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I agree fren, but it's a step in the Right direction. Getting a person to unwind the retardedness of the leftist progressives is a huge first step and shoves our foot in the door, plus Vance should be a major whitepill for all rw men and women. A man who listens to the most fringe dissident (lol) right voices, is a man that sees the problems with the standard viewing of American and worldwide politics. While he may not implement all the policies we may want him to, he's gonna begin the shift.Trump isn’t gonna destroy the Civil Rights Act, repeal the 19th, or even address legal immigration in any meaningful way. He doesn’t want to and the will isn’t there anyway. We’ve still got a long, long way to go.
And on that same token, we won't have real security because real security is mean. Real security means locking people up, chasing border crossers away with rifles, using nightsticks to make bums move on, and more. People forget that we've already been through this cycle. We shut down law enforcement in the 60s and 70s at the demand of voters because it was mean. Things got really, really bad, so bad that voters came around and were okay with being mean again...for a while. Things eventually got good in the 2000s, so good that once again, voters cried and wailed when they saw how mean keeping society secure was. So we started disabling meaningful law enforcement again, now things are going to shit, and once again, voters are coming around.
But even if Trump does fix things, in 10 years, voters will start crying about how mean putting criminals in jail is.
It’s the end of the world as we know it, and more military news
Happy Friday! Every time I walk into my local Starbucks, a barista I know asks me if World War III has started. It’s a reasonable question considering Ukraine claims Russia fired a non-nuclear intercontinental ballistic missile on Thursday at the Ukrainian city of Dnipro. Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters on Thursday that Russia had fired an “experimental intermediate-range ballistic missile” based on Russia’s RS-26 Rubezh ICBM, and Russian authorities notified the United States briefly before the launch through nuclear risk reduction channels.
Singh also said this is the first time the United States has seen this missile used on the battlefield, and that U.S. officials recently briefed Ukraine about the possibility that it could be used.
The latest Russian attack comes after the United States allowed Ukraine to use its Army Tactical Missile System, or ATACMS, to strike targets inside Russia — although under what conditions remains unclear — and the U.S. government has agreed to provide the Ukrainians with antipersonnel landmines.
Things haven’t been this tense since 1983, when the United States and Soviet Union nearly stumbled into nuclear war, first in September and again in November. The recent talk about the possibility of World War III has prompted me to ask Pentagon Rundown readers: Which is the most depressing nuclear war movie of all time – “The Day After” or “Threads”? Send your votes to schogol@taskandpurpose.com and increase the peace!
But enough about the potential for Armageddon. Here’s your weekly rundown.
And on a personal note: The Pentagon Rundown will be off next week for the Thanksgiving holiday. On behalf of everyone at Task & Purpose, I wish you and your families all the best!
- “We need you.” CNN rising star and Task & Purpose alumna Haley Britzky pressed Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin this week about comments made by Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary, that women do not belong in combat roles. Austin responded that the “very courageous and very proficient” women he has led in combat are examples of the incredible things that women in the military do. “I think our women add significant value to the United States military and we should never change that,” Austin said in Laos on Wednesday. “And if I had a message, to answer your question, to our women, I would tell them that, you know, we need you, we have faith in you, we are appreciative of your service, and you add value to the finest and most lethal fighting force on Earth.”
- Speaking of voluntary service. The Marine Corps is out with its newest moto recruiting commercial as part of its “Made for This” campaign, which features the tag, “You don’t join the Marines, you become one.” Task & Purpose asked a panel of teenagers who are in the Corps’ target demographic what they thought of the commercial. While they sensed there are less glamorous aspects of Marine life that the commercial didn’t show — such as “sitting around doing nothing” — they also picked up on many of the recruiting ad’s themes. “It definitely showed the variety of what you can do,” said Colin, a high school junior. “There were, like, guys jumping out of helicopters and then it clipped to a guy running through a snowstorm. And then spinning a weapon around. I don’t know, just a bad ass on the move all the time.”
- Saying the quiet part out loud. Navy Adm. Samuel Paparo, head of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, acknowledged on Tuesday that the U.S. military’s stockpile of artillery shells and other munitions is dwindling due to the amount of aid being provided to Ukraine and Israel. The Army expects to ramp up production of 155mm artillery shells to 100,000 per month by the end of 2025 — more than three years after the Ukraine war started. One limiting factor has been that the United States has had to import TNT, a major component of artillery shells. Although the Army recently awarded a contract to build a TNT factory in Graham, Kentucky, it is not expected to be completed until 2028.
- Using the military to deport illegal immigrants. This week’s news has moved so quickly that it would be easy to forget that Trump confirmed on Monday that he plans to use U.S. troops as part of his efforts to deport illegal immigrants. The law he will likely use to do so is the Insurrection Act, which gives presidents, “almost unrestricted latitude for the domestic use of the United States military for law enforcement purposes,” said Kori Schake, head of the defense policy team at the American Enterprise Institute think tank in Washington, D.C. While Trump may be challenged in courts, U.S. troops are not allowed to disobey orders because they disagree with them.
- Small Wars Journal reboot. The Small Wars Journal, a blog that was initially launched in 2005 and focuses on unconventional or irregular warfare, insurgency, and guerilla warfare, is being relaunched under the Future Security Initiative at Arizona State University, said John P. Sullivan, an associate editor with the publication. The original site was founded by retired Marine Maj. Dave Dilegge, who died in May 2020. “The new Small Wars Journal (SWJ), or SWJ 2.0. under the leadership of ASU’s Future Security Initiative (FSI) and in collaboration with ASU Media Enterprises publishes serious, authentic voices from across the spectrum of small wars stakeholders,” Sullivan told Task & Purpose.
Reread what you just wrote, think on that for a moment, and then realize that branding and who 'owns' what doesn't matter when the physical point of construction and movement of goods is in the U.S.How is it not the other way around? What business and/or industry exactly does Trump want to economically protect and from whom?
See the following for example : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpALVkRGW1Y
Even in the case of the auto-motive industry, Trump says he doesn't care if a particular company is foreign or not as long as they make cars here and hire workers here, and f they don't do that, he'll put tariffs on cars made overseas.
And on that same token, we won't have real security because real security is mean. Real security means locking people up, chasing border crossers away with rifles, using nightsticks to make bums move on, and more. People forget that we've already been through this cycle. We shut down law enforcement in the 60s and 70s at the demand of voters because it was mean. Things got really, really bad, so bad that voters came around and were okay with being mean again...for a while. Things eventually got good in the 2000s, so good that once again, voters cried and wailed when they saw how mean keeping society secure was. So we started disabling meaningful law enforcement again, now things are going to shit, and once again, voters are coming around.
But even if Trump does fix things, in 10 years, voters will start crying about how mean putting criminals in jail is.
Good point. I did not know that about SpaceX or Tesla. I was going based off of his comments on X.
Honestly this seems pretty on the mark.
People still need to realize he’s a fair weather friend though. Who knows how long it will last.
FUCK YESSmall Wars Journal reboot
Florida's referendum would have passed if the proponents actually tried a moderate approach. If the proposal was to protect abortion for, say, 15 weeks and that's it, then that's somewhat reasonable and likely would have passed. But they tried to push for free abortion up to viability, which is just too distasteful to garner the supermajority necessary for a state constitutional amendment. Jury's still out on whether they realize this or not, but I'm guessing their ideological possession will just push them to double down in the future.Florida would have also passed a measure if they used the same 50% threshold as other states but they require 60% to pass a measure and only got 57% of the vote.
The best way to save money with the military is to get them to stop spending $20 on nuts and bolts. Not bulk packages of them, $20 for 1 nut or bolt."Elon Musk came in and he's going to help Make America Efficient Again. He's a great guy and really wants to do some things, and we're going to let him do it [...] Elon, leave defense to me. We have more planes than any country in the world. We have more than Russia. Elon, stay away from our military":
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Drones have use for surgical strikes, reconnaissance, and cheap to produce disposable close air support but on their own as technology currently stands they are not suitable to replace fighter jets just yet."Elon Musk came in and he's going to help Make America Efficient Again. He's a great guy and really wants to do some things, and we're going to let him do it [...] Elon, leave defense to me. We have more planes than any country in the world. We have more than Russia. Elon, stay away from our military":
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Florida would have also passed a measure if they used the same 50% threshold as other states but they require 60% to pass a measure and only got 57% of the vote.
You guys know it was a State Constitutional amendment, and not a simple 'ballot measure' right?Florida's referendum would have passed if the proponents actually tried a moderate approach
The most legitimate criticism of tariffs that I have read is that Trump wants manufacturing to happen in the US that has not happened at significant scale in decades, so there is no way to keep prices low on certain goods because the US supply chain is not prepared. The counter to this is... no shit, and why aren't we self-reliant? Why are we relying on China, who is our main trade adversary, to give us cheap shit? Liberals see no issue with China supporting Russia by buying their cheap natgas and shipping them the North Koreans to get addicted to porn, but they would have a stroke if we bought anything from Belarus.I won't lie, the tariffs I think are a bad idea. Unless Trump can actually reduce the barrier to entry for factories to return such as by getting rid of the regulations that encouraged the outsourcing in the first place, the tariffs are only going to make prices worse
People forget that although the older generations were made of tougher stuff, we still went through our own period of indulgence and Weimar style degeneracy before we ramped up to that level of manufacturing, people were soft and drunk and enraptured by trappings. Then Depression and war took those trappings and hammered them to dust and people rose to the challenge of making better.The most legitimate criticism of tariffs that I have read is that Trump wants manufacturing to happen in the US that has not happened at significant scale in decades, so there is no way to keep prices low on certain goods because the US supply chain is not prepared. The counter to this is... no shit, and why aren't we self-reliant? Why are we relying on China, who is our main trade adversary, to give us cheap shit? Liberals see no issue with China supporting Russia by buying their cheap natgas and shipping them the North Koreans to get addicted to porn, but they would have a stroke if we bought anything from Belarus.
You just described 3 out of 5 of the roles of a multi-purpose fighter like the F35, the remaining jobs (Strategic ordinance delivery) can be fulfilled by dedicated airframes more efficiently, and (Air superiority) is only necessary in the context of other people having fighter jets, yet even this can be outsourced with ever smarter G2A/A2A-loitering solutions.Drones have use for surgical strikes, reconnaissance, and cheap to produce disposable close air support but on their own as technology currently stands they are not suitable to replace fighter jets just yet.
Imagine if Deng Xiaoping had said "we can't compete with the US and Europe, we don't have any manufacturing. We should just trade rice for manufactured goods because there's no way that we could build up our own industry".The most legitimate criticism of tariffs that I have read is that Trump wants manufacturing to happen in the US that has not happened at significant scale in decades, so there is no way to keep prices low on certain goods because the US supply chain is not prepared. The counter to this is... no shit, and why aren't we self-reliant? Why are we relying on China, who is our main trade adversary, to give us cheap shit? Liberals see no issue with China supporting Russia by buying their cheap natgas and shipping them the North Koreans to get addicted to porn, but they would have a stroke if we bought anything from Belarus.
I absolutely know that, and I am not even disagreeing that it should take more than a bare majority to amend the state constitution. My point is that it would have passed the 60% threshold if the proponents tried a moderate compromise rather than trying to get everything they wanted. I'm more surprised that the recreational marijuana amendment didn't reach the 60% majority, even though I personally didn't like the idea of smelling marijuana everywhere like you do when you walk the streets of New York.You guys know it was a State Constitutional amendment, and not a simple 'ballot measure' right?
It should take a 2/3 majority.
I remember a couple of years ago, California public schools were trying to teach Reconquista as part of their curriculum..Massive illegal immigration from Latin America has been a significant national security issue that our government has been completely ignoring like an ostrich in the sand since, what, the 1930's at the very least? This issue is cataclysmically awful for the US and I feel like I'm taking crazy pills when I hear people say it's really not a big deal at all.
air superiority is one of the most important parts in any modern war though. Just look at the Ukraine Russia war, if either side started flying jets more often then the war would have been over in like half a year.You just described 3 out of 5 of the roles of a multi-purpose fighter like the F35, the remaining jobs (Strategic ordinance delivery) can be fulfilled by dedicated airframes more efficiently, and (Air superiority) is only necessary in the context of other people having fighter jets, yet even this can be outsourced with ever smarter G2A/A2A-loitering solutions.
Ideally the F35 should be the last manned fighter America ever produces