Yes, the Alan Greenspan school of economics would have everyone negotiate from a position of strength. The economics of the past would have us continue having the nation-state as the prime economic mover combined with its standing armed forces and military-industrial complex as the heart of the unit. The economics of the future would have apolitical, at least as much as possible, international corporations as the prime economic movers with simple trade and transactions between people of the world as the heart of these units. The economies of the nation-states will become so intertwined that armed conflict will not only be undesirable on the part of all it will be anathema to continued prosperity. The age of the military-industrial complex is coming to a close within the next 50 years. What the US is doing in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and many other places, is not a war for oil but a war for control or economic influence in states that will be important in the building of the new economic ties in the future. It is the economics of the past, of the gun.Seth wrote:That's hardly anywhere near the truth. Whatever the economic situation in Europe and elsewhere, the US is still the nation that other nations call out to when they are oppressed by their belligerent behaviors and that's because our military is simply the best military anywhere on the planet. Your claim assumes that the US having a superior military is "belligerent behaviour" when in point of fact it's anything but that. Unlike many other nations, including the UK, the US does not empire-build or take over countries it defeats in combat. In fact, exactly the opposite happens. We win the war and then spend even more of our money rebuilding the nation for the benefit of the people (not the despotic rulers) who live there. Like the 44 million dollars we spent to build a gas station in Iraq.Făkünamę wrote:LoL Seth. You haven't changed a bit.
Because the US is set to become part of the economic third-world in the future economy which will be largely predicated on the rapid-freight-transit of the 'New Silk Road' being built by China which will connect the economies of Asia, India, Russia, and Western Europe making them almost inseperable while the best the US can hope for is an agreement with Russia that will see the Bering Strait being bridged.. but that's advanced economics for futurists. The short version is the US is being a bully and trying to bull their way into the future from the barrel of a gun. Mao would find it most amusing.Seth wrote:And, as it happens, nations know full well that the better armed their military forces are the less likely it is that a belligerent nation will try to attack them. It's called "deterrence" and "peace through superior firepower." Why do you think the US spends so much of it's wealth building the best-armed and most formidable army on the planet?
So you see how armament leads to belligerent behaviour at the expense of society as a whole to, ostensibly, benefit the individual whether it be at the level of persons or nations.Some people need to end up in jail over that one.
Which of course has nothing whatever to do with personal self defense and the right to keep and bear arms to facilitate it. It's simple logic that when one faces an enemy, be it a belligerent nation or a violent criminal, one's best prospects for survival and avoiding harm come from having defensive (or offensive) weapons superior to those of your attacker. In no case should anyone ever be less well armed than one's criminal attacker, that's just bad strategy and tactics.
There is a better way forward from individual armament and a state of eternal vigilance as the price of personal well-being and that is a way of open-palm diplomacy and trade, or put simply, co-dependence with anyone and everyone in your society. Stress reduction alone is worth the effort, not to mention the boon in recouped productive energy that can be put to more exploratory and developmental use than simple armament development and production. We don't need Jesus.
