they Won't use nukes against a nonnuclear threat... they never said they would though.
And Vietnam was the failure of a conventional force v. a guerilla war. The "Police" portion would be handling that... and would be very similar to conventional forces... but would have to be much more infantry centered, and equipped/trained in a totally different way.
But that is how they should be structured, not around fighting battles, but at killing/capturing criminals in incredibly hostile territory... in both Iraq and Afghanistan we are not at war with any governmental organizations.... so we are not dealing with conventional war.
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The fail was a stimulus that didn't create a new carrier group, stopped production on f-22, and failed to create any jobs. Young people are hurt the most in this economy, so a stimulus that paid unemployed people to exercise would have been better.
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I don't know how this became a discussion of the merits of a military armed only with nuclear payloads, but try to consider that military as an extension of foreign policy and you may see how utterly inflexible it is in its applications and benefits. It is essentially only going to maintain deterrence. When applied to live targets it will create environmental externalities, unprecedented ill will, and a new precedent of applied nuclear arms as a policy tool, multiplying the consequences in the future. Imagine a situation where an ailing hegemon is now seen as an imminent threat by all other states, some of which are armed with instant genocide weapons that the hegemon itself has declared open season in using.
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OMG guys, I can't bear the though of having a balanced budget, and a monetary system that doesn't get to print money for their friends with no accountability. The world will be in chaos!
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On January 06 2011 16:19 EchOne wrote: I don't know how this became a discussion of the merits of a military armed only with nuclear payloads, but try to consider that military as an extension of foreign policy and you may see how utterly inflexible it is in its applications and benefits. It is essentially only going to maintain deterrence. When applied to live targets it will create environmental externalities, unprecedented ill will, and a new precedent of applied nuclear arms as a policy tool, multiplying the consequences in the future. Imagine a situation where an ailing hegemon is now seen as an imminent threat by all other states, some of which are armed with instant genocide weapons that the hegemon itself has declared open season in using. I'm almost laughing at the ridiculousness of a situation like that, yet people actually come up with these ideas?
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To the guy who said the Democrat "era" was only two years, they were in control of Congress since 2006.
I think that the free market can allocate money better than the government, plain and simple.
If government spending creates jobs, then what happened with the stimulus? I know you will argue "pulled us back from the brink blah blah blah", but honestly, the bill was just a trillion dollar pork bill. I still don't think they have spent most of it. Wonder why that is, huh.
Idk, the liberal arguments for most things don't compute with my brain for some reason. It seems that they all want "class warfare" and "poor vs. rich" mentalities about everything. I honestly don't want "rich" people to be taxed more. I work for a small business run by two older guys (construction company), and you think taxing them more will help them hire more and expand??
Helping the poor is another issue for me. Why should the government do it? Do you really think African-American's poverty demographics have shifted in the past 50 years? They have probably gotten worse. Its almost like the Dems want to tell them (although more covertly, obviously) "Hey, guess what guys, vote us in, and we will pay you to not work!" Pretty sweet deal if you can get it I guess.
So basically, what I'm saying is....make government smaller. The people will make things right (if we can/deserve to), not the government. I'm just praying everyone with an "R" by their name doesn't blow it this time. Seems like we have a younger/more libertarian leaning group than in year's past. I'm counting on people like Marco Rubio, Paul Ryan, Allen West, etc. to do what they promised. I will fight them tooth and nail if they don't.
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On January 06 2011 16:27 Scruffy wrote: To the guy who said the Democrat "era" was only two years, they were in control of Congress since 2006.
I think that the free market can allocate money better than the government, plain and simple.
If government spending creates jobs, then what happened with the stimulus? I know you will argue "pulled us back from the brink blah blah blah", but honestly, the bill was just a trillion dollar pork bill. I still don't think they have spent most of it. Wonder why that is, huh.
Idk, the liberal arguments for most things don't compute with my brain for some reason. It seems that they all want "class warfare" and "poor vs. rich" mentalities about everything. I honestly don't want "rich" people to be taxed more. I work for a small business run by two older guys (construction company), and you think taxing them more will help them hire more and expand??
Helping the poor is another issue for me. Why should the government do it? Do you really think African-American's poverty demographics have shifted in the past 50 years? They have probably gotten worse. Its almost like the Dems want to tell them (although more covertly, obviously) "Hey, guess what guys, vote us in, and we will pay you to not work!" Pretty sweet deal if you can get it I guess.
So basically, what I'm saying is....make government smaller. The people will make things right (if we can/deserve to), not the government. I'm just praying everyone with an "R" by their name doesn't blow it this time. Seems like we have a younger/more libertarian leaning group than in year's past. I'm counting on people like Marco Rubio, Paul Ryan, Allen West, etc. to do what they promised. I will fight them tooth and nail if they don't.
That was one of the most logical and well reasoned posts I've seen on these forums.
/thread?
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On January 06 2011 16:24 NATO wrote: OMG guys, I can't bear the though of having a balanced budget, and a monetary system that doesn't get to print money for their friends with no accountability. The world will be in chaos!
Hey, don't you know those unions deserved more money than everyone else.
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