4/30/2012 10:03:12 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Hi  Billy,  


Fascinating bit of personal history.  Thanks for sharing.


Let me clarify one point:




 
 
You seem  to envision a peaceful future.  I do not envision a peaceful 
future at  all.
Granted, it may seem peaceful and secure at the  moment, but there is 
absolutely
no guarantee. And while it may be only a remote  possibility that we will 
see
military action on US soil in the next 15 years,  no-one can be sure, and 
even if
there isn't, suppose you were at Ft Hood a while  ago, or at LAX also 
recently,
or in Seattle, etc, and happened to be in the  wrong place at the wrong 
time ?
We have been lucky, that plus the effects of  Homeland Security measures,
but who says there won't be a bomb attack in  Houston or Chicago or San Jose
in the 15 years ahead ?
 
But maybe more relevant, there are all the  effects of war, like what a 
trillion $$
in costs for Iraq have done to the US economy.  






I think there's two different issues worth teasing out.


I don't envision a peaceful future.  However, what I *do* envision  is what 
could be called "discretionary" wars.  That is, wars we have a  great deal 
of freedom to choose the parameters.  All the wars you list  from my 
lifetime (except maybe Cuba) were things that took place far away, and  never 
threatened our core economy.  Yes, they were hugely *expensive*,  but at most 
they threatened our economic security (Iraq & Kuwait) or our  political 
influence (Vietnam), not our national integrity.


For those kinds of wars -- even the ones you list below -- I don't see  
where it really matters where we buy our electric transformers.  Those  things 
matter when you are fighting a war of attrition and logistics, like  World 
War II, where your total national productivity is a key determining  factor 
in victory.





I agree whole-heartedly  with :
>From a National Security perspective, I believe  our most pressing need
is to project American cultural influence -- at  least the better aspects
of Western liberalism -- onto Asia.  We need  to establish America as
the land of opportunity and freedom, not a  paranoid empire in decline. 
They may not love us, but we need them to at  least envy and respect us.

If that's true, then the most important  imperative is for America to 
provide
economic leadership, which requires business  innovation. 


But if we are in another war in the next three or  four years how relevant 
would
any of this be ?




Even more relevant. I don't disagree with the plausibility any of your  
scenarios.  I simply disagree that protecting native industry is key to  
winning any of those conflicts.


I believe that there will be war in our future, but it will be  
*asymmetric* warfare, with terrorists and rogue/failed states.


For those kinds of fights, the real challenge is political unity and  
economic resilience, not raw productivity or physical resources.  


The best industrial policy is one that produces healthy economic growth  
and robust political consensus, and perhaps energy independence.  If we  can 
achieve that, I believe we will be well positioned to deal with any of the  
crises you mention. If we don't, we're pretty much hosed regardless.


-- Ernie P.






 

What is your concern:

a) a "Hot War" with  China over Taiwan in 2015? 

b) Economic blackmail in 2020?

c)  A resurgent Africa demanding reparations in 2030? 

d) China invading  India in 2040?  

e) Japan reverting to 1940's  imperialism?

Answer : None of the  Above. More along the lines of --
 
2012 or  2013
Israel bombs Iran's nuke  facilities. China takes Iran's side.
Egypt threatens Israel;  Turkiye goes on high military alert,
Hezbollah fires thousands of  rockets into Haifa and Tel Aviv.
US military positions itself  to protect Israel...
After that, God only knows,  but a real possibility
of major war and  major disruption of Gulf oil and
a serious shock to the global  economy
 
2013 or  2014
Iran tests A-bomb. Egypt  starts a nuclear program followed
by the Saudis and the Turks.  This sets in motion a new intifada
against Israel which is worse  than any previous ones. Israel
retaliates with maximum  force. Egypt closes the Suez Canal.
Attacks on Israeli assets  overseas, with a rise in virulent
anti-Semitism in Europe.  Things start to go downhill fast.
 
2014 or  2015
War between India and  Pakistan
and / or
North Korea attacks South  Korea and this time the South retaliates
by a major assault on NK  military targets, and the North explodes
a nuke near Seoul ( the  border is just 30 miles away ), and  etc
 
2015 or  2016
Russia in a new war in the  Caucasus, this time it spreads to some of
the Central Asian republics  and Kazakhstan is drawn in. Effects felt
all over western Asia ( the  Mid East plus the Black Sea states ).
The USA must take sides.  Whichever way we decide there are
serious blowback  consequences.
 
2016 or  2017
Iranian regime collapses.  Muslim jihadists decide to attack Iranian assets
all over the map, and the  Persian Gulf becomes a war zone
or 
There is an Islamist takeover  of northern Nigeria and a civil war
breaks out, with effects all  over West Africa as Nigerian oil becomes
impossible to process and  ship. The USA and NATO send in troops.
Muslim uprisings elsewhere in  sympathy with Muslim Nigerians
disrupt the economies of  perceived pro-American regimes in
Jordan, the UAE, and  etc
 
 
PLUS, as an added bonus,  cyberwar breaks out as massive efforts are
carried out to disrupt or  wreck the US economy.
 
 
The question simply is  this :
Which is more realistic future to think about if  you were an intelligence 
analyst
at the CIA rather than a  marketing expert at Apple ?
 
That  --intelligence  analysis at the CIA--is the gold standard, nothing 
else.
 
 
For sure, it makes little  sense for me, no longer being 40 something, to 
worry all
that much about 2025 or  2035.  With luck I will still be around, and 
genetics
suggests I will be, but for  obvious reasons my focus is directly ahead.
Moreover, as much as I  wish the best for Apple ( and MS and Intel, etc, 
etc )
I have zero investment in the  long term prospects for any corporation.
The upside is that this frees  me to think --hopefully--  more objectively.
The operative word is  "hopefully."  For sure I could be wrong.
And my worries are not  predictions, they simply are worries.
But they do seem to me to be  realistic.
 
I agree whole-heartedly  with :
>From a National Security perspective, I believe  our most pressing need 
is to project American cultural influence -- at  least the better aspects 
of Western liberalism -- onto Asia.  We need  to establish America as 
the land of opportunity and freedom, not a  paranoid empire in decline.  
They may not love us, but we need them to at  least envy and respect us.

If that's true, then the most important  imperative is for America to 
provide 
economic leadership, which requires business  innovation. 


But if we are in another war in the next three or  four years how relevant 
would
any of this be ?
 
Yes, regardless, we should pursue these  objectives. Any prospect of war is 
no
better than one+ chance out of three, give or  take. Best guess is that for 
any 
particular year down the road we will not be at  war. And even if we are,
it probably won't last as long as Iraq or  Afghanistan. Such objectives
would serve us well, post-war.
 
But the context for my thinking is the  possibility of near term war
that just could become a major conflict,  especially if it involves Israel,
or India/ Pakistan, or South Korea and  vicinity.
 
I also am very concerned about the possibility of  some kind of Christian 
values collapse
in America, even if this is less likely in any  near term. But a few years 
from now ?
I am very uneasy about that.
 
Billy
 
 
===========================================
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
4/25/2012 1:59:53 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   writes:

Hi Billy,

On Apr 25, 2012, at 1:21 PM,  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
wrote:
>> Saying  all this my guess is that your next rejoinder, if any, will once 
again  completely ignore national security as a basic  consideration.
>>  
>> Which is exactly what you  did.  You immediately returned to economic
>> argument. As  if you said to me, "I don't want to pay for insurance 
because my finances  will be far better off not making payments to
>> Liberty Mutual  or some other company."
> 


Sigh.

I think the  problem -- we seem to have this a lot -- is that the topic 
seems to keep  shifting under our feet.  I respond to what I see as one part of 
your  argument, then you feel I'm ignoring (what I consider) the other part 
of  your argument.

If the *only* thing you are talking about is  national security, then I 
think we agree:

a) national security is  generally more important than economic security

b) we need a  vibrant economic security to support national security

What we  *disagree* about is;

c) -which- industries are essential to  national security

d) -what kinds- of protection will product a net  security benefit
e.g., when will the gains to national  security outweigh (however you 
weight them) the economic  impact

Right?

I think we have to start talking specifics,  since the generalities create 
more confusion than  enlightenment.

Here's a list of industries where China is  displacing the U.S as the 
market leader:

_http://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/2012/01/24/eight-industries-us-has-lost-
to-china/_ 
(http://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/2012/01/24/eight-industries-us-has-lost-to-china/)
 

Which  do you think are relevant to national security? What measures could 
we  take that would be a net win?


Two points I should also  clarify:

* You're right, if there's vibrant internal competition,  then the loss of 
foreign competition may not have much of an impact on  economic efficiency.  

* I agree that economic interdependence  isn't a guarantee of everlasting 
peace, and that economic dependence can  create all sorts of "soft problems" 
short of military  weakness.

That said, it is important to define what threat you are  trying to defend 
against.  You can't really prepare for everything,  you have to choose which 
battles you consider likely, and in which  timeframe.

What is your concern:

a) a "Hot War" with China  over Taiwan in 2015? 

b) Economic blackmail in 2020?

c) A  resurgent Africa demanding reparations in 2030? 

d) China invading  India in 2040?  

e) Japan reverting to 1940's  imperialism?

Something else?  Again, talking in generalities  doesn't seem to have 
gotten us very far.  

>From a National  Security perspective, I believe our most pressing need is 
to project  American cultural influence -- at least the better aspects of 
Western  liberalism -- onto Asia.  We need to establish America as the land of 
 opportunity and freedom, not a paranoid empire in decline.  They may  not 
love us, but we need them to at least envy and respect us.

If  that's true, then the most important imperative is for America to 
provide  economic leadership, which requires business innovation.  Anything  
which speeds up innovation (e.g., higher standards) is good, anything  which 
slows it down and reduces global competitiveness (e.g.,  protectionist 
regulation) is bad.  Obsessively focusing on protecting  specific industries or 
jobs 
tends to skew investment in the wrong  direction.

Importantly, I define economic innovation as creating  societal value, not 
mere profit. That implies we need better metrics than  GDP, where money 
spent to cure a disease caused by pollution counts as  "growth."

We need enough military strength to credibly fulfill our  commitments to, 
e.g. Taiwan and Asia, but I don't expect any direct  military confrontation 
with China for the next 15 fifteen years. After  that, I expect the world to 
be fundamentally re-aligned, so there's no  point in making predictions.

-- Ernie P.

-- 
Centroids:  The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group:  http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website  and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org


 



-- 
Centroids: The Center  of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >
Google  Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 




-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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