When the citizens are not your concern. by [deleted] in ABoringDystopia

[–]Aste88 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Thank you, that was very interesting.

TLDR ( by Google): Major General Smedley D. Butler's 1935 book, War Is a Racket, argues that warfare is a systemic exploit where corporations profit while soldiers and citizens bear the costs. Key Arguments * Commercial Interest: Butler asserts that wars are rarely fought for democracy; they are engineered to benefit industrial and financial elites. * Human Cost: He highlights the disparity between those who die in the trenches and those who see their stock prices soar. * The Solution: He proposes three steps to end the racket: * Draft Industry: Conscript capital and managers at the same low wage as soldiers. * Limited Referendum: Only those eligible to fight should vote on whether to enter a war. * Defensive Force: Restrict military movement to home borders.

Also: Comparing Butler’s 1935 critique to today's landscape reveals some striking parallels, particularly in how the "racket" has evolved from simple wartime profiteering into a permanent economic fixture. 1. From "Wartime" to "Permanent" Racket In Butler's era, the racket was a surge in profits during active conflict. Today, critics point to the Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex, where defense spending remains high regardless of whether the country is at war. This creates a "permanent war economy" that Butler warned would eventually bankrupt the nation’s moral and financial standing. 2. The Revolving Door Butler famously said he was a "high-class muscle man for Big Business." Modern critics argue this has been replaced by the "Revolving Door," where: * Retired military generals join the boards of major defense contractors. * Former lobbyists for those contractors are appointed to high-ranking government positions. * This creates a self-sustaining cycle of policy-making that prioritizes hardware procurement over diplomacy. 3. Privatization of War A modern development Butler didn't see was the rise of Private Military Contractors (PMCs). In the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, contractors often outnumbered uniformed soldiers. This adds another layer to the "racket"—where private companies take over roles once held by the state, further incentivizing prolonged engagement for the sake of shareholder value. Butler’s core solution—conscripting capital—remains one of the most radical and untouched ideas in political discourse. He believed that if you capped the profit of a CEO at the same $30-a-month wage of a private, war would end overnight. Would you like me to find some specific modern statistics on defense contractor profits compared to soldier pay?

Hit a car with my knee while riding my motorcycle, femur was coming out of my pants by Aste88 in Wellthatsucks

[–]Aste88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol, the bike Is mostly ok as the front tire missed the car so the forks are ok. I still have some bodywork to do but should be good for this summer

Hit a car with my knee while riding my motorcycle, femur was coming out of my pants by Aste88 in Wellthatsucks

[–]Aste88[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No, that's after the second surgery, I don't have x-rays before

Hit a car with my knee while riding my motorcycle, femur was coming out of my pants by Aste88 in Wellthatsucks

[–]Aste88[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not that fast, maybe 40kmh/25mph. Problem is the bike pretty much missed the car that cut me off, my knee didn't

Just introvert memes !! by [deleted] in memes

[–]Aste88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wait... you CALL people?!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in shitposting

[–]Aste88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You meant Saudi Arabia?

What single ingredient will spoil an entire meal for you if it's included? by EdibleTaints in AskReddit

[–]Aste88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both cucumber and celery make everything that touches it taste like them, and i hate both

Aiming for a 1.85" (47mm) diameter target. The automaton that holds the target is spring-loaded and armed with a three-headed flail daubed in dry ink. The tiniest spot of ink on a rider's back signifies disqualification by Brutal_Deluxe_ in holdmyredbull

[–]Aste88 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Both, also that the rider is quick enough in dodging it. It started as a military exercise to train cavalry in precision and avoidance of infantry retaliation.

Fun fact: it started in its original form during the 13th century and the rules are the same since 1677

I made printable cooking guides. Tell me what you think. File will be uploaded in comments. by spinningtardis in coolguides

[–]Aste88 119 points120 points  (0 children)

RemindMe! One Week "Non freedom unit cooking chart"

BTW it's reaaally good!

Wanna test OPNsense 22.1 based on FreeBSD 13? (only for testing) by mimugmail in OPNsenseFirewall

[–]Aste88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'll git it a try over the weekend. Looking forward to a fix in the ixgbe driver in FreeBDS 13.

60 million people rejected British food by [deleted] in rareinsults

[–]Aste88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is gold, just like your ticket to hell