ZenMode
Inconceivable Member
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- 3,757
He's basically a tall, obese Ron Popeil.He lacks the prerequisite for shame - honor - so it should be expected.
He's 2 minutes from peddling purses on QVC.
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He's basically a tall, obese Ron Popeil.He lacks the prerequisite for shame - honor - so it should be expected.
start spending it on Americans FDR and LBJ style.
Curiously, defense spending by percentage reached its peak under FDR (that WWII thing) dropped after the war but remained high until the end of Vietnam and been dropping fairly steadily since. Both of those had a greater % of defense spending than currently. That not to say we don't need to refocus but those aren't great examples.
Do you ever research things before you post? If you do, why don't you look at the change in corporate and farm subsidies? I suspect there's more serious fat there that can be trimmed than in overseas defense spending without harming the country.
Trump cologne smells like onions and bankruptcy.I imagine a lot of us Trumpers are going to have a "Trump Christmas" with all the products he's selling. My guess is that I'm going to get a Trump watch, Golden sneakers, cologne and cuff links for my Christmas. My kids will think it's hilarious.
For a few years, actually.. I brought up their defense spending because you strongly implied that their social programs were at the expense of defense spending.
I don't think anyone goes to any particular effort to "win" an argument against you.
I hope you enjoy the gifts and have a Merry Christmas.I imagine a lot of us Trumpers are going to have a "Trump Christmas" with all the products he's selling. My guess is that I'm going to get a Trump watch, Golden sneakers, cologne and cuff links for my Christmas. My kids will think it's hilarious.
The defense spending we most need to cut are damned near untouchable. That's those weapons systems and stuff that Congress designates to their constituents to justify their donations from defense contractors in their states. The international stuff? Most of it is a good investment. Israel? Not so much but damned near a political fact of life.But when I say I want to "stop spending that money to protect the Estonias of the world and start spending it on Americans FDR and LBJ style" I'm implying that I want to spend it on social welfare for Americans. But if you think that somehow strongly implies that I want to increase defense spending like FDR and LBJ, I'm glad I could correct your misinterpretation.
So if you're done with your straw men, what choice do you think we should make? Do you want to decrease defense spending so that we could spend that money on other priorities, and if you do, where do you want to cut?
Cool—the billionaire needs your money.I imagine a lot of us Trumpers are going to have a "Trump Christmas" with all the products he's selling. My guess is that I'm going to get a Trump watch, Golden sneakers, cologne and cuff links for my Christmas. My kids will think it's hilarious.
So (1) you would advocate essentially the same approach that the Biden Admin took with Ukraine but that most republicans including Trump criticized Biden for taking and (ii) Trump would not do this; he wouldn’t understand why Lithuania would be important to US interests.To be clear, I'm not for leaving NATO. I am for shrinking our NATO commitments to the most important allies.
If Russian aggression threatens a place like Lithuania, an Ukraine style conflict funded by us and our allies serves our interests better than a commitment to put forces into combat.
It was expected and the market response so far has been yawn. Still in a much more comfortable range.Inflation ticked back up. going to be interesting
Yes. Absolutely. The Biden approach of funding other people to fight our largest enemies is the way to go.So (1) you would advocate essentially the same approach that the Biden Admin took with Ukraine but that most republicans including Trump criticized Biden for taking and (ii) Trump would not do this; he wouldn’t understand why Lithuania would be important to US interests.
Also, Ukraine is far more important than Lithuania and all other Eastern Europe states except for Poland. As a natural buffer state, and given its size and population, it is a clear and logical site for fighting Russian aggression.
The defense spending we most need to cut are damned near untouchable. That's those weapons systems and stuff that Congress designates to their constituents to justify their donations from defense contractors in their states. The international stuff? Most of it is a good investment. Israel? Not so much but damned near a political fact of life.
What really needs to be addressed is farm subsidies, corporate welfare and tax breaks for oil companies. There's a lot of bloat there that is not in the best interests of the nation.
Other than you're equating NATO spending with their entire defense spending and that you're ignoring how much more of the world we're spending that money on than NATO is, and you're making real sense. I expect we're getting good value for that money when it comes to the Ukraine and NATO.I'd be all for cutting corporate welfare but it's not going to get you anywhere near where you need. Corporate welfare is about $100 billion per year depending on how you define it. Tax breaks for oil companies are about $2 billion and farm subsidies are about $20 billion and there's some overlap with the corporate welfare number.
Defense spending is more than eight times that at $850b per year. Reduce that from the 3.5% of GDP that we currently spend to the around 2% that our better NATO allies in Europe spend and you're making real progress.
So if we're going to start making some hard decisions, we can't just say cut government waste or corporate welfare or NASA or whatever other peanuts approach people advocate and never get done. We have to cut defence, cut entitlements, raise taxes or keep running up the credit card. Now which one do you want to do?
I certainly mentioned that our defense spending includes non-nato commitments before in this thread so not sure how I'm ignoring it.Other than you're equating NATO spending with their entire defense spending and that you're ignoring how much more of the world we're spending that money on than NATO is, and you're making real sense. I expect we're getting good value for that money when it comes to the Ukraine and NATO.
The problem is that it's the money to private contractors, sweetheart deals for constituents and things that most need to be cut that are the most likely to be hands off.