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#1
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Martin Hotze wrote in
: On Sun, 21 Aug 2005 07:29:48 -0400, Bob Noel wrote: and what are you (the USA) going to do with it? Advance/upgrade. Status quo leads to stagnation. Plus, this aircraft will allow for better survivability of the pilot. I don't know about you, but I like the idea of the pilot having improved odds of surviving a mission. almost nobody else invest this huge pile of money into such new developments. So you and your pilots will still stay as safe as you are now. you already can have world domination with the military arsenal you currently have. World domination isn't the purpose/mssion of the US military. no, not of your military. There is no logic reason for even more military power. see above. my point stays: there is no LOGIC reason. are your F22 (?) pilots falling out of the sky without any good reason? Or are they losing air combats (too often)? IMHO it is useless waste of money. but this is your money, not mine. #m When you become an American citizen then you can have the right to bitch about how we spend our money. Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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#2
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and what are you (the USA) going to do with it? you already can have world domination with the military arsenal you currently have. There is no logic reason for even more military power. Martin, If world domination was our objective, we could have probably accomplished that when the Soviet Union fell apart. (We might still be able to do that). I know I will never convince you otherwise, but the typical U.S. citizen is a decent human being who really does want world peace and wants to co-exist and work alongside other peoples. There are occurrences where some countries or rulers try to dominate others, such as the recent invasion of Kuwait by Iraq and a limited engagement is a viable option. We keep hearing that we are a "Superpower" and should be the world's policeman. Many if not most of us would prefer that other countries handle their own problems internally. No one that I know personally wants to have to resort to nuclear warfare. To answer your assertions, I believe that there is very good logic to keep developing weapons for limited engagements. Standing still with conventional weapon development will get us into a position where we have no other choice but the nuclear route. To keep this discussion on topic and aviation related: I know you get tired of having this thrown in your face but I also had a close relative who died in WWII trying to preserve your countries way of life . After that war did we come in and try and dominate your country? You can read about him he http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/mohiia2.htm scroll down to *GOTT, DONALD J. (Air Mission) I have a goal of visiting your country to learn more of it's rich history and people and to visit the area where my cousin lost his life. Would you be available as a guide to the Hattonville area? Joe Schneider 8437R ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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#3
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On Sun, 21 Aug 2005 08:59:30 -0500, "JJS" jschneider@remove socks
cebridge.net wrote: and what are you (the USA) going to do with it? you already can have world domination with the military arsenal you currently have. There is no logic reason for even more military power. Martin, If world domination was our objective, we could have probably accomplished that when the Soviet Union fell apart. true (We might still be able to do that). I know I will never convince you otherwise, but the typical U.S. citizen is a decent human being I met some Americans in the US. who really does want world peace let's hope it. and wants to co-exist and work alongside other peoples. the average American really doe not see much of the international stuff that is going on. and he is mostly not interested. (speaking of the average American). At least this was the impression I got. There are occurrences where some countries or rulers try to dominate others, such as the recent invasion of Kuwait by Iraq recent? and a limited engagement is a viable option. We keep hearing that we are a "Superpower" and should be the world's policeman. this was then. today many see the *official* USA way outside of the wolrd community. Maybe and hopefully this is only the *official* America. As long as I have this impression (and many of my friends share this viewpoint) I will stay away from this country, I won't feel save. I hope I am wrong and I know that the average American can't understand my and my friends' viewpoint. Many if not most of us would prefer that other countries handle their own problems internally. yes No one that I know personally wants to have to resort to nuclear warfare. To answer your assertions, I believe that there is very good logic to keep developing weapons for limited engagements. this might be right .. but as I am not a friend of weapons at all I can't share this aspect. Sure, there are always bad guys and one has to be protected ... this is sort of a conflict ... Standing still with conventional weapon development will get us into a position where we have no other choice but the nuclear route. there is always a choice. To keep this discussion on topic and aviation related: I know you get tired of having this thrown in your face but I also had a close relative who died in WWII trying to preserve your countries way of life . hm, that of my ancestors; but I have good sources that they didn't like the way they lived. It is rather complex to understand, even for folks here that have not lived in this time (like me). It must be harder to understand for foreigners. After that war did we come in and try and dominate your country? domination? not really. but you haven't done anything without seeking your own advantage (this was your good right, America was on the winner's side of the war). You can read about him he http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/mohiia2.htm scroll down to *GOTT, DONALD J. (Air Mission) sorry about the loss your family had. I have a goal of visiting your country Austria? to learn more of it's rich history and people and to visit the area where my cousin lost his life. Would you be available as a guide to the Hattonville area? where is Hattonville? France? England? Overflying your link it seems to be in France. Saarbruecken is close to the French border. I'd love to guide you when visiting my area (Tirol, Austria) - but there is little to nothing left re historic sites of WWII in our area. Joe Schneider 8437R #m -- The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident. That's where we come in; we're computer professionals. We cause accidents. -- Nathaniel Borenstein |
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#4
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where is Hattonville? France? England?
Overflying your link it seems to be in France. Saarbruecken is close to the French border. I'd love to guide you when visiting my area (Tirol, Austria) - but there is little to nothing left re historic sites of WWII in our area. Damn, Are you sure you're not French? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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#5
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Hi Joe!
"JJS" jschneider@remove socks cebridge.net wrote: I have a goal of visiting your country to learn more of it's rich history and people and to visit the area where my cousin lost his life. Would you be available as a guide to the Hattonville area? Hattonville is located Southeast of Verdun, France, thus quite a ways from Martin's location in Austria. I happen to live in the Southwest of Germany, about two hours by car (or 45 minutes by plane :-) from the Verdun area. Please let me know if I can be of any assistance in your travel plans. Many greetings, Markus Voget -- For email, substitute epost with web. |
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#6
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Hattonville is located Southeast of Verdun, France, thus quite a ways from
Martin's location in Austria. I happen to live in the Southwest of Germany, about two hours by car (or 45 minutes by plane :-) from the Verdun area. Please let me know if I can be of any assistance in your travel plans. Markus, Thanks for the wonderful offer. If and when I can afford the trip I may be in contact. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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#7
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On Sun, 21 Aug 2005 13:03:45 +0200, Martin Hotze wrote:
On Sat, 20 Aug 2005 18:52:39 -0500, "JJS" jschneider@remove socks cebridge.net wrote: The most amazing thing was watching the raptor fire missiles while the airplane was rolling very fast. I've never seen a jet do that. The ability to super cruise and the vectored thrust would make this the best fighter in the world without all of the electronic wizardry and stealth capability. and what are you (the USA) going to do with it? you already can have world domination with the military arsenal you currently have. There is no logic reason for even more military power. #m That's actually not true. Technologically, our primary fighters are on par with what is readily available around the world. And, let's not forget that the F16, F14, and others, are available on the world market. Let's not forget that Russia has their top technolgies on the market; which are on par with current US offerings. Heck, even European countries have some top notch technologies on the market. For now, the line of deliniation is a small gap is US technology, mostly by means of support infrastruture, and a large gap provided by superior training. Any nation is capable of closing the training/pilot gap; especially with Russia so willing to provide those services. The F-22 is designed to address tomorrow's world today, not the other way around. Do you know what the world holds in a decade from now? How about two? China is looking to upset the world both militarily and economically within the next decade. What will the world look like in two? China is not exactly the nicest guys on the block. People who say the world has no need for the F-22 need to stop looking down at their feet and try to look over the horizon. With the BEST of luck, the F-22 will be a huge waste of money. Remember, weapons systems serve two roles. One, lethality. Two, deterence. If the F-22 serves only a deterence role, it's paid back its investiment. From a technology perspective, China is growing rapidly. In less than a decade, China is now able to design and build their own CPUs which are on par with Intel's Pentium; much of which was reaped from technology publically available from places like the US and Europe. They are rapidly closing the technology gap to build something on par with the Pentium II. Their DSP (Digital Signal Processor) capabilities are rapidly growing as well. In case you don't know, DSPs are used for everything from basic radio to complex radar/sonar systems and even complex digitial encryption communication infrastruture. With available technology of Pentium II-class processors, China will finally be able to create super computers in mass which are on par with what the US had in the 70s, 80s, and even into the early 90s. Remember, the F117 was built using 1960s technology, most of which was done on a slide rule; thus the very odd shape. This opens the doors for all sorts of new technolgies; radar/sonar, stealth, high energy physics, new classes of encryption, new classes of decryption, new manufacturing technologies, higher quality military equipment, more powerful explosives, silent subs, etc....the list is practically endless...and they have no shortage of labor to build on what is already available in the market place (skills and both hard and soft technology). Lastly, let's take a look at some numbers. Ford spent a BILLION dollars to develop the Ford Tarus. In turn, they were able to spread their investment over many, many, many units (I don't recall the sales figures). The Tarus was developed in what, the early 90s? I don't know what this is in today's inflated dollar, but I do know that's a lot of bucks on something that is simple and VERY well understood. After all, the ICE and automobile are fairly well understood, even in the 90s. On the other hand, almost everthing in the F-22 is brand new, leading edge technology. The number of units on which they can spread their development cost is very low; in the hundreds. The technology that comes out of the F-22 program will in turn, go into new plane development. As a US citizen, I understand these are expensive. It does upset me that the project seems to be growing without bounds. Having said that, I do understand that the resulting technology will feed into other programs for decades to come. I also understand that their technology is helping to keep the entire world safe. Greg |
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#8
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"Greg Copeland" wrote That's actually not true. Technologically, our primary fighters are on par with what is readily available around the world. The F-22 is designed to address tomorrow's world today, not the other way around. Do you know what the world holds in a decade from now? How about two? China is looking to upset the world both militarily and economically within the next decade. What will the world look like in two? China is not exactly the nicest guys on the block. Well said. I agree with perty much everything you said. Well put. -- Jim in NC |
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#9
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Recently, Jay Honeck posted:
Looks like Lockheed's got another winner. (I just hope it isn't the last manned fighter aircraft...) It absolutely boggles my mind that those that can justify the massive expenditures on aircraft with absolutely no purpose are at the same time opposed to supporting NASA. Neil |
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#10
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Looks like Lockheed's got another winner. (I just hope it isn't the
last manned fighter aircraft...) It absolutely boggles my mind that those that can justify the massive expenditures on aircraft with absolutely no purpose are at the same time opposed to supporting NASA. Well, if we're going down *that* road, I must agree with you. The Raptor is an amazing, awe-inspiring aircraft, and I'm glad it's been built -- but I would have rather spent the money on a replacement for the Space Shuttle. Or a Mars landing. Of course, in 15 years, when China (or a nuclear armed Iran) is invading someone, I'll be probably be plenty glad we've got the F/A-22. Lyndon Johnson tried to have both "guns and butter" (Viet Nam and Apollo) -- and started our long, death spiral of deficit spending. Our current awful deficit can be traced directly to the 1960s (with a few years off in the booming '90s). Apollo lost out (as did all space exploration) when it became apparent that more Americans supported the culture of entitlement than supported the culture of exploration. Just look at the recently passed transportation bill to see the ultimate example of government waste and stupidity. Let's hope a future Congress can do something about the problem -- the guys and gals that are there now have shown that they clearly have no clue. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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