Arms

Ugh.
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KUTradition
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Arms

Post by KUTradition »

or weapons of death

or deterrents to protect freedom and sovereignty

the US is the largest “dealer” of arms globally ($237 billion worth) with an estimated 100+ nations/states being the recipients

the saudis are the biggest purchasers individually, and the mid-east is regionally…some 46.7%

europe/eurasia, including NATO countries, only account for 15.7% of those sales

asia pacific “states” are second at 26.9% of sales

https://caat.org.uk/data/countries/unit ... s-exports/

here ya go, ousie…discuss
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Re: Arms

Post by Qusdahl »

Let’s discuss!

My first thought was, how does the arms numbers compare to Merican humanitarian aid to the rest of the world numbers?

https://www.state.gov/policy-issues/ref ... ssistance/
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Re: Arms

Post by japhy »

KUTradition wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 1:34 pm or weapons of death

or deterrents to protect freedom and sovereignty

the US is the largest “dealer” of arms globally ($237 billion worth) with an estimated 100+ nations/states being the recipients

the saudis are the biggest purchasers individually, and the mid-east is regionally…some 46.7%

europe/eurasia, including NATO countries, only account for 15.7% of those sales

asia pacific “states” are second at 26.9% of sales

https://caat.org.uk/data/countries/unit ... s-exports/

here ya go, ousie…discuss
MBS seems like a real family values guy. According to Graeme Wood at The Atlantic, he eats breakfast every day with his kids. Seems like the kinda family guy most Mericans would enjoy sittin down and drinkin a beer with.
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

Qusdahl wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 1:45 pm Let’s discuss!

My first thought was, how does the arms numbers compare to Merican humanitarian aid to the rest of the world numbers?

https://www.state.gov/policy-issues/ref ... ssistance/
i think there is an often flawed argument that arms dissemination is intended to prevent humanitarian crises

no matter how many daisies we want to put into gun barrels, there are assholes that will seek to do harm to others. aside from eye-for-an-eye escalation when all other means are exhausted, i’m not sure what the correct action is

if the numbers i’m reading are correct (or at least close), then the US is the source for only 37% of the arms trafficked globally. that leaves a whole lot of other countries on the hook for arming assholes (or good people trying to protect themselves)

it seems to me that, all things considered, most countries that sell military goods globally have made the right choices as to who to sell their weapons to. otherwise it seems we’d be seeing a whole lot more of the actions we’re now seeing in eastern europe

the kicker though, is that things change. regimes change, resources change, priorities change. our “friends” today who we’ve sold arms to in order to prevent a cultural genocide may become radicalized 10 or 15 years down the road
and end up using those same weapons to be the aggressors rather than the protectors

should we stop selling arms to everyone? to anyone in particular?

do you think another country would fill the void left if we stopped? would that country share our values and decisions about the right and wrong people to sell arms to?

russia is second behind the US in global arms sales. would you be comfortable with putin making the decisions about who gets arms and who doesn’t, instead of the US?
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

japhy wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 2:05 pm
KUTradition wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 1:34 pm or weapons of death

or deterrents to protect freedom and sovereignty

the US is the largest “dealer” of arms globally ($237 billion worth) with an estimated 100+ nations/states being the recipients

the saudis are the biggest purchasers individually, and the mid-east is regionally…some 46.7%

europe/eurasia, including NATO countries, only account for 15.7% of those sales

asia pacific “states” are second at 26.9% of sales

https://caat.org.uk/data/countries/unit ... s-exports/

here ya go, ousie…discuss
MBS seems like a real family values guy. According to Graeme Wood at The Atlantic, he eats breakfast every day with his kids. Seems like the kinda family guy most Mericans would enjoy sittin down and drinkin a beer with.
i’m sure he values his family…every one of his wives equally too

edit: that’s an interesting read, and highlights something i referenced in my response to ousie…what happens if/when the US stops dealing with “people” that may have questionable records? for the saudis, it seems like the answer is china

keep your friends close, but your enemies closer
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Re: Arms

Post by Qusdahl »

KUTradition wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 2:48 pm
Qusdahl wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 1:45 pm Let’s discuss!

My first thought was, how does the arms numbers compare to Merican humanitarian aid to the rest of the world numbers?

https://www.state.gov/policy-issues/ref ... ssistance/
i think there is an often flawed argument that arms dissemination is intended to prevent humanitarian crises

no matter how many daisies we want to put into gun barrels, there are assholes that will seek to do harm to others. aside from eye-for-an-eye escalation when all other means are exhausted, i’m not sure what the correct action is

if the numbers i’m reading are correct (or at least close), then the US is the source for only 37% of the arms trafficked globally. that leaves a whole lot of other countries on the hook for arming assholes (or good people trying to protect themselves)

it seems to me that, all things considered, most countries that sell military goods globally have made the right choices as to who to sell their weapons to. otherwise it seems we’d be seeing a whole lot more of the actions we’re now seeing in eastern europe

the kicker though, is that things change. regimes change, resources change, priorities change. our “friends” today who we’ve sold arms to in order to prevent a cultural genocide may become radicalized 10 or 15 years down the road
and end up using those same weapons to be the aggressors rather than the protectors

should we stop selling arms to everyone? to anyone in particular?

do you think another country would fill the void left if we stopped? would that country share our values and decisions about the right and wrong people to sell arms to?

russia is second behind the US in global arms sales. would you be comfortable with putin making the decisions about who gets arms and who doesn’t, instead of the US?
These are all valid concerns, with no easy answers.

But generally, we gotta figure out how to make things more humanitarian and less militant.

Not to be too dramatic, but the fate of the entire world is sort of depending on it.
“Qusdahl ISNT wrong.” - PDub 1/28

“I dont dislike you, even as wildly flailing and uninformed as your theories are” - TDub 2/5
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

Qusdahl wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 3:14 pm
KUTradition wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 2:48 pm
Qusdahl wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 1:45 pm Let’s discuss!

My first thought was, how does the arms numbers compare to Merican humanitarian aid to the rest of the world numbers?

https://www.state.gov/policy-issues/ref ... ssistance/
i think there is an often flawed argument that arms dissemination is intended to prevent humanitarian crises

no matter how many daisies we want to put into gun barrels, there are assholes that will seek to do harm to others. aside from eye-for-an-eye escalation when all other means are exhausted, i’m not sure what the correct action is

if the numbers i’m reading are correct (or at least close), then the US is the source for only 37% of the arms trafficked globally. that leaves a whole lot of other countries on the hook for arming assholes (or good people trying to protect themselves)

it seems to me that, all things considered, most countries that sell military goods globally have made the right choices as to who to sell their weapons to. otherwise it seems we’d be seeing a whole lot more of the actions we’re now seeing in eastern europe

the kicker though, is that things change. regimes change, resources change, priorities change. our “friends” today who we’ve sold arms to in order to prevent a cultural genocide may become radicalized 10 or 15 years down the road
and end up using those same weapons to be the aggressors rather than the protectors

should we stop selling arms to everyone? to anyone in particular?

do you think another country would fill the void left if we stopped? would that country share our values and decisions about the right and wrong people to sell arms to?

russia is second behind the US in global arms sales. would you be comfortable with putin making the decisions about who gets arms and who doesn’t, instead of the US?
These are all valid concerns, with no easy answers.

But generally, we gotta figure out how to make things more humanitarian and less militant.

Not to be too dramatic, but the fate of the entire world is sort of depending on it.
i agree

organizations like the UN and NATO have largely been successful in doing so

but there’s always gonna be putins, and the world has to have the ability and means to deal with them when they rear their ugly heads
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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Re: Arms

Post by japhy »

KUTradition wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 2:54 pm
japhy wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 2:05 pm
KUTradition wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 1:34 pm or weapons of death

or deterrents to protect freedom and sovereignty

the US is the largest “dealer” of arms globally ($237 billion worth) with an estimated 100+ nations/states being the recipients

the saudis are the biggest purchasers individually, and the mid-east is regionally…some 46.7%

europe/eurasia, including NATO countries, only account for 15.7% of those sales

asia pacific “states” are second at 26.9% of sales

https://caat.org.uk/data/countries/unit ... s-exports/

here ya go, ousie…discuss
MBS seems like a real family values guy. According to Graeme Wood at The Atlantic, he eats breakfast every day with his kids. Seems like the kinda family guy most Mericans would enjoy sittin down and drinkin a beer with.
i’m sure he values his family…every one of his wives equally too

edit: that’s an interesting read, and highlights something i referenced in my response to ousie…what happens if/when the US stops dealing with “people” that may have questionable records? for the saudis, it seems like the answer is china

keep your friends close, but your enemies closer
If you wanted to make the case that THIS is all about oil. It would be easy to argue that the relationship with the Saudis was all about oil.

And speaking of family values, killing your uncles and cousins is what family is all about.

https://observer.com/2019/01/how-saudi- ... -to-power/
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

from the Atlantic piece:

It’s sometimes a decision between bad and worse.

unfortunately, this is a truth when maintaining global relationships
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Re: Arms

Post by Qusdahl »

I wonder how much of Putins (and generally other toxic grifters) of the world would be mitigated by some more politically and economically egalitarian approaches, or whatever.
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

such as?

edit: you’ve gotta keep in mind that in many cases we’re forced to deal with religion-based scenarios where a lack of equality is built into the system
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Re: Arms

Post by Qusdahl »

Yeah, exactly, such as overcoming inherently unequal systems.

it’s a big broad general idea
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

Qusdahl wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 4:54 pm Yeah, exactly, such as overcoming inherently unequal systems.

it’s a big broad general idea
which is kinda why i posted the quote that i did

if we don’t cooperate with some of these parties, they’ll just go do business with the russians or chinese, who will hold them even less accountable than we will
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Re: Arms

Post by Qusdahl »

It’s oversimplified and maybe not even applicable, but I may once again try to analogy of 2 kids roughhousing in the yard:

Does a responsible parent resolve the roughhousing by running out there and giving one or both kids weapons?

Much of it is reprogramming our good-or-bad, gotta-pick-a-side sort of dualistic thinking

In Merica, at least, I wonder how much of that could be accomplished by overhauling the “two-party system”
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“I dont dislike you, even as wildly flailing and uninformed as your theories are” - TDub 2/5
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

as soon as you convince the assholes of the world to give up all their weapons, let me know

i mean, we can’t even convince a large proportions of ‘muricans to submit to reasonable gun legislation, much less total disarming

i think your ideas come from a good place, but they are rather pie-in-the-sky and not rooted in reality
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Re: Arms

Post by Qusdahl »

Yea.

Like I’ve said, lefties are a bunch of theoretical dreamers.

But at least give credit for actually trying to have a better vision for us all, rather than just fussing about mah rights and mah heritage and all these other self-centered and short-sighted grievances that usually amount to arguing for preservation of those unequal systems, even if they’re cutting off their nose to spite their face.

At this point, I think the salvation of the world is more likely to come from someone generally looking forward than looking back; from someone trying to imagine an existence beyond the constructs of class and race and religion, rather than doubling down on those constructs.
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Re: Arms

Post by KUTradition »

i’m increasingly of the opinion that humanity is moving beyond salvation
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Re: Arms

Post by japhy »

Qusdahl wrote: Tue Mar 08, 2022 5:28 pm Yea.

Like I’ve said, lefties are a bunch of theoretical dreamers.

But at least give credit for actually trying to have a better vision for us all, rather than just fussing about mah rights and mah heritage and all these other self-centered and short-sighted grievances that usually amount to arguing for preservation of those unequal systems, even if they’re cutting off their nose to spite their face.

At this point, I think the salvation of the world is more likely to come from someone generally looking forward than looking back; from someone trying to imagine an existence beyond the constructs of class and race and religion, rather than doubling down on those constructs.
I think the Russians tried that in 1917 and the Chinese in 1949. Theory is great, but then millions of people get involved. In any population there is always a subset of thousands of assholes.

You should start the revolution small. Get together all of the like minded prols in the Frasier valley and convinced them to work together to build affordable housing for themselves and self regulate the administration of the housing complex. You could call it something like a Home Owners Association and all agree to work for the greater good and see how it goes.
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Re: Arms

Post by Deleted User 863 »

Humans are not nice animals. We kill each other. We have since the beginning of time. Long before guns were invented.
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Re: Arms

Post by TDub »

so do all other animals...even those cute little ducklings. ever seen what ducks do to each other....and to chickens? Drakes can be vicious little fuckers.
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