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#51
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"Ken S. Tucker" wrote in
: Hi Jeff, studied your post. On Feb 25, 1:34 pm, Jeff Dougherty wrote: On Feb 25, 4:08 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: On Feb 25, 11:30 am, Jeff Dougherty wrote: On Feb 25, 1:07 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: On Feb 25, 9:29 am, Jeff Dougherty wrote: On Feb 23, 1:04 pm, " wrote: On Feb 23, 12:45 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: I think war is usually a business mistake, nowadays. Ken Right, and that is always the overriding concern that trumps the war option, I suppose? Certainly that was the case in 1861, 1914, and 1939 -- years devoid of business interests. Every time that argument comes up, I'm more and more tempted to go digging through the college textbooks I have in storage until I find one reading that mentions a very compelling book, written by a well- respected economist, that was very popular in its time. It carefully explained how, due to the interconnected nature of international trade, widespread war was now impossible because it would call too much economic damage to everyone involved. Written in 1912. -JTD That's a case of too much power, not enough brains. 1% of those in control, say we must build 1000's of ICBM's because the other are guys are. ICBMs were involved in the buildup to World Wars I and II? Do tell. Yet, 99% of the people on both sides have not motive or desire to harm the other guys, apart from being told they should. Perhaps true. Even probably true. And almost certainly true of Americans and Chinese today, or most people all over the world for that matter. But war happened anyway. So what has changed in the past 60 years, or even the past 30, that prevents such a situation from devolving into war? JTD I'm lookin at history from 5000BC to the present. Mongols slaughtered 30 million chinese using a sword (not the same one), hence the sword is a weapon of mass destruction, that's why I think one should take care to the analysis of the 1000 ancedotal tactical battles, humans have fought. Okay, hang on. In your original post, you implied that wars weren't going to happen any more, because they would be a "business mistake", that the world had gotten too interdependent for a wider war. Others (including myself) pointed out that for most of human history, war has been a bad move, economically, and that in fact your thesis had been put forward early in the 20th Century just before the most devastating wars the human race has ever fought- Not really WW1 and 2 were sissy fights, historically serious war is totally genocidal. and that wars keep happening anyway, besides being really bad for business in general. In the post you replied to, I pointed those things out, and asked what you thought had changed in the years since that meant that this time, business concerns would trump out, and wars wouldn't happen. In response, you're invoking 5000 years of history, and calling us to analyze the wars that humans have fought. From the formation of city states (~5000BC) to the present, ~7000 years. Each empire believed "Might is Right", and War = Strength, including economical but that never happened, otherwise the world would be unified by force. The world can be unified but by Benevolent Capitalism, (according to our simulations). That's a non sequieter, but let's look at it for a second. The last time anyone could make a case that "war pays for war" between civilized states with a straight face was in the early 18th Century, when conscript armies under folks like Blenheim were merrily marching back and forth blowing the Hell out of civilized Europe. They spent most of their time "levying contributions", which is a nice way of saying "we marched into this state and forcibly stripped it of pretty much anything of value to feed and pay the troops". Since the armies didn't require a terrible lot of manufactured goods that couldn't be captured and since international trade wasn't a big deal at the time, this meant that an army in the field could more or less sustain itself indefinitely with minimal expenditure from home. Any territory it captured was more or less gravy for the homeland. As you can imagine, this led to some awfully long wars. I read a theory about Spain stealing gold etc. from America. Spain didn't need to develope a home based GNP and when the America's gold ran out, everyone they were purchasing goods from were far more economically more powerful, because they had a GNP, Spain had very little. *After* that time, though, the balance tips the other way. Sustaining an army in the field takes a lot of manpower, a lot of high-end manufactured goods, and a lot of mundane supplies like food and clothing- and you have to supply those on your own now, because armies have gotten big enough that you can't gather what you need by "levying contributions"/bank robbery on an international scale. All of that takes money, and lots and lots of it. All of this means that since (I would say) about the mid 18th Century, fighting and winning a war is almost always going to cost more money than any *economic* benefit you could get out of it. [All of this applies, of course, to wars between cultures with roughly equal technology. I haven't looked at the figures in detail, but it's entirely possible that some of the colonial wars that pitted breech- loading rifles against spears ended up being economic wins in the long run. Although conquest was generally one thing, pacification another.] I'm still trying to figure out why somebody attacked the Taliban, it wasn't my decision. Yes, you'd have the RCAF flying paper darts if it were up to you , though. Bertie |
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On Feb 25, 11:13 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
" wrote : On Feb 25, 10:11 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:7ffbdfc9-16bf-4444-bcaf- om: On Feb 25, 9:24 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:24f21d94-8e49-4e1b-9a96-b7dd8495c153 @m23g2000hsc.googlegroups.c om: On Feb 25, 5:15 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:e2c255ce-25e4-4a87-9a6a- m: On Feb 25, 2:30 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:aa1f5080-a55c-40e0-954a-647c765d1565 @u10g2000prn.googlegroups.c om: On Feb 25, 1:15 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in news:050125fe-1edc-4441- : That's a case of too much power, not enough brains. 1% of those in control, say we must build 1000's of ICBM's because the other are guys are. Yet, 99% of the people on both sides have not motive or desire to harm the other guys, apart from being told they should. What bout fuedin'? Bertie Now that's jes plain fun... You reckin? bertie A yup -- I'm in Pennsylucky -- we knows all abouts feudin'! Pennsylucky? OK... Lucky iffin you don't get shot by a stray 30-06, ya mean! Bertie I LOVE my 30-06... best all around cartridge, ever. Except for 105mm. No that will end a fued, right quick! Hmm, Can you smell the paper mill from where you live? Bertie yeah. I love the smell of a mill in the morning. Smells... Like..... Victory. So, you're an Altoid. I used to fly in there ( down the ridge) in a 310 full of cancelled checkes every day. Interesting airport! Bertie Actually, no... I'm south of Pittsburgh along the Mon, where the coal fires burn to keep the lights on. Not from here but it pays good. What's an altoid? OK, I know your area now. An Altoid is from Altoona, of course! Bertie Ah ha... Those poor people.... |
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On Feb 26, 7:10*am, " wrote:
On Feb 25, 11:13 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote : On Feb 25, 10:11 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:7ffbdfc9-16bf-4444-bcaf- om: On Feb 25, 9:24 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:24f21d94-8e49-4e1b-9a96-b7dd8495c153 @m23g2000hsc.googlegroups.c om: On Feb 25, 5:15 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:e2c255ce-25e4-4a87-9a6a- m: On Feb 25, 2:30 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: " wrote innews:aa1f5080-a55c-40e0-954a-647c765d1565 @u10g2000prn.googlegroups.c om: On Feb 25, 1:15 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in news:050125fe-1edc-4441- : That's a case of too much power, not enough brains. 1% of those in control, say we must build 1000's of ICBM's because the other are guys are. Yet, 99% of the people on both sides have not motive or desire to harm the other guys, apart from being told they should. What bout fuedin'? Bertie Now that's jes plain fun... You reckin? bertie A yup -- I'm in Pennsylucky -- we knows all abouts feudin'! Pennsylucky? OK... Lucky iffin you don't get shot by a stray 30-06, ya mean! Bertie I LOVE my 30-06... best all around cartridge, ever. Except for 105mm. No that will end a fued, right quick! Hmm, Can you smell the paper mill from where you live? Bertie yeah. I love the smell of a mill in the morning. Smells... * * *Like..... Victory. So, you're an Altoid. I used to fly in there ( down the ridge) in a 310 full of cancelled checkes every day. Interesting airport! Bertie Actually, no... I'm south of Pittsburgh along the Mon, where the coal fires burn to keep the lights on. Not from here but it pays good. What's an altoid? OK, I know your area now. An Altoid is from Altoona, of course! Bertie Ah ha... Those poor people....- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You're not too far from me. Is that a rural area or a city? What's a twentyish acre gentleman's farm over there going for? Sorry, sort of OT. Wil |
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On Feb 25, 10:59 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
Not really WW1 and 2 were sissy fights, historically serious war is totally genocidal. 50+ Million killed over 8 years is a "sissy fight"? From the formation of city states (~5000BC) to the present, ~7000 years. Each empire believed "Might is Right", and War = Strength, including economical but that never happened, otherwise the world would be unified by force. The world can be unified but by Benevolent Capitalism, (according to our simulations). Hunh? Which? SimCity? I read a theory about Spain stealing gold etc. from America. Spain didn't need to develope a home based GNP and when the America's gold ran out, everyone they were purchasing goods from were far more economically more powerful, because they had a GNP, Spain had very little. So you read something --- that's always a good reason to posit some unsupported theory on global economics, certainly. I'm still trying to figure out why somebody attacked the Taliban, it wasn't my decision. Regards Ken The United States "Attacked the Taliban" and overwhelmed the entire pathetic country in a matter of weeks. This because the Taliban were Muslim jihadists who harbored and supported those who attacked us on September 11th, when 2,974 people died --- 246 on four airplanes. Dan |
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"The3rdRail" wrote in message
... 1. QUIT 2. BE RICH 3. MOVE TO SOUTH DAKOTA 4. FLY ON BATTERIES I choose #2. |
#56
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![]() angry. When his job gets shipped overseas, and he has to speak to some incomprehensible idiot in India for tech support, he simmers. When Al Sharpton comes on TV, leading The job probably got shifted overseas because an "angry white man" was trying to improve shareholder value for other "angry white" men. |
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On Feb 26, 7:18 am, William Hung wrote:
You're not too far from me. Is that a rural area or a city? What's a twentyish acre gentleman's farm over there going for? Sorry, sort of OT. Wil This area (southeast of Pittsburgh) was once the coal and coke (cooked down coal) provider for the Steel Mills. Coke is no longer produced here, but the remnants of those days are everywhere, from old rail yards to rows of coke ovens. The area remains depressed (relatively), so there has been an effort to woo technology firms to help bolster the local economy. Most open land is owned and held until natural Gas is found. Then the money pours in while the pittance taxes go out. Good luck finding 20 acres. It's either 200+ or 1/4 acre -- very few McMansions around here. Dan |
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On Feb 26, 8:07*am, " wrote:
On Feb 26, 7:18 am, William Hung wrote: You're not too far from me. *Is that a rural area or a city? *What's a twentyish acre gentleman's farm over there going for? *Sorry, sort of OT. Wil This area (southeast of Pittsburgh) was once the coal and coke (cooked down coal) provider for the Steel Mills. Coke is no longer produced here, but the remnants of those days are everywhere, from old rail yards to rows of coke ovens. The area remains depressed (relatively), so there has been an effort to woo technology firms to help bolster the local economy. Most open land is owned and held until natural Gas is found. Then the money pours in while the pittance taxes go out. Good luck finding 20 acres. It's either 200+ or 1/4 acre -- very few McMansions around here. Dan Too bad, I was thinking of a cabin and small strip for a STOL. Wil |
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On Feb 26, 8:13 am, William Hung wrote:
On Feb 26, 8:07 am, " wrote: On Feb 26, 7:18 am, William Hung wrote: You're not too far from me. Is that a rural area or a city? What's a twentyish acre gentleman's farm over there going for? Sorry, sort of OT. Wil This area (southeast of Pittsburgh) was once the coal and coke (cooked down coal) provider for the Steel Mills. Coke is no longer produced here, but the remnants of those days are everywhere, from old rail yards to rows of coke ovens. The area remains depressed (relatively), so there has been an effort to woo technology firms to help bolster the local economy. Most open land is owned and held until natural Gas is found. Then the money pours in while the pittance taxes go out. Good luck finding 20 acres. It's either 200+ or 1/4 acre -- very few McMansions around here. Dan Too bad, I was thinking of a cabin and small strip for a STOL. Wil As long as you're ok landing up or down 25 degree slopes, you're good to go! Nuttin but hills here. The local airport (KVVS) is right at the foot of a ridge that does fun things to any winds from 030- 170. Can you say "Hold on Martha -- we're gonna die!!!" Dan |
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On Feb 26, 8:17*am, " wrote:
On Feb 26, 8:13 am, William Hung wrote: On Feb 26, 8:07 am, " wrote: On Feb 26, 7:18 am, William Hung wrote: You're not too far from me. *Is that a rural area or a city? *What's a twentyish acre gentleman's farm over there going for? *Sorry, sort of OT. Wil This area (southeast of Pittsburgh) was once the coal and coke (cooked down coal) provider for the Steel Mills. Coke is no longer produced here, but the remnants of those days are everywhere, from old rail yards to rows of coke ovens. The area remains depressed (relatively), so there has been an effort to woo technology firms to help bolster the local economy. Most open land is owned and held until natural Gas is found. Then the money pours in while the pittance taxes go out. Good luck finding 20 acres. It's either 200+ or 1/4 acre -- very few McMansions around here. Dan Too bad, I was thinking of a cabin and small strip for a STOL. Wil As long as you're ok landing up or down 25 degree slopes, you're good to go! Nuttin but hills here. The local airport (KVVS) is right at the foot of a ridge that does fun things to any winds from 030- 170. Can you say "Hold on Martha -- we're gonna die!!!" Dan- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Oh wel, It was wishful thinking in any case. Not quite there yet financially. Wil |
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