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polly7

(20,582 posts)
Sun Apr 24, 2016, 02:10 PM Apr 2016

Military spending is the capitalist world’s fuel

By Pete Dolack
Source: Systemic Disorder
April 21, 2016

The U.S. maintains military bases in 80 countries, and has military personnel in about 160 foreign countries and territories. Another way of looking at this question is the number of foreign military bases: The U.S. has around 800 while the rest of the world combined has perhaps 30, according to an analysis published in The Nation. Almost half of those 30 belong to Britain or France.

Asking others to pay more is endorsing imperialism

Is there some sort of altruism in the U.S. setting itself up as the gendarme of the world? Well, that’s a rhetorical question, obviously, but such self-deception is widespread, and not just among the foreign-policy establishment.

One line of critique sometimes heard, especially during this year’s presidential campaign, is that the U.S. should demand its allies “pay their fair share.” It’s not only from Right-wing quarters that phrase is heard, but even from Left populist Bernie Sanders, who insisted during this month’s Brooklyn debate with Hillary Clinton that other members of Nato ought to pay more so the Pentagon budget can be cut. Senator Sanders said this in the context of pointing out the superior social benefits across Europe as compared to the U.S., but what it really implies is that militarism is justified.


So why is U.S. military spending so high? It’s because the repeated use of force is what is necessary to maintain the capitalist system. As top dog in the world capitalist system, it’s up the to the U.S. to do what is necessary to keep itself, and its multi-national corporations, in the driver’s seat. That has been a successful project. U.S.-based multi-nationals hold the world’s highest share in 18 of 25 broad industrial sectors, according to an analysis in New Left Review, and often by commanding margins — U.S. multi-nationals hold at least a 40 percent global share in 10 of those sectors.

A partial list of U.S. interventions from 1890, as compiled by Zoltán Grossman, a professor at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington state, lists more than 130 foreign military interventions (not including the use of troops to put down strikes within U.S.). Consistently, these were used to impose U.S. dictates on smaller countries.

At the beginning of the 20th century, U.S. President William Howard Taft declared that his foreign policy was “to include active intervention to secure our merchandise and our capitalists opportunity for profitable investment” abroad. Taft overthrew the government of Nicaragua to punish it for taking a loan from a British bank rather than a U.S. bank, and then put Nicaragua’s customs collections under U.S. control and handed two U.S. banks control of Nicaragua’s national bank and railroad. Little has changed since, including the overthrows of the governments of Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), Brazil (1964) and Chile (1973), and more recently the invasion of Iraq and the attempted overthrow of the Venezuelan government.

Muscle men for big business

We need only recall the statement of Marine Corps general Smedley Butler, who summarized his highly decorated career in 1935, in this manner:

“I spent thirty three years and four months [in] the Marine Corps. … [D]uring that period I spent most of my time being a high-class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for bankers. In short, I was a racketeer for capitalism.”


Full article: https://zcomm.org/znetarticle/military-spending-is-the-capitalist-worlds-fuel/

"Military spending is the capitalist world’s fuel" - as are all of these 'free trade' agreements guaranteed to further blight the poorest of the poor in nations that cannot fight off the ISDS' and lawsuits against their gov'ts resulting in austerity, environmental catastrophe and all of the ruined lives because of it. The corporations really do own it all, don't they. Makes me sick.

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Military spending is the capitalist world’s fuel (Original Post) polly7 Apr 2016 OP
Military spending and US interventions need to be discussed and dealt with. The US can't continue think Apr 2016 #1
 

think

(11,641 posts)
1. Military spending and US interventions need to be discussed and dealt with. The US can't continue
Sun Apr 24, 2016, 02:29 PM
Apr 2016

to work in such a dysfunctional way and expect social conditions to get better.

Here's hoping for a new era of reduced military spending and diplomacy for the good of man kind.

One can always hope...

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