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The ‘Ukraine War Is Good For American Business’ Argument Isn’t Just Vile, It’s Also A Lie
The Federalist ^ | DECEMBER 14, 2023 | AUGUSTE MEYRAT

Posted on 12/14/2023 4:22:04 PM PST by Kazan

Instead of shoveling money to a foreign government to buy American weapons, taxpayers could use that money to buy American consumer goods.

By now, as President Joe Biden proposes sending another $61 billion from American taxpayers to Ukraine, most Americans realize supporting the war in Ukraine has been a massively expensive failure. When the Russian army initially invaded, the foreign policy establishment insisted the United States could successfully train and arm the Ukrainians to resist the Russian onslaught. This, it was said, would benefit Americans by preventing Putin from invading American allies in the rest of Europe and promoting democracy. Somehow, the corrupt oligarchy in Ukraine was more democratic than the corrupt oligarchy in Russia.

Hundreds of thousands of lives and more than $100 billion later, it’s clear nothing about this war is going to change. Now, the only people who want to keep the war going are defense companies and their shills in Washington, D.C. They will fight Putin to the last Ukrainian and happily sink our country even further into debt to do so.

Moreover, as former George W. Bush speechwriter Marc Thiessen celebrated in a recent essay, these war profiteers are legion and quite proud of the business they’re bringing to American workers — almost as proud as they were when they hyped Volodymyr Zelensky as this generation’s Winston Churchill.

“Funds that lawmakers approve to arm Ukraine are not going directly to Ukraine but are being used stateside to build new weapons or to replace weapons sent to Kyiv from U.S. stockpiles,” Thiessen points out. Also, all this aid has become “a major cash infusion into factories across the country that directly benefits American workers” and is “also reinvigorating our dangerously atrophied defense industrial base.”

For good measure, Thiessen calls out Republican politicians who oppose this military aid to Ukraine, especially U.S. Sens. J.D. Vance and Josh Hawley. In his view, these men pretend to champion factory workers, but won’t support them where it counts. “Now, thanks to the Ukraine aid that Vance opposes, the Pentagon signed a $624.6 million contract last year to build Stinger missiles in Tucson, to replace about 1,400 sent to Ukraine,” Thiessen asserts. He accuses Hawley of impoverishing his constituents in Missouri by “trying to cut funding for these [Patriot missile] systems being built in his state.”

At no point does Thiessen mention who exactly is paying for these weapons: American taxpayers. Nor does he mention the other crucial fact that all this money could be going to a whole slew of other things that would benefit the American industrial base far more than producing weapons for endless war. Those include building a wall to keep out cheap foreign labor, promoting domestic energy production, and investing research into new industrial technology.

As the French economist Frederic Bastiat explained almost two centuries ago, “Destruction is not profitable.” He illustrates this point with the “Parable of the Broken Window,” in which a boy breaks a window, forcing the store owner to pay for a new one. Some might conclude this is good because it keeps window-makers in business: “Good comes out of everything. Accidents like this keep production moving. Everyone has to live. What would happen to glaziers if no window panes were ever broken?”

Bastiat points out that people only arrive at this conclusion because they can see the store owner paying to have his window replaced, but they cannot see what the store owner would have done with that money otherwise. For instance, he could have bought shoes, enriching the shoe salesman. As for the glazier, he could have made a window for a new building instead of repairing an old one that was just vandalized.

Saying that pointless wars are good for business follows the same logic. It focuses on what people can see — new Abrams tanks, the factories in Ohio making them, and the plants in Mesquite, Texas arming them — and neglects what they cannot see: new cars (that are actually affordable), the factories in Ohio making them, and plants in Texas equipping them with GPS systems. Instead of shoveling money to a corrupt foreign government that wants to buy American weapons, American taxpayers could use that money to buy American consumer goods. More jobs, more happy customers, and far fewer dead Ukrainians and Russians.

Without this argument that war is good for business, Thiessen and other Ukraine boosters are only left with the same old arguments used to initially justify American intervention in Ukraine: “decimating the Russian military threat to NATO, restoring deterrence with China, dissuading other nuclear powers from launching wars of aggression, and improving American military preparedness for other adversaries.”

But all of these “reasons” are subject to serious questions at this point: Was the Russian military ever a real threat to NATO? Is China really deterred from taking military action in Taiwan? Are any world leaders more afraid of the U.S. military after seeing Ukraine laid waste despite the support it received — to say nothing of the despicable Biden administration withdrawal from Afghanistan? It’s time for our leaders to admit that continuing support for Ukraine is a mistake. It has been an utter waste of lives and money, and to suggest otherwise only ensures further destruction. For the sake of everyone involved, the Biden administration should just broker a peace deal and move on — or better yet, focus on domestic affairs. American workers should focus their efforts at home, beat their swords into plowshares, and rebuild a once proud country that’s currently falling apart.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bloggers; failedproxywar; fakenews; mic; neoconsvotedbiden; russia; ukraine
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1 posted on 12/14/2023 4:22:04 PM PST by Kazan
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To: Kazan

2 posted on 12/14/2023 4:23:17 PM PST by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: Kazan

Months ago, Biden had already gifted the Ukraine with more money than it has ever given to any other country. Since spring of 2022, Joe handed 113 Billion dollars, that we know of, to the Ukraine to pay pensions, salaries of government workers and first responders etc..
Joe has given more money to the Ukraine since the 2022 start of the war than it gave to Afghanistan in 20 years.

Joe has provied 70%+ (that we know of - black ops don’t require congressional approval) of NATO’s funding for the war.
Joe is hiding crimes and protecting the Deep State’s hive.


3 posted on 12/14/2023 4:26:50 PM PST by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: ransomnote
Months ago, Biden had already gifted the Ukraine with more money than it has ever given to any other country.

World Record Grifting

4 posted on 12/14/2023 4:35:43 PM PST by cabojoe ( 🇺🇸 Stop Ukie censorship. Release Gonzalo Lira)
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To: Kazan

It sure is... Only an Imbecile would claim this because they don’t understand the bigger picture of reality.

I hear it here a lot.


5 posted on 12/14/2023 4:36:21 PM PST by Openurmind (The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world it leaves to its children. ~ D. Bonhoeffer)
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To: Kazan

I fixated on “promoting democracy” for a second. In the Current Year, does “democracy” mean anything more than LGBTQ+ stuff, especially among the people who promote it? I understand the dictionary definition, but I am talking about what it means in application to reality. Is there a single “democracy” in the West that isn’t an abomination.


6 posted on 12/14/2023 4:42:58 PM PST by cdcdawg (Our empire of sodomy is failing as it should. How else could it go? )
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To: Kazan

Ukraine impact on:
INDUSTRIAL BASE IMPACTS FOR AMERICA
$27 Billions encounting.

(Mapped values reflect major systems only; not all funds are reflected.

https://www.acq.osd.mil/news/spotlight/Ukraine%20Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdf


7 posted on 12/14/2023 4:43:29 PM PST by USA-FRANCE
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To: Kazan; lodi90

I believe lodi90 would dispute the author’s conclusion.


8 posted on 12/14/2023 4:49:30 PM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Kazan



9 posted on 12/14/2023 4:50:32 PM PST by canuck_conservative (NATO - keeping Europe free of Russian invaders for 74 years - you're welcome!)
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To: Kazan

I agree.


10 posted on 12/14/2023 4:54:47 PM PST by FlingWingFlyer (The damage Biden and his freak show is doing to America is not reversable.)
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To: Kazan

“For good measure, Thiessen calls out Republican politicians who oppose this military aid to Ukraine, especially U.S. Sens. J.D. Vance and Josh Hawley. In his view, these men pretend to champion factory workers, but won’t support them where it counts. “Now, thanks to the Ukraine aid that Vance opposes, the Pentagon signed a $624.6 million contract last year to build Stinger missiles in Tucson, to replace about 1,400 sent to Ukraine,” Thiessen asserts.”

Thiessen with some particularly ghoulish analysis.


11 posted on 12/14/2023 5:09:10 PM PST by cdcdawg (Our empire of sodomy is failing as it should. How else could it go? )
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To: Kazan

Headline makes no sense.


12 posted on 12/14/2023 5:16:56 PM PST by bigbob
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To: Kazan

This is an EXCELLENT explanation. Thank you for sharing!


13 posted on 12/14/2023 5:42:55 PM PST by MNDude
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To: USA-FRANCE

You must have not read a word of this article.


14 posted on 12/14/2023 5:47:41 PM PST by MNDude
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To: Kazan
Meyrat's arguments are shallow. He contrasts spending on military systems with consumer purchases, but ignores the fact that the government doesn't use tax dollars to buy consumer goods for taxpayers, and those consumer goods don't come from US factories.

In reality he is suggesting that giving $5,000 debit cards to illegal aliens so they can buy imported stuff from China in Walmart is better than spending $5,000 at a defense manufacturer in Texas.

Personally I'd rather see my tax dollars going to US factory workers so they can use that money to buy whatever they want to buy than going to some liberal spending program.

15 posted on 12/14/2023 5:55:35 PM PST by freeandfreezing
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To: freeandfreezing

I just want America, the West, and our Pacific allies better prepared for the China threat than they were 2 years ago when weapons plants had closed or rusted into inactivity, everyone was dozing off, military budgets were being ignored and old weapons and ammo stocks were corroding and becoming outdated or coming up for end of life disposal.

The invasion and Ukraine’s sustained resistance have improved that situation greatly.


16 posted on 12/14/2023 6:10:07 PM PST by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: cdcdawg

>I fixated on “promoting democracy” for a second. In the Current Year, does “democracy” mean anything more than LGBTQ+ stuff, especially among the people who promote it? I understand the dictionary definition, but I am talking about what it means in application to reality. Is there a single “democracy” in the West that isn’t an abomination.<

Yes, practicing Christians.


17 posted on 12/14/2023 6:18:40 PM PST by bimboeruption (“Less propaganda would be appreciated.” JimRob 12-2-2023)
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To: bimboeruption

What I meant to say is practicing Christians ARE an abomination in the West.


18 posted on 12/14/2023 6:20:31 PM PST by bimboeruption (“Less propaganda would be appreciated.” JimRob 12-2-2023)
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To: bimboeruption

“”””practicing Christians ARE an abomination in the West.””””

It is far worse for Bible-believing Christians in Russia and among Russia’s friends and allies.


19 posted on 12/14/2023 6:25:54 PM PST by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: Kazan
The ‘Ukraine War Is Good For American Business’ Argument Isn’t Just Vile, It’s Also A Lie

The Ukraine War has been an excellent opportunity for the yacht industry.

20 posted on 12/14/2023 6:35:44 PM PST by Right_Wing_Madman
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