• socsa@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    I suppose the difference is that a country doesn’t just get conquered by force if it stops polluting.

    • Saleh@feddit.org
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      20 hours ago

      Even if the US suddenly lost all its fighter jets, naval force, missiles and bombs. How likely would an invasion be in the next 10 to 50 years?

      It is quite a big country with a big population, with a practically uninhabited and difficult to cross country in the north, and a poor drug war ridden country with significant amount of jungle in the south. To the west and east are oceans with some thousands of kilometres until the next sizable and properly inhabitated landmass.

      So purely in geographics terms, invading and conquering the US is a huge pain.

      Now add to it all the issues of the US dominance in global trade and the ramifications such an invasion would have.

      The US doesnt need that army or MIC for defense. It is offense focused and it needs to keep murdering people all over the world to keep its wheels turning.

      • osugi_sakae@midwest.social
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        18 hours ago

        I don’t disagree with you, especially in the short term, but Noah Smith (economist at https://www.noahpinion.blog/) does have some eye-opening opinions on the industrial might of China, and what that could mean for USA influence if China wanted to push things. (All this assumes no one uses nukes, of course.)

        I’m going from memory, so errors are probably mine, not Mr. Smith’s. But, basically, wrt manufacturing, China is already where the USA was during / near the end of WWII. Even if we had the tech and raw materials, the USA would not be able to up with China’s factories if it came to war. They could basically just keep throwing drones and bombs at the USA until we literally ran out of anything to defend ourselves with, much less fight back with. Even if much of the rest of the world’s factories were on our side.

        CHIPS act is one way the Biden admin was trying to restart strategic manufacturing in the USA. We’ll see how that goes.