Well, if what you say is true, then why do the Coalition Opposed to Arms Trade (COAT), Food Not Bombs, and the Ploughshares Movement, three quite respected anti-defence industry lobbies, feel that money spent on defence is better spent on social programs (or food in the case of Food Not Bombs)?andydes wrote:Now there's an interesting point. However, I'm not sure it's as simple as that. After all, pretty much all of the US's military spending goes into US companies. They pay workers, who pay taxes, buy goods and services from fellow americans, etc. Same for service personnel, the money stays in the US and keeps the ecconomy moving.M. Bréqs wrote:...The family of every American citizen who dies while waiting for an operation to repair a heart valve because can't afford private medical insurance, can thank a Canadian or European pacifist for shit state of American social programs.
As was pointed out, Boeing has done very well out of it. They could then pile this money into making civilian aircraft, which they sold to just about every airline in the world.
Add to that the revinue from US arms sales to other countries, NATO, other allies (iraq- sorry, had to say it), etc. I can't remember what we paid the US for our trident nukes, but it was a fair few billion. And was money going directly from our ecconomy into the US's.
It's alway's been said that war is good for the ecconomy, so I don't think you can really lay the blame for underprivaliged US citizens on Europe.
Phew, for a second there, I thought my country was responsable for even more crap then I give it credit for.
It seems you're argueing that Defence spending doesn't affect the provision of social services to Americans because it contributes to the economy... But the economic circulation doesn't seem to touch on Health Care, does it?
The three instutions above seem to disagree with you. I'm not engaging in an Ad Hominem attack, I am curious how you would refute their positions.