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On Feb 25, 2:42 pm, Jeff Dougherty
wrote: On Feb 25, 12:52 pm, " wrote: On Feb 25, 12:29 pm, 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 Messy divorces are proof that emotions trumps economic interest every time. Dan Maybe not *every* time, but it only has to happen some of the time for Bad Things to result. 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. Of course the US had Jim Crow and segregation at the time -- but evidence of inconsistency in application of a fundamental principal -- that All men are endowed by their creator, etc. -- does not invalidate the principal. Of course the Allies included the Stalin's dictatorship. But the enemy of my enemy is my friend. Remember -- the USSR joined the allies *after* Hitler invaded Russia in 1940. Read Paul Fussel and a host of others who realized when they opened the concentration camps (in Europe and in Asia) that theirs was a crusade -- not a mere squabble over territory. And anyone who says different is itchin for a fight. Dan |
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