Youngian wrote: ↑Wed Feb 26, 2025 10:28 am
The cut in aid is a drop in the ocean compared to the increase in defence spending needed. It is performatively effective to gain consent from a public that hasn't a fucking Scooby about numbers.
Killer Whale wrote: ↑Wed Feb 26, 2025 8:24 am
I may seem trite, and the sort of thing a cunt might say, but keeping the peace in Europe is pretty fundamental aid to the rest of the world.
Hate to make a similar point that rearmament means more skilled manufacturing jobs.
Technocrats like Dominic Cummings want to know why the UK doesn't have tech behemoths like the US. Its because America has super power military spending these firms plug into to grow. Well now its likely Europe will in the coming decades.
There's an elephant sized reason why the UK doesn't have tech behemoths.
An uncomfortable one for tory aligned talking heads like Cummings to acknowledge.
The USA has always been extremely protective of its big businesses.
* Consider the degree of "corporate capture" of US politics, most of the politicians and almost all funding comes from businesses.
* They've never been shy about using "Lawfare" against foreign competition; allegations of financial fraud, obfuscated terms of service to block interoperability or backload additional cost onto franchisers, buying out the competition, or the software patent trolling that we saw in the 2000s.
* Our own politicians and businesses all too ready to cease competing and buy American for a short term gain. More examples then we can list here: Jet and supersonic aircraft technology, computers, pharmaceuticals. I remember ICL binning several world leading products, in favour of re-selling USA kit.
* The call for "interoperability" often degrades to single supplier arrangements, with the 300 pound gorilla that is American manufacturing dominating defence and tech deals. Again many examples of mergers, take-overs.. The UK seems particularly prone to US domination, maybe the special relationship, but more likely the common language and a bit of laziness. Consider the Westland affair.
Late stage capitalism tends toward no more than three suppliers in any market.
Back in the swinging sixties, that would mean three British suppliers in Britain, three French ones in France and three US ones in the USA.
In the present global age it often means just three suppliers worldwide.
And the USA has been voracious in gobbling up any competition.
Their tactics include:
* Legal restrictions.
* Acquisition/Takeover (Hostile or otherwise).
* Headhunting (Make the chief development team an offer they cant refuse).
* Internal sabotage (Nokia)
* Tarriffs.
The UK's neolib interpretation of free trade includes a hefty dose of "Sell the fucking lot to the highest bidder".
But that's another story.