So you dont want to fix up roads, or build schools, or build sewers, infrastructure, etc?The money problem in the US isn't how much is being spent on the military.
If you keep doing that, there wont be much left worth defending soon.
So is the population of most European countries and nobody here is planning a war (we do make some of the worlds best weapons systems in here Europe though, like the Leopard battle tank and the Type 212 attack submarine).China has a dilemma. Their population is rapidly aging.
Chinas interest has traditionaly always been directed inwards. The only country they could be interested in attacking is Taiwan, since they consider it part of their own country. However, this would be idiotic, since Taiwan and China are finally getting closer again politically. If Chinas economy keeps getting stronger, I am predicting Taiwan to remerge with China in a peaceful way, as an autonomous region, just like Hong Kong did earlier.India has a nearly equal population which will be much younger in comparison. If China is to seize the opportunity it must move quickly. Am I saying blitzkrieg? Not necessarily. But at the very least, throwing their weight around...
So even assuming that things are much cheaper to produce in China, their military power will only grow at half the pace the US military power grows. Also, as the article says: Their weapons technologies are still inferior to those of the US. The stealthy shape of the craft only makes part of the plane. This Chinese "5th generation" fighter might look like an F22, but I doubt that it truly is a 5th generation plane in regards to its engines, avionics, radar and other instrumentation, which are just as much defining a 5th generation plane as the stealthy shape is.China's annual defence budget is still less than one-sixth of America's $663bn a year, or less than half the US figure when expressed as a percentage of GDP.
haha. it's like a bad husband/wife saying "our money problems have nothing to do with me going out and buying lots of stuff that i don't really need."Skipjack wrote:So you dont want to fix up roads, or build schools, or build sewers, infrastructure, etc?The money problem in the US isn't how much is being spent on the military.
If you keep doing that, there wont be much left worth defending soon.
Skip, the whole point of F-22 is supercruise and the combat envelope extensions. Time on station is way better, and you would be suprised at high density tanking cycles and the ability to keep stations covered. basing from land is much easier for F-22 than others. Generally, tanking exceeds pilot endurance, and is planned that way.Skipjack wrote:So is the population of most European countries and nobody here is planning a war (we do make some of the worlds best weapons systems in here Europe though, like the Leopard battle tank and the Type 212 attack submarine).China has a dilemma. Their population is rapidly aging.
Chinas interest has traditionaly always been directed inwards. The only country they could be interested in attacking is Taiwan, since they consider it part of their own country. However, this would be idiotic, since Taiwan and China are finally getting closer again politically. If Chinas economy keeps getting stronger, I am predicting Taiwan to remerge with China in a peaceful way, as an autonomous region, just like Hong Kong did earlier.India has a nearly equal population which will be much younger in comparison. If China is to seize the opportunity it must move quickly. Am I saying blitzkrieg? Not necessarily. But at the very least, throwing their weight around...
It is not like China has invaded Hong Kong and are supressing the people there now, are they? All that does not add up to the scenario you are proposing.
I predict that China will, once their economic strenght is great enough and their polpulation is aged enough (the old generation to old to have more children). They will open their borders and let the people travel freely. They will also undo the one child policy, which is already being openly talked about, last time I checked. Within 20 years, they could add a new generation of young workers that way. Also dont forget that the one child policy only was enforcable in the cities. In the rural areas people were resisting and having more than one child all the time. So they do have more young people in the country than their official statistics may say.
Also, please let me quote the article that you posted:So even assuming that things are much cheaper to produce in China, their military power will only grow at half the pace the US military power grows. Also, as the article says: Their weapons technologies are still inferior to those of the US. The stealthy shape of the craft only makes part of the plane. This Chinese "5th generation" fighter might look like an F22, but I doubt that it truly is a 5th generation plane in regards to its engines, avionics, radar and other instrumentation, which are just as much defining a 5th generation plane as the stealthy shape is.China's annual defence budget is still less than one-sixth of America's $663bn a year, or less than half the US figure when expressed as a percentage of GDP.
One more thing to think about when facing China: The F22 can not be used on aircraft carriers (the swing wing version was cancelled in 1991). So it can not really be used much in a war against China, only if it can be placed on friendly military bases nearby China in time (and there are not that many). I doub that it would be possible to air fuel even 186 F22s at once...
The JSF makes much more sense for this, since it can be carrier borne.
Finally, I know that some of you reps here are (of course) blaming Obama for the reduction of the order, but the decision to reduce the order was already made by the Pentagon in 2006. The Obama administration is simply carrying out the recommendation of the Pentagon here.
Not that this really matters that much in this discussion, but I wanted to mention it.
The portion of our taxes that goes to military SHOULD be around 95%, because we should NOT be taking so #%*(ing much money from people to pay for these socialist redistribution schemes we've got. Not to mention the government forays into industries that should be reserved for private industry.happyjack27 wrote:the u.s. federal budget is publically available online. i encourage you to take a look at it. let me assure you, the proportion of your federal taxes that go to the military is MUCH closer to 50% than 5%. look it up.krenshala wrote:The money problem in the US isn't how much is being spent on the military. That is only about 5 to 10 percent of what is taken in by taxes from what I've seen. The budget problems are in how the other 90 - 95% are being used, in my opinion.
It's not the government's job to build schools. Heck, the majority of major roads don't need to be built by the government either. We've got the technology now that all roads could be made to be privately owned toll roads, pay for use. Drive a lot, pay a lot. Drive a little, don't pay much.Skipjack wrote:So you dont want to fix up roads, or build schools, or build sewers, infrastructure, etc?The money problem in the US isn't how much is being spent on the military.
If you keep doing that, there wont be much left worth defending soon.
actually, yeah it is. and its a darn good idea too, unless you'd rather take us back to the dark ages. but education isn't important, and it doesn't need to be public, right? it should just be a luxury for those who can afford it. besides, science when has education ever done anything important for us?mdeminico wrote:It's not the government's job to build schools. Heck, the majority of major roads don't need to be built by the government either. We've got the technology now that all roads could be made to be privately owned toll roads, pay for use. Drive a lot, pay a lot. Drive a little, don't pay much.Skipjack wrote:So you dont want to fix up roads, or build schools, or build sewers, infrastructure, etc?The money problem in the US isn't how much is being spent on the military.
If you keep doing that, there wont be much left worth defending soon.
wow. you are clearly a political radical. and very much so. way too many very radical (and other words that are not so pleasant) things to respond to and i can only imagine that it'll just get worse from there. frankly i lack the patience and i don't think it will do any good besides. that's the nicest way i can think to put it. besides that i think you could benefit greatly from taking some polisci courses. (or just picking up an elementary textbook, for that matter.) i lack the patience.mdeminico wrote:The portion of our taxes that goes to military SHOULD be around 95%, because we should NOT be taking so #%*(ing much money from people to pay for these socialist redistribution schemes we've got. Not to mention the government forays into industries that should be reserved for private industry.happyjack27 wrote:the u.s. federal budget is publically available online. i encourage you to take a look at it. let me assure you, the proportion of your federal taxes that go to the military is MUCH closer to 50% than 5%. look it up.krenshala wrote:The money problem in the US isn't how much is being spent on the military. That is only about 5 to 10 percent of what is taken in by taxes from what I've seen. The budget problems are in how the other 90 - 95% are being used, in my opinion.
Get rid of those, and they'd cut our tax rates by 75% easily. Only the military would be left, along with some basic stuff to support the bureaucracy, including lawmaking, courthouses, what minimal national parks should exist (Arlington for example), and the very few other things authorized in Article I Section 8 of the US Constitution.
If all that happened, we'd be spending about 95% or more of our tax dollars on the military, and the only reason it'd be that high is because only 5-10% of our money would go to taxes, versus the 60% that does now at all levels of government.
China has a LOT of nations around it that are friendly to us. I don't think we'd need to worry about finding a place to stage air ops, unless they were willing to utterly destroy every *single* airfield (a formidable task in one nation, but in this many nations...) in India, Thailand, the Phillippines, Australia, Japan, South Korea, not to mention Afghanistan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Israel, etc, all of which are within a "relatively close enough" range of some region of China. Plus all the small Pacific islands.Skipjack wrote:Yes, I am very well aware of the supercruise thing. But you are obviously not aware of the distance between the US soil and mainland China... It makes the fighter very ineffective.
You might have better results stationing them in Okinawa or some other friendly airbase closer to China. Otherwise, you would have no other choice than to rely on aircraft carriers and those need F35s and not F22s.
Of course a stationary base close to mainland China is also highly exposed and very attackable. I would expect it to be a first target for the Chinese if they were to make an attack. That would take the F22s out of the equation- again, especially since they are (like most american aircraft) rather high maintenance and need clean (non bombed) airfields...
You seem to drastically underestimate the distances involved here, very drastically! Hey Australia is only 6000 miles away from China. Walk in the park!the Phillippines, Australia, Japan, South Korea, not to mention Afghanistan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Israel, etc, all of which are within a "relatively close enough" range of some region of China. Plus all the small Pacific islands.
Look, I am all for private industry where it makes sense. Certain things dont make sense though. Education should be there for everyone, not just for the privileged. Infrastructural measures should also be done by the government. Private companies will have problems with e.g. securing the rights to build roads through communities. And then, you wont have much competition there. If you let the private companies build the roads on their own dime, they will want to charge the ones using them. So you have a road tax imposed on you by private company. Since you can only build so many highways in one place, this road will be without competition from anyone else. So this company will effectively have the monopoly to charge as much as they want. Seems like the perfect business to me. It is the return of the robber baron. I dont know about you, but I dont see this reducing any costs for the private citizen.The portion of our taxes that goes to military SHOULD be around 95%, because we should NOT be taking so #%*(ing much money from people to pay for these socialist redistribution schemes we've got. Not to mention the government forays into industries that should be reserved for private industry.
Dude,Skipjack wrote:You seem to drastically underestimate the distances involved here, very drastically! Hey Australia is only 6000 miles away from China. Walk in the park!the Phillippines, Australia, Japan, South Korea, not to mention Afghanistan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Israel, etc, all of which are within a "relatively close enough" range of some region of China. Plus all the small Pacific islands.
Even the Philipines are 700 miles away from China. Coast to coast that is, not from an airfield on the Philipines to important Chinese military installations...
The F22 has a range of 1800 miles with two external fuel tanks (that severely reduce its stealth capabilities and its armament.
So at a range of 1400 miles, you can barely get there, fly a few maneuvers and then get back. Not much headroom left there.
Of course you can expand the range with tanker planes, but that means all sorts of other problems (tankers are not stealth craft, you can only tank two F22s at once with one tanker so you need many tankers for many F22s, etc, etc).
Oh, I forgot to mention that the 1800 miles of range are only when using the fuel most efficiently. Combat range is only 400 miles. Just saying...
You have demonstrated your lack of knowledge in the choice and use of stat snippets you use to argue.Skipjack wrote:I do know these capabilities, but you are just as ignorant to the complexity involved with doing these things than you are to geography.There is way more to this than you have knowledge of, both technical capabilities, as well as planning integration to apply them.