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#31
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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- 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. 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. *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.] The thing is, though, that wars still happen between industrialized countries, and have for a long time. Even though they're economic losers, they still happen. Because they can bring political benefits, like more territory for the Big Man to rule or showing that your country is not to be trifled with. Because they can fulfill somebody's idea of national destiny. Because people do stupid things, don't consider the consequences that their actions might have years down the road, and get painted into corners. And any of those things could still happen between the U.S. and China. I devoutly hope they don't, because the one thing I do think you're right about is that such a war would very likely be ruinous for both sides and because I think wars in general are to be avoided, even if they're sometimes necessary. But saying that it can't happen is wrong, and dangerous because if we assume it can't happen we may not be vigilant enough to keep it from happening. So, with the above in mind: why, specifically, do you think that the U.S. and China are so economically interdependent as to render war between them impossible? -JTD |
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On Feb 25, 1:11 pm, " wrote:
On Feb 25, 4:08 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: I think Old Bush's "New World Order" could have re-vamped the UN, to unify the planet better., it's time has come. Ken Unify the planet under...? And what of those who would rather not be unified...? No Thanks. Dan Straightfoward question to Dan. Do you want your kids to shoot the other kids before discussing an issue? If you say "shoot 1st, ask questions later", is that a good way to resolve problems? Ken |
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On Feb 25, 4:45 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
On Feb 25, 1:11 pm, " wrote: On Feb 25, 4:08 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: I think Old Bush's "New World Order" could have re-vamped the UN, to unify the planet better., it's time has come. Ken Unify the planet under...? And what of those who would rather not be unified...? No Thanks. Dan Straightfoward question to Dan. Do you want your kids to shoot the other kids before discussing an issue? If you say "shoot 1st, ask questions later", is that a good way to resolve problems? Ken My kids all knew how to shoot by the time they were 5. What's your question? Dan |
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On Feb 25, 4:17 pm, Jeff Dougherty
wrote: On Feb 25, 3:41 pm, " wrote: On Feb 25, 2:42 pm, Jeff Dougherty It doesn't even have to be emotion, either- when you're leading a country, the economic is just one of the dimensions you have to contend with. Take the U.S. and Japan in the years just before WWII: Japan imported much more from the U.S. than she exported, and from a strictly economic point of view the best thing might have been to let Japan's campaign of conquest in Asia go on. Most of the things Japan was importing were manufactured goods as opposed to raw materials, with the exception of a few things like bauxite that weren't really present in the territories under attack anyway, so absent any U.S. interference it's likely that trade deficit would have increased, if anything, to feed Japan's war effort. From a strict making-money point of view, the thing to do would be to let Japan grab what it could- but the political consequence would have been accepting Japanese hegemony in Eastern Asia, which was unacceptable to the U.S. There are more things on heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in economics texts. -JTD Wait a second ... This ahistorical drivel needs to be corrected, and fast. WW2 wasn't simply a clash of Empire. Despite the best efforts of various revisionsists, the reality was that WW2 pitted various democracies (in spite of all the imperfections of each) against totalitarian regimes that posited racial superiority as validation of their claims. snip I think we may be in violent agreement here. :-) The point I was trying to make was that wars happen for many, many reasons, and that national leaders have to consider many, many different dimensions when they're making decisions. Reducing the entire thing to economics, as the poster I was initially replying to did, is a dangerous oversimplification. All I was doing with that part of my post is illustrating my point by looking at *one* of the other dimensions that led to war between the U.S. and the Japanese Empire in the Pacific. I did not mean to suggest that there weren't any others, or that politics alone could explain the war any more than economics could, or that the Pacific War was a "clash of Empire". (For one thing, it's a bit hard to have a "clash of Empire" when one party is in the process of giving up its empire in the area, as the U.S. was doing at the time WWII kicked off.) There are a lot of other dimensions that I could have picked, and many more if I wanted to look at the Japanese decision to attack the U.S. I was just making a point about the causes of war in general, and the dangers of looking at one particular factor as the end all and be all. As a side note, I would agree with you that anyone who says the U.S. and Japan were ideologically equivalent at the time simply hasn't done the reading. -JTD OK, thanks for the clarification. My WW2 reading was buttressed by my Father's experience (DEs and Subs in the Pacific). Dan |
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On Feb 25, 4:34 pm, Jeff Dougherty
wrote: *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. -JTD Not really. The Russians did a pretty good job of pillaging and looting on their merry way back west. The Hutu's and Tutsi's did their thing without an extensive logistical tail. The Eastern Bloc arms were all designed to feed NATO rounds, so on their way west they could capture NATO stockpiles and put them to use. I'm always wary of simplified explanations for/against War. As a professional soldier (once) and a mildly interested historian the more I learn, the more I am in awe of war's way of encompassing all the worst and best of humanity. Dan |
#36
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" wrote in
: 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 |
#37
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"Ken S. Tucker" wrote in
: 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. Got stuck in your outhouse again, eh? Bertie |
#38
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On Feb 25, 5:05 pm, " wrote:
On Feb 25, 4:34 pm, Jeff Dougherty wrote: *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. -JTD Not really. The Russians did a pretty good job of pillaging and looting on their merry way back west. Hmm, that's a counterpoint I hadn't thought about. Considering how worked over the USSR was during the war, though, I'd doubt they really came out ahead from a profit/loss point of view. Of course, that part of the war wasn't ever about economics from their point of view- it was about political survival, and making sure that they could never be threatened from that quarter again. (IMHO) The Hutu's and Tutsi's did their thing without an extensive logistical tail. Point. One could argue that they're not really functioning at a level much above the 18th Century armies, but that's not really true either. My thesis looks like it might have to go back to the drawing board. The Eastern Bloc arms were all designed to feed NATO rounds, so on their way west they could capture NATO stockpiles and put them to use. True, but could they really have sustained *all* of their operations from NATO stockpiles? Even if they could supply all of their ammo needs, would they have been able to capture enough food? POL? Clothing? Spare parts? You can certainly reduce your logistics headaches by looting, but I'd argue that expecting an army to sustain itself without requiring any real money spent at home by doing so in the modern age probably isn't going to work. On the other hand, I haven't served and I'm strictly an amateur historian, so I could be wrong. I'm always wary of simplified explanations for/against War. As a professional soldier (once) and a mildly interested historian the more I learn, the more I am in awe of war's way of encompassing all the worst and best of humanity. That's certainly true, and I hope I haven't come across as trying to simplistically explain war. My argument was that it's probably been a long time since somebody actually made a buck, so to speak, by going to war, and so (contra the OP) you have to look at dimensions other than the economic to see why wars happen. I may have to rethink that a bit in light of the examples you posted above, particularly with respect to warfare in relatively unindustrialized countries. Thanks for your service. -JTD Dan |
#39
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On Feb 25, 5:01 pm, " wrote:
On Feb 25, 4:17 pm, Jeff Dougherty wrote: On Feb 25, 3:41 pm, " wrote: On Feb 25, 2:42 pm, Jeff Dougherty It doesn't even have to be emotion, either- when you're leading a country, the economic is just one of the dimensions you have to contend with. Take the U.S. and Japan in the years just before WWII: Japan imported much more from the U.S. than she exported, and from a strictly economic point of view the best thing might have been to let Japan's campaign of conquest in Asia go on. Most of the things Japan was importing were manufactured goods as opposed to raw materials, with the exception of a few things like bauxite that weren't really present in the territories under attack anyway, so absent any U.S. interference it's likely that trade deficit would have increased, if anything, to feed Japan's war effort. From a strict making-money point of view, the thing to do would be to let Japan grab what it could- but the political consequence would have been accepting Japanese hegemony in Eastern Asia, which was unacceptable to the U.S. There are more things on heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in economics texts. -JTD Wait a second ... This ahistorical drivel needs to be corrected, and fast. WW2 wasn't simply a clash of Empire. Despite the best efforts of various revisionsists, the reality was that WW2 pitted various democracies (in spite of all the imperfections of each) against totalitarian regimes that posited racial superiority as validation of their claims. snip I think we may be in violent agreement here. :-) The point I was trying to make was that wars happen for many, many reasons, and that national leaders have to consider many, many different dimensions when they're making decisions. Reducing the entire thing to economics, as the poster I was initially replying to did, is a dangerous oversimplification. All I was doing with that part of my post is illustrating my point by looking at *one* of the other dimensions that led to war between the U.S. and the Japanese Empire in the Pacific. I did not mean to suggest that there weren't any others, or that politics alone could explain the war any more than economics could, or that the Pacific War was a "clash of Empire". (For one thing, it's a bit hard to have a "clash of Empire" when one party is in the process of giving up its empire in the area, as the U.S. was doing at the time WWII kicked off.) There are a lot of other dimensions that I could have picked, and many more if I wanted to look at the Japanese decision to attack the U.S. I was just making a point about the causes of war in general, and the dangers of looking at one particular factor as the end all and be all. As a side note, I would agree with you that anyone who says the U.S. and Japan were ideologically equivalent at the time simply hasn't done the reading. -JTD OK, thanks for the clarification. My WW2 reading was buttressed by my Father's experience (DEs and Subs in the Pacific). Hats off to him, then. You don't hear nearly enough about what a crucial difference the "Silent Service" made during the war years. Have you read Blair's _Silent Victory_? It's probably the best single history of U.S. sub operations in the Pacific during WWII, and if you haven't it's well worth the read. Just got reprinted a few years back, so you can even get a copy without promising someone your firstborn son. -JTD |
#40
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On Feb 25, 5:15 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
" wrote : 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! Dan |
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