• @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    I wish there was anyone in Congress who opposed this sort of thing out of an understanding of the pernicious nature of the military industrial complex. I feel like it’s a perfectly reasonable position to hold to not want your country to just be three defense contractors in a trench coat.

    • @ZapBeebz_
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      171 year ago

      Don’t be silly; America isn’t three defense contractors in a trench coat.

      It’s at least half a dozen: Boeing, Northrop-Grumman, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, HII, and EB. And that’s just the biggest ones.

    • NoneOfUrBusiness
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      41 year ago

      I mean tbf they’re not actually making new stuff either way. This is just old stuff that’s not really used anymore.

  • Chainweasel
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    1 year ago

    What’s really shocking to me is that the Republican party has traditionally been heavily supported by the military industrial complex and the party has always used any excuse to use up some military assets and show some force.
    Now, we have a good reason to give their donors wads of cash by increasing our purchases of military equipment and they’re not having any of it.
    You know if it was any county other than Russia they’d be screaming at the top of their lungs about Biden not doing enough and trying to burn as much taxpayer money as possible on military equipment.

  • Veraticus
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    71 year ago

    You really have to give it to nativists; they’re willing to shoot themselves in the foot, so people overseas will also get shot in the foot.

    • @CaptainPedantic
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      01 year ago

      so people overseas will also get shot in the foot face.

      I fixed it for ya.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    11 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    It is expected to employ a minimum of 125 people; bring business opportunities to local suppliers, retailers and restaurants; and, city officials hope, potentially help turn the area into an industrial hotbed of well-paying jobs.

    House colleagues in calling for an end to American support for Ukraine’s fight, voting for measures to strip $300 million in security assistance for the war-torn country from next year’s defense budget and prohibit Congress from approving any more funds for the conflict.

    It reflects how the “America First” mentality popularized by former President Donald J. Trump has spread and intensified among Republicans, prompting increasing numbers of lawmakers — including some whose constituents benefit directly from continued American aid to Ukraine — to refuse to keep supporting it.

    It was all part of an effort to attract higher-skilled production industries offering wages that would encourage residents of this fast-growing city to work and spend money in Mesquite, where despite a recent proliferation of housing developments and major corporations opening warehouse distribution hubs, empty storefronts still dot many blocks of the historic downtown.

    To that end, the city has made a point of promoting vocational training programs through the public secondary schools and the local community college, to prove to similar companies that there is a ready work force waiting to be tapped.

    “The money we’re talking about doesn’t go to Ukraine; it goes to defense manufacturing facilities all across America and supports tens of thousands of American jobs,” Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority leader, said on the floor last week.


    The original article contains 1,406 words, the summary contains 257 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!