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DeathToTheOil

(1,124 posts)
40. And then there's this:
Wed Jan 25, 2012, 04:01 PM
Jan 2012

From The American Conservative, no less!

Weapons 'R' Us

By William J. Astore | January 24, 2012

Perhaps you’ve heard of “Makin’ Thunderbirds,” a hard-bitten rock & roll song by Bob Seger that I listened to 30 years ago while in college. It’s about auto workers back in 1955 who were “young and proud” to be making Ford Thunderbirds. But in the early 1980s, Seger sings, “the plants have changed and you’re lucky if you work.” Seger caught the reality of an American manufacturing infrastructure that was seriously eroding as skilled and good-paying union jobs were cut or sent overseas, rarely to be seen again in these parts.

If the U.S. auto industry has recently shown sparks of new life (though we’re not making T-Birds or Mercuries or Oldsmobiles or Pontiacs or Saturns anymore), there is one form of manufacturing in which America is still dominant. When it comes to weaponry, to paraphrase Seger, we’re still young and proud and makin’ Predators and Reapers (as in unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones) and Eagles and Fighting Falcons (as in F-15 and F-16 combat jets), and outfitting them with the deadliest of weapons. In this market niche, we’re still the envy of the world.

Yes, we’re the world’s foremost “merchants of death,” the title of a best-selling exposé of the international arms trade published to acclaim in the U.S. in 1934. Back then, most Americans saw themselves as war-avoiders rather than as war-profiteers. The evil war-profiteers were mainly European arms makers like Germany’s Krupp, France’s Schneider, or Britain’s Vickers.

Not that America didn’t have its own arms merchants. As the authors of Merchants of Death noted, early on our country demonstrated a “Yankee propensity for extracting novel death-dealing knickknacks from [our] peddler’s pack.” Amazingly, the Nye Committee in the U.S. Senate devoted 93 hearings from 1934 to 1936 to exposing America’s own “greedy munitions interests.” Even in those desperate depression days, a desire for profit and jobs was balanced by a strong sense of unease at this deadly trade, an unease reinforced by the horrors of and hecatombs of dead from the First World War.

We are uneasy no more. Today we take great pride (or at least have no shame) in being by far the world’s number one arms-exporting nation. A few statistics bear this out. From 2006 to 2010, the U.S. accounted for nearly one-third of the world’s arms exports, easily surpassing a resurgent Russia in the “Lords of War” race. Despite a decline in global arms sales in 2010 due to recessionary pressures, the U.S. increased its market share, accounting for a whopping 53%of the trade that year. Last year saw the U.S. on pace to deliver more than $46 billion in foreign arms sales. Who says America isn’t number one anymore?


http://www.theamericanconservative.com/blog/weapons-r-us/

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0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

This is why the war mongers are so anxious to attack another country liberal N proud Jan 2012 #1
Anyone still wondering why... 99Forever Jan 2012 #2
"A Third World country with a big Military" DeathToTheOil Jan 2012 #13
A perfect description. 99Forever Jan 2012 #14
There were a lot of terms like that for the USSR RZM Jan 2012 #27
Your points explain why the USSR collapsed a couple decades before us, that's all. Scuba Jan 2012 #51
Have our economy and political system collapsed? RZM Jan 2012 #52
Not yet, but we're trying hard. Scuba Jan 2012 #53
Who are we selling 'em to? joshcryer Jan 2012 #3
That is a good question Broderick Jan 2012 #16
GREECE! This is not sarcasm. Prometheus Bound Jan 2012 #46
Oh god. That is crazy. joshcryer Jan 2012 #50
Did anyone inventory those? sagesnow Jan 2012 #4
Homeland Security will arrest you for taking that video Generic Other Jan 2012 #5
yes there is /was a law against video or still shots of trains madrchsod Jan 2012 #10
Misleading Title lacrew Jan 2012 #6
The United States is still the world's largest manufacturer, 1/5 of the world's total. Bluenorthwest Jan 2012 #7
You're not supposed to post stuff like this on DU... hunter Jan 2012 #8
Indeed! (eom) CanSocDem Jan 2012 #9
Well, at least we're still good at making one thing. HopeHoops Jan 2012 #11
They were made in China treestar Jan 2012 #12
Counted over 110 before it cut off Broderick Jan 2012 #15
Training at the National Training Center at Ft Irwin is my guess. nt hack89 Jan 2012 #17
Must be a huge facility Broderick Jan 2012 #20
Largest in the world - 1000 square miles. hack89 Jan 2012 #23
Thanks for the information! Broderick Jan 2012 #25
Reserves heading to Hunter Liggett would be my guess Brother Buzz Jan 2012 #34
Could be - there are plenty of plausible explanations. nt hack89 Jan 2012 #38
It's been quite a while since those were manufactured. MineralMan Jan 2012 #18
you were supposed to be highly offended, and stuff... dionysus Jan 2012 #19
Yah. Offended because we have a military at all, MineralMan Jan 2012 #21
Yes t's all nonsense... SomethingFishy Jan 2012 #35
It's tanks on a train, going to some base. MineralMan Jan 2012 #36
Post removed Post removed Jan 2012 #24
i admire your skill of completely making shit up, outrage dude... dionysus Jan 2012 #29
That word is offensive. DevonRex Jan 2012 #33
Thanks for the "briefing" whatchamacallit Jan 2012 #22
But true. nt hack89 Jan 2012 #26
i find the phoney outrage more comical... dionysus Jan 2012 #30
What is your problem? Why the constant attacks on him? DevonRex Jan 2012 #31
No problem. Glad to do it. MineralMan Jan 2012 #32
Operation Fast & Furious II Hugabear Jan 2012 #28
Trains like this have routinely moved through California since the 1980s hack89 Jan 2012 #37
Here's another pintobean Jan 2012 #39
And then there's this: DeathToTheOil Jan 2012 #40
couple things here maddezmom Jan 2012 #43
+ 1 Article has link to SIPRI, which I was not aware of: BrendaBrick Jan 2012 #48
wow. maybe they should have covered each tank with a tarp Liberal_in_LA Jan 2012 #41
Why - it is a routine movement. nt hack89 Jan 2012 #42
so the public doesn't get the wrong idea. Liberal_in_LA Jan 2012 #47
A tank covered by a tarp looks like a tank covered by a tarp hack89 Jan 2012 #49
They're trying to save money. progressoid Jan 2012 #44
I was very disappointed that the president didn't brag about this fact last night. Liberal_Stalwart71 Jan 2012 #45
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