USS Ronald Reagan Commissioning Tomorrow 1831
wessman writes "Being an employee at Northrop Grumman's Newport News shipyard, I cannot help but be proud to see one of our products commissioned by the U.S. Navy, especially considering how long it takes to build a $5 billion Nimitz-class nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. And I'm sure the other 18,000 workers here feel the same way. The ship is being commissioned Saturday, July 12 at the Norfolk naval base. It is obviously the most technically advanced carrier in the fleet, taking the term "hardware" to new levels. Pick a local story. From the Hampton Roads Daily Press: Anchors Aweigh, Changes Abound Aboard Carrier, Some Wanted CVN-76 Named after Daredevil Flier, 20,000 Expected for Reagan's Rite, USS Constellation Retiring Too Soon?. From the Virginia Pilot: The Carrier Reagan - Ahead of Its Class, Carrier Construction is All in the Family, Former President's Son Michael Reagan Excited about Commissioning."
I wonder (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I wonder (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I wonder (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I wonder (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry to be a realist, but people have been misbeahving since the dawn of time. Sometimes the only thing that works to avoid violence is the threat that you will get beat up more then your opponent.
Re:I wonder (Score:4, Insightful)
Well simply, the US doesn't want Aircraft carriers with dumb little ramps at the end. Besides if your going to build one you might as well build one to handle all ones needs. We do have ships that are platforms for verticle takeoff vehicles.
The brits can get away with the small ships since they largely use Harriers (sp). The also don't have the amount not even have the size of planes the US launches off their carriers.
There is little that is bad about the big carriers, unless your going sight seeing in a small harbor. Fuel isn't much an issue, so it takes an extra few pounds of uranium every 20 years, not a big deal. Also the military gets there money no matter what they do. If they didn't spend it on a carrier it would go to other weapons, it's not going to get used for anything else if they don't use it.
Re:I wonder (Score:4, Funny)
You said it! (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh yeah, forgot the [/sarcasm]
Heh, a coworker once called me a socialist for saying that Reagan wasn't the greatest president that ever lived. So I guess if you don't like Reagan, you must be a socialist! I love the logic of Republicans.
Re:You said it! (Score:5, Interesting)
While you could say that the men and women of congress are adults who are responsible for their own actions, you can't ignore that it was the President who goaded/inspired them to do it.
These changes did accelerate the endgame of the Cold War; but the seeds of the endgame were planted much earlier. After all, the coup attempt on Gorbachev was about Perestroika and its attendant lessening of power for many in the system. Gorbachev's autobiography (though self-serving at times) is a good reference here.
You could, of course, say that the form of the Soviet government was flawed to begin with and could never succeed in the long run. But as far as the problem of spending so much on the military to keep up with the U.S., that began as soon as the Cold War itself. It also spiked after the Cuban Missile Crisis.
A weird sort of irony is that Khruschev put missiles in Cuba thinking they would be an easy way to appease his hard-liners, allowing him to spend more money on domestic issues. After all, the Americans had missiles closer than those to the USSR. Even the U.S. military acknowledged that while they weren't insignificant, the missiles posed less of a threat to the U.S. than did submarines. Beschloss' "The Crisis Years" is a good reference here.
The tough break for Khruschev was that unlike Eisenhower, who carried enough of the people's trust that he didn't need to respond bellicosely every time the Soviets did something, Kennedy did. He even did it proactively, making a statement that the placement of any offensive nuclear weapons in the region would not be allowed. He then was stuck backing it up to keep his own people happy.
After Khruschev backed down, any thoughts of increasing domestic spending went out the door. Khruschev was pushed from power, and the direct seeds of the USSR's dissolution were planted with the increase in military spending that resulted from the "defeat" in Cuba.
You can imagine that Castro was pissed off; but if you want a good scary story, read about relations between the USSR and China at the time.
Reagan didn't create deficit spending Congress did (Score:5, Informative)
On the issue of Reagan convincing Congress to increase spending you are demonstrably mistaken.
From Fiscal Year 1981 through Fiscal Year 1981, only once did the Reagan administration propose more spending than Congress approved; for the other eight years, Congress spent more money than Reagan proposed. Here are the actual figures Reagan proposed, and the actual amount Congress authorized (in billions of dollars):
FY1981 Reagan: $655.2 Congress: $678.2
FY1982 Reagan: $695.3 Congress: $745.8
FY1983 Reagan: $773.3 Congress: $808.4
FY1984 Reagan: $862.5 Congress: $851.8
FY1985 Reagan: $940.3 Congress: $946.4
FY1986 Reagan: $873.7 Congress: $990.3
FY1987 Reagan: $994.0 Congress: $1003.9
FY1988 Reagan: $1024.3 Congress: $1064.1
FY1989 Reagan: $1094.2 Congress: $1144.2
Note that the Democratic party controlled the House all eight years of Reagan's presidency, and the Senate the last two. Had it not been for excessive spending by Congress (which also increased the amount of "locked in" spending for each successive budget), the budget deficit would have disappeared by the end of Reagan's term.
Source: Edwin S. Rubenstein, The Right Data, P. 235.
Re:Reagan didn't create deficit spending Congress (Score:4, Informative)
2. The Carter figures are misleading because they are not inflation-adjusted dollars. After 1982, inflation was a very minor factor in increasing budgets and revenues, but during the hyperinflation of the Carter years they were a major factor. Subtract the rate of inflation from the Carter revenue increases and you're left with very little. (I would calculate the exact figure, but my Almanac doesn't go back that far, and I don't have a copy of Statistical Abstract of the United States handy.)
Re:You said it! (Score:4, Offtopic)
While the Republican party likes to claim that Reagan's hard-line policies were responsible the collapse of the Soviet Union, it's not clear that that was the case. In fact, hard-line American policies made it easier for the Soviet government to justify repressing its own people.
Sure. So persuasive when you back it up with...
After all, the US had invaded the Soviet Union in 1918
No they didn't. The Soviet Union didn't even exist in 1918. The western powers participated in the Russian civil war in 1918-20 by allying with the forces opposed to the Communists. Small numbers of troops from western nations participated, but those were mostly British and French. The assertion that the the US invaded Russia in completely false.
and the Treaty of Versailles required that German troops to continue occupying large areas of conquered Russia after the war
No it didn't. Versailles required the Germans to give back large pieces of territory in the East, primarily to Poland. It isn't like there were large pieces of Russian territory in the East occupied by the Germans by 1920. Besides, Versailles was hardly dictated by the Americans.
so how could they trust the US when it was building up its military?
Claiming that the events that transpired after WWI directly affected Soviet attitudes towards the US 70 years later is a joke. That it kept the Communists in power longer even more so. Try picking up a history book before you go making ridiculous assertions.
Re:You said it! (Score:3, Insightful)
What would you suggest? Government-sponsored surgically overlaying condoms on your penis, so when you go bang a hooker, you won't get AIDS?
Re:You said it! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I wonder (Score:5, Funny)
Sincerely,
Osama
Re:I wonder (Score:5, Insightful)
So I guess it's doing just fine.
More concerning is the massive amount of consumer debt that we have piled up over the last 15 years.
How 'bout letting us know which country you are from so we can ask you some smarmy, ill-informed questions?
Re:I wonder (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually it started [thirdworldtraveler.com] in 1953 when Eisenhower ordered the CIA to overthrow the popularly elected (as in a real democratic election) prime minister of Iran, Mossadegh, by pushing Reza Pahlava, the Shah, to expel him. Riots ensued, the Shah fled, the CIA put the riots down, brought the Shaw back, and trained SAVAK; who went on to earn Amnesty International's award for "worst human rights record on the planet" in 1976. That's the year Carter was elected, he didn't take office 'till 77. I'm not sure how you can imply he was responsible for the revolt in 79 to overthrow a brutal and repressive regime.
As for Reagan's illustrious involvement in the hostage crisis: He traded weapons to the Ayatollah Khomeini, the forces of darkness, to secure their release. Even Reagan admitted [grolier.com] it. A very clever move, now known as the October Surprise, which was significant in defeating Carter.
"When President Reagan first issued his challenge to America's scientific community to find a defense against ballistic missiles..." [heritage.org] Clinton did continue funding, but then Clinton governed as a moderate republican, unfortunately.
Greneda was no joke for the Grenadines. They had made the mistake of electing Maurice Bishop who, alas, was mildly socialist. CIA destabilization began shortly thereafter under Carter in '79, actually, but given the animosity and outright betrayal of Carter by the UberRight in the defense organization (Ollie et al, see above), it's not clear he knew anything about it. Given that Grenada was a managed news event, you should be careful of any "news" you read about it, and the dangerous weapons they had [guardian.co.uk]. Remember pfc Lynch's "Rescue." [guardian.co.uk]
US prohibition has quite a long history, all of it embarrassing. Reagan did declare the "War on Drugs," [serendipity.li] but what that really meant, and continues to mean is difficult to ascertain. One thing is for sure, it is not about helping people. [uni-bremen.de] Mentioning Gary Webb's [pbs.org] careful and exceptionally well documented journalism runs contrary to the charade, but the evidence is strong [webcom.com] that under Reagan the CIA was supporting the sale of cocaine in the US to fund the Contras after congress confronted the CIA's arms sales underwritten funding.
The difference is the Sandinistas were the popularly elected government and the Contras were the private army of Samoza, evacuated, rearmed, retrained, and reinserted
Re:Friggin Troll or what? Bush is a Fascist Pig! (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, smart thinking. That Jefferson didn't like the British taxes? Then he should have left! The Northern states didn't like the South keeping slaves? They should all have left! Yeah, right on!
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Friggin Troll or what? Bush is a Fascist Pig! (Score:3, Insightful)
Correction:
...and if (God forbid!) you'd actually like to do something about the problems you see in the country you love, you're a terrorist.
Re:Friggin Troll or what? Bush is a Fascist Pig! (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, but at least I didn't post as an Anonymous Coward.
Gerald Ford (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Gerald Ford (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Gerald Ford (Score:5, Funny)
USS Bill Clinton gets really close to some of the not-quite-commissioned submarines, and gets them to stick torpedoes in places where torpedoes shouldn't be stuck.
Then there's the USS George W Bush, which comes with faulty radar that is always detecting incoming Weapons of Mass Destruction.
-- james
Re:Gerald Ford (Score:4, Funny)
Bah. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bah. (Score:4, Informative)
How appropriate... (Score:3, Informative)
Ronald Reagan's pro-spending, pro-big-government, anti-labor policies are undoubtedly going to lead my beloved country to her death. But with our large military, at least we will make a hell of a lot of noise when everything finally collapses.
Re:How appropriate... (Score:5, Insightful)
Believe it or not it takes more than a few days to plan and build one of these things. We were still in an economic boom (bubble, but who knew) at the time.
Plus, these things don't last forever and you don't wait until one of your existing carriers is toast to start thinking of buying another one. The defense of the country is an ongoing investment.
Ronald Reagan's pro-spending, pro-big-government, anti-labor policies are undoubtedly going to lead my beloved country to her death.
Wow, you take the cake. A liberal that can blame today's problems on a president from two decades ago. Nevermind that social spending far exceeds military spending, but blame the military spending for the deficit. Whatever.
Budget Deficits: Blame Congress, Not Reagan (Score:3, Interesting)
You are demonstrably mistaken. It was not Ronald Reagan but Congress that was "pro-spending," and "pro-big-government." From Fiscal Year 1981 through Fiscal Year 1981, only once did the Reagan administration propose more spending than Congress approved; for the other years, Congress spent more money than Reagan proposed. Here are the actual figures Reagan proposed, and the actual amount
Re:How appropriate... (Score:5, Insightful)
True, but remember that the concept of trickle-down economics was invented in the Reagan era as a faux-conservative justification for massive deficit spending. The idea was that heavy government purchasing would boost the economy without involving direct meddling. I guess it worked, sort of, at least better than whatever the Commies were doing (not that this wsa difficult) but it did lead us with that pesky deficit.
Reagan did also slash quite a bit of government spending in other areas, but he certainly didn't set much of an example for fiscal moderation. It remains to be seen whether Bush will surpass Reagan's record of bloat (or Clinton's record of lying. . . heh).
As far as Vietnam is concerned, remember that Reagan first became politically prominent campaigning for Goldwater, who didn't think JFK was tough enough. And NASA isn't exactly cheap, but it's nowhere in the neighborhood of military spending over the past few decades.
Re:How appropriate... (Score:3, Insightful)
He increased the federal budget by more than anyone before him, in both real dollar and percentage terms. So either he was pro-big-government, or incredibly incompetent.
New Rule: If you claim to be against big government while increasing government spending, you shall be laughed at. And if you claim it because you are simultaneously cutting taxes, while further claiming to be fiscally responsible, you shall be pelted with
You've oversimplified the question... (Score:5, Informative)
BTW, mothballing old ships is standard Navy practice, just in case a big war causes them to need more ships. For example, in Gulf War I, many of the transportion ships used to move supplies to the Gulf were pulled out of mothballs.
Re:How appropriate... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Industrial base (Score:5, Insightful)
Recently?
Liberia.
Within the last few years?
Mozambique (Operation Atlas Response).
Timor (USGET and UNTAET).
Venezuala (Operation Fundamental Response).
Turkey (Operation Avid Response).
Kosovar (Operation Allied Harbour).
Central America (Operation Strong Support).
Kenya & Tanzania (Operation Resolute Response).
That just takes us back 5 years to the middle of 1998. Do some research of your own.
Bad Name (Score:5, Funny)
Ouch.. (Score:3, Funny)
At $5 billion a pop, I can only imagine what a Beowulf cluster of these would be like..
great... (Score:3, Funny)
the GPS forgets where it is, and the sensory equipment goes to sleep during long meetings.
Re:great... (Score:3, Informative)
Misnamed, I think (Score:5, Funny)
* More space for women
* New island house
* Bulbous bow
* New arresting gear
One can't help but think it should have been named the USS Bill Clinton instead....
Re:Misnamed, I think (Score:5, Funny)
*All female crewmembers return to port preagnant.
*When conflict breaks out, it makes port in a non-involved country.
*Has a suite of bedrooms for rent at $50,000/night.
*Equiped with a double compliment of distress beacons and emergency signal flares.
*Flight deck lined with astroturf.
Screenshots of Nimitzes (Score:4, Informative)
Pictures [fas.org]
Not dead yet (Score:5, Interesting)
In Reagan's case, he is not really a factor, but his partisans (and detractors) are still pretty rabid. If he is really a great as his adherents say he is, why not wait a bit longer until a consensus emerges?
Re:Not dead yet (Score:5, Insightful)
1] "Like passing the largest tax cuts in history despite the Democrats controling the house AND the Senate".
BUZZ - Wrong. Reagan got control of the house for the first two years of the presidency, and - because of the presence of a highly conservative Democratic caucus from the south, he had effective control of the Senate. Oh, and in addition to "passing the largest tax cuts in history" (on the rich - naturally), he also passed the largest tax increase in history (on the poor). This is something a lot of anti-tax conservatives seem to pass over when reciting the faith.
"Reagan got more judicial nominees in than any president in history."
- TRUE, but meaningless. The country is bigger, so we have more judge positions to fill. You could also credit this to cooperation from Democrats, but the truth is that the GOP has been nearly as cooperative for Democratic appointments (sorry liberals). Between modern presidents, Clinton appointed 357 (or 44%), Reagan appointed 378. On a percentage basis though, no one beats George Washington - who appointed 100% of the judges in the country.
"He was the first president to put his foot down and stop the USSR."
- BZZZT. Wrong. That honor goes to Truman. In fact - there's this little "Doctrine" named after Truman having to do with the USSR, but I don't expect a typical dittohead to know that. They're so ignorant, they can hardly find the planet they're standing on.
You see, every President opposed the USSR. The only difference is the strategy they took: carrot, stick, or carrot and stick. From a global political perspective, it seems pretty obvious that none of these made much difference. It was the system of free trade and free expression that won over the long haul, not any macho posturing from a politician.
However, if you're determined to find a "sole cause", you would do worse that look at Japan. When that little upstart started beating the U.S. at its own game, suddenly the third world saw a model they could emulate, and the Russians began to loose faith. When Taiwan almost passed the GDP of the entirety of mainland China, even the Maoists did too.
It's a funny thing. McCarthy and the other 50s conservatives felt they had to emulate some of the methods of the USSR to destroy it. They had less faith in capatalism than many extremely liberal countries, including Sweeden - who proudly call themselves "socialist" even to this day.
Put a submarine up against it any day (Score:4, Interesting)
They better make sure they commision at least two submarines to escort this thing. The only ship capable of really fighting a submarine is another submarine. The suface ship guys may say they can handle this role, but they can't. If this thing isn't escorted by at least two 688s it will never hear the modern diesel boat running on batteries that launches 4 torpodoes on it.
They have...in training (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the problem with nuclear submarines - they're too loud to hear purely electrical ones. I believe it put some impetous into the Seawolf project.
more than meets the eye (Score:5, Interesting)
Directed energy weapons! what does that mean? High powered lasers? Something else that's super-secret?
after reading that I half-expected a description of how the next carriers will transform into a gi-normous humanoid robot.
Re:more than meets the eye (Score:5, Interesting)
Isn't that just a really fancy term for... a gun?
It's directed (you aim it) and bullets have lots of... KINETIC ENERGY! America's enemies will read this thinking they need to blow their budgets on defenses against Laser beams and ion canons only to get pulverized because they're not defended against a good ol' fashioned shelling.
Re:more than meets the eye (Score:3, Informative)
Re:more than meets the eye (Score:4, Funny)
Close, very close. Directed energy weapons means of course sharks with friggin' lasers.
It's expensive being policeman to the world (Score:3, Insightful)
An interesting question is whether we can shrink the size of the supporting battlegroup around a carrier in these times of reduced naval competition.
Independant of pointless pissing contests about politics, Reagan was a notable president. I'd fully expect there to be a significant ship named after Clinton some time in the future.
-dB
Simply wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
It is simply wrong, indeed, dangerous, to name anything after a living personage, especially a politician. And double especially a President.
This is cult-of-personality gone extreme. It's a small step from this to granting titles to retired Presidents, to granting titles to current Presidents. Rather than an occasion for a solemn acknowledgement of a person's contributions -- as validated by the sweep of history -- we get partisanship, triumphialism, and politicking.
It might sound morbid but they should have waited until he was dead.
Re:Simply wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
Though, there is a least one precedent, the George Bush Intercontinetal Airport [houstonairportsystem.org] in Houston.
Re:Simply wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
There's quite a bit that's been named after him.
Re:Simply wrong (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, so you're one of those types who think he's still alive?
Re:Simply wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm all for naming airports and ships after great people, but to go from the Lincoln and Washington to the Reagan and Bush is entirely too political.
Re:Simply wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
Who knows. But it's exactly this sort of naming convention that will seriously embarrass the US sooner or later. Imagine a vessel named after a President who later turns out to have stolen millions, or the sort of fuss that'll be kicked up when one's sent to a country that the CinC it's named after had attacked several years earlier?
How good would it look if their was an aircraft carrier called the USS Richard Nixon?
Carriers A Dichotomy (Score:5, Insightful)
What always impressed me about carriers- beyond the obvious, was that all that high tech is backed up by very simple means of getting the job done.
I worked in the V-2 division, arresting gear. We had electric motors that set the weight on an arresting gear engine for each trap. But each of those motors had a crank and they could be set by hand if power was not available.
Sound powered phones are still another slick- no power needed tool that impress the heck out of me.
But what everyone should remember - the single thing that make carriers so effective- are the people that run it.
.
I second that (Score:5, Interesting)
Directed Energy Weapons?! (Score:5, Interesting)
Detect incoming missle with integrated helicopter radar
Point maser at incoming missle
Destroy incoming missle
Profit!
Piloting the planes off the deck via an electromagnetic catapule will give new meaning to the old Quake 2 'so-and-so rides so-and-so's rail'.
No ship for Clinton, but.... (Score:3, Funny)
All Hail the Military! (Score:3, Interesting)
USS Bill Clinton (Score:3, Funny)
Hi Res Pics from PCU (Score:3, Informative)
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 2 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 3 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 4 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 5 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 6 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 7 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 8 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 9 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 10 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 11 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 12 [navy.mil]
USS Reagan Carrier Pic 13 [navy.mil]
Sick jokes... (Score:4, Insightful)
Its odd that so many liberals, so eager to tell everyone who compassionate they are, are so quick to make jokes about such topics.
Presence, cost, and Microsoft (Score:5, Informative)
U.S.S. Grace Hopper (Score:4, Informative)
Just a small ship in a big navy, but they are important to.
The real question is (Score:3, Interesting)
My $.02 on this (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting Reagan Quote about technology (Score:5, Insightful)
In June 1989, Ronald Reagan said, "Information is the oxygen of the modern age. It seeps through the walls topped by barbed wire, it wafts across the electrified borders.
[1] http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.
Re:Interesting Reagan Quote about technology (Score:5, Insightful)
In every summit Gorbi and Reagan had Gorbi pushed to end Star Wars, even coming to the brink of war over it. Reagan never relented and continued to push the technology. He had the forsight to know that overcoming evil, poverty and every other ill on this Earth involved investment in technology.
Bugging me (Score:4, Interesting)
Why is it ok to lie about motives, money and politics (see Reagan & the Contras, or W. & Nuclear (prounouced NukeClear) weapons) but NOT ok to lie about sex? (see Clinton and Monica).
I hate Clinton but I could honestly care less who he had sex with. I put him in the same category as Bush Jr. except maybe he was a little smarter.
Just a thought.
- If you wanna see what happens when the dumbest amonst us aspires to lead look no further than the Grand US of A
Re:WTF? (Score:4, Insightful)
He was a president, and whatever his domestic failings, he does get the credit for ending the Cold War without WWIII.
Plus, I suspect that the darn things are just named after the president when they were first proposed.
Re:WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:WTF? (Score:3, Informative)
Ugh. This stuff drives me crazy.
Crack a book. Congress does the budget. Maybe the phrase "Congressional Budget" rings a bell?
Re:WTF? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:WTF? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:WTF? (Score:3, Insightful)
In the meantime, his name on the most advanced aircraft carrier on the planet will do nicely.
Nope (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mod parent up! (Score:5, Funny)
Rude (Score:5, Insightful)
But, Mr Reagan was an exceptionally decent human being, who cared deeply about the welfare of his nation, and for 8 years did the best he knew how to make this world a better place. That is more than can be said for many Presidents.
He is also a human being, and deserving of more respect than that.
Stop with the flamebait political posts, michael (Score:3, Interesting)
USS Ronald Reagan Commissioning Tomorrow
Posted by michael on Friday July 11, @11:20AM
from the no-memory-of-those-events dept.
Jebus. I know that most of the Slashdot audience probably agrees politically with Michael, but it's pretty clear to me that this whole goddamn story is just an excuse for people to make snide jokes about Ronald Reagan. I don't care whether you like Reagan or not (I didn't particularly), but when did Slashdot get into the business of just posting Republican-baiting stories?
If I
Re:Stop with the flamebait political posts, michae (Score:3, Informative)
The whole goddamn story is actually a call for us to lust after spiffy new military hardware. Though the choice in naming is just one of an inordinate number of projects being named after our fortieth president. Some have called it "the Reaganization of America."
If you don't like Michael's stories, Slashdot has made it very e
Re:I guess you have no memory of (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess you have no memory of REAGAN ACTUALLY SAYING THAT DURING IRAN-CONTRA.
Honestly, would it hurt to have a passing familiarity with the subject before bitching and moaning about "political flamebait"?
I recall that incident perfectly well, thank you. Reagan was clearly lying and making an ass of himself. Again, I'm not complaining because I love Reagan.
I'm "bitching and moaning," as you put it, because Michael either a.) just couldn't restrain himself from throwing a political jab into the stor
Re:One question. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:One question. (Score:5, Insightful)
Reagan's first words on hearing about it were, and I quote: Ah, shit. Followed up, I believe, by: Those fools.
If Reagan had any shortcoming, it was that he put too much faith in the goodness and integrity of the people he appointed.
Re:One question. (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe you are a humorless bastard, who rages every time someone offends your delicate sensitivities, or maybe you just like to laugh like l33t Santa, I don't know.
You should realize that different people deal with tragedy, danger, unfortunate circumstance, and fear in different ways.
Sorry, but I don't see you weeping for starving kids, earthquake deaths, epidemics in 3rd world countries, Billy skinning his knee, or the loss of the best paper airplane ever. All those things are tragedy to someone.
You want to be a selfish bitch about how you're the only one suffering in the world. Guess what? You're not. Grow up and deal. Unless you're a midget...then, just deal.
Re:One question. (Score:3, Funny)
OMG, you bastard! The rest of the post was fine, but this is UNFORGIVABLE!!!
Seriously, though, the post is so uber-flamebait (like that?) that it surpasses flamebait and moves on to funny.
Re:News for nerds? Stuff that matters? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Way too many articles (Score:3, Interesting)
10 aircraft carriers? There will be 12 in active service once the Reagan is out there and the Constellation is retired (there are 12 now). There are also several in reserve for quick activation if need be. See here [navy.mil].
Re:Way too many articles (Score:3, Informative)
From your link:
Nimitz-class ships:
USS Nimitz (CVN 68), San Diego, Calif.
USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69), Newport News, Va.
USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70), Bremerton, Wash.
USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71), Norfolk, Va.
USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), Everett, Wash.
USS George Washington (CVN 73), Norfolk, Va.
USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74), San Diego, Calif.
USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75), Norfolk, Va.
Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) (under construc
Re:Way too many articles (Score:3, Insightful)
Very little can stop box cutter carrying fanatics when you're not expecting it (or when the people at the ground level of your security apparatus are not expecting it, or not thinking that letting people on planes with box cutters is a problem).
But the 12 aircraft carriers are fucking awesome to have w
Re:should come in handy (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, it would have been so much better for the world if the US had just turned a blind eye to the Soviet Union's goals of conquering Europe.
Considering the US has the most power, it's not surprising that we are involved in most of the war actions. The difference is that the US never starts anything, we just usually end up finishing them. And "start" does NOT necessarily mean dropping the first bomb.
As for me, I'm proud to live in a country that gives a damn and is willing to do something to back it up.
"Peace Through Strength" -- Ronald Reagan.
Re:MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:3, Insightful)
You're full of shit ..
The vote is made by representatives of the people, who rely on the military to advise them on situations. Hence Bush and other military leaders telling us "weapons of mass destruction" etc. to have congress agree to go to war. As far as killing people goes, rules of engagement are pretty clear.
If the aircraft carrier wasn't designed for war and destruction then what was it made for. If the thing is n
It doesn't "run" on any OS. (Score:5, Informative)
-ET2
Re:U-S-A! U-S-A! (Score:3, Insightful)
But to be fair, we can't really expect Americans to put down their weapons and clean up their own backyards. It's far easier and more profitable to continue on the current path of economic supremacy via military supremacy. Not to mention the fact that both major parties are merely slightly different shades of black. The US 'democracy' is a sad joke of an auction. Both parties for example supported the 10-year + trade sanctions on the Iraqi people which prevented them from buying food and basic me
Re:Answers for Hippies (Score:5, Insightful)
Woah, listen to the economics professor everyone. You have a point, but you could have got the same benefit to the economy by building a $5 billion gigantic rotating barbie doll. Just how big a barbie could you build with $5 billion. I don't know, but I bet I could figure it out with $1 million. Plus, this would provide lasting employment because you would need to make clothes for it. Include tourist money and we have a winner.
Re:Cue... (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Star Wars (Score:3, Insightful)
I read this in about 3 seconds. That would indicate that about a million kids die from bad water every hour, and 1.5 billion -all the children in the world - die from poor water every year. You just made that up, didn't you?
As much as I would also like to see better living conditions in the third world, it appears to me (and most economists who have studied t
Death of Carrier Reported Prematurely (Score:5, Insightful)
You are echoing a 1950's argument. With nukes [insert technology here] is obsolete. Yet Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Irag again were all conventional and carriers were invaluable. Also consider Cold War and other near-shooting incidents where carriers helped keep things calm, Cuban Missle Crisis for example. One of the various flaws in the argument you echo is that nukes are not like any other weapon. There is an extreme reluctance to use them. Use some conventional weapon on our carrier and we respond with conventional weapons on your military. Use nuclear weapon on our carrier and we respond with nukes on all your industrial and population centers, make an example of you. The preceeding Cold War policy has not been renounced as far as I know.
The US has to be prepared to fight a wide range of wars and carriers are invaluable in many scenarios. Many technologies, some quite ancient, are still valuable in this nuclear age. The spear for example. During the Iraq war I recall Marines clearing some marshy area with dense vegetation, bayonets fixed on their M16s.