I have to agree with Keith on the highlighted points Tom seems to disagree 
with. And heavily disagree with Tom who has an obvious a left-wing view of the 
world and quite jaded… 

But what does any of this have to do with Linux?

On 11/11/16, 2:07 PM, "PLUG-discuss on behalf of Tom Roche" 
<[email protected] on behalf of [email protected]> 
wrote:

    
    While I mostly agree with Keith's (and that of most of the other folks) 
larger points on this thread (e.g.,
    
    1. US STEM firms (esp in IT) are destroying themselves and US STEM 
infrastructure by offshoring jobs and onshoring cheap young labor.
    
    2. US STEM firms benefit tremendously from the investment of the US 
taxpayer and therefore should be forced to hire and train citizens first.
    
    ), some of his points are too false to ignore:
    
    Keith Smith[1] (rearranged, heavily excerpted)
    > 1) Our country gives money to almost every other country in the world.
    
    With the exception of Israel, US foreign aid is goods and services--not 
money--and is almost entirely corporate welfare. US food aid is the poster 
child: when people are starving in country X, instead of "giving money" to the 
starving with which to buy food, or even buying food where most closely 
available (sometimes in a different part of X), the US buys food from US 
farmers at subsidized prices, then pays US shippers to transport it (typically 
vast distances, and at significant markup from prevailing rates), then pays US 
personnel to distribute it or at least supervise (and pays for their travel). 
Rightwingers should love that, but they're too busy hating foreigners (esp dark 
ones) to notice that--much less that US foreign aid is a tiny fraction of the 
Federal budget, and has been for all of US history excepting the Marshall Plan.
    
    > 2) Our men and women die while being the world police.
    
    US military contractors (and their pals in the US corporate-funded media) 
are *demanding* to be the world's police, because they get paid to do it! You 
may also not have noticed the distinct *lack* of non-elite people--both 
Americans and foreigners--demanding to have US military forces in the many 
places to which US elites have committed them[2]. And spare me the tired 
bullshit about "it's better to fight them there than to fight them here": how 
many (e.g.) Somalis, Syrians, and Yemenis have *invaded* the US recently? And 
what did the US do to the one nation (Saudi Arabia) whose citizens *actually* 
attacked "the homeland" in 2001? We sold them billions of dollars of weapons :-)
    
    This "world police" shtick is a racket, and has been for over a century[3].
    
    > As an American I spent 4 years on active duty in the USMC.  I was part of 
that global police force
    
    ... for which you got paid, and continue to get paid. Face it: the US 
military is not an "all-volunteer" force, in any usual sense of the word--to 
offer one's services without pay. When one "volunteers" to help with some event 
at a local school, does one expect a salary, and education benefits, and 
healthcare for life, and a defined-benefit pension? No, but US veterans do.
    
    Another fact rightwingers just won't face: the US military is composed of 
Federal employees and (increasingly) contractors, just like the EPA, the IRS, 
and all the other parts of the civil service that rightwingers love to hate.
    
    > 3) We have some of the best universities in the world and we export our 
knowledge by allowing foreigners to come to our country to study.
    
    > 4) 17 years ago I learned that the University of Arizona was charging 
foreign students 95% of the cost of their education. The tax payers paid the 
other 5%.
    
    You may not have noticed, but tuition, esp for foreign students, has gone 
up since 1999 :-) The facts in 2016 are, we have a higher-education bubble in 
the US, brought on by the largely-correct belief that one must have a college 
degree to get a decent-paying job. (It does not however follow that there are 
decent-paying jobs for everyone with a college degree.) This bubble is 
currently being sustained only by importing millions of foreign students, whose 
tuition is multiples of that of in-state students. Esp for graduate STEM 
programs: look at any Ass End of Nowhere U. (and even many higher-quality and 
-reputation large public institutions) and you will see very few citizen 
students. This allows PIs and departments to fund themselves on the minimal 
grants available to programs that really should have been terminated for lack 
of quality (esp the for-profit ones) long ago.
    
    > It was the American spirit that created all this.
    
    Not quite. Don't forget, e.g., the European spirit--and taxpayers--that 
paid Tim Berners-Lee's tuition and funded his job @ CERN[4]. (If I was a PHP 
coder, or anyone else dependent on the Web ecosystem, I'd have a shrine to his 
memory in my home, and genuflect in his general direction daily :-)
    
    HTH, Tom Roche <[email protected]>
    
    [1]: 
http://lists.phxlinux.org/lurker/message/20161111.173600.4ac7e260.en.html
    [2]: a year old, but still informative: 
https://www.thenation.com/article/how-many-wars-is-the-us-really-fighting/
    [3]: from your fellow Marine Smedley Butler: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Is_a_Racket
    [4]: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_World_Wide_Web#1980.E2.80.931991:_Invention_and_implementation_of_the_Web
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