I'll try to explain it as objectively as possible.
In his recent talk with Tucker, he starts out defending the blob, and he later expounds on it in 1.5 hour talk. The central proposition is "no blob, no pencils". Meaning that pencils consist of a large number of materials, many of which come from different countries, and if one of those countries decides to do an export ban, then you do not have pencils. So you need a blob to put pressure of those countries, or destabilize them, or corrupt judges and labor unions, or coup them, in order to be able to have pencils. That is, he says, necessary for American prosperity and safety. He says he does not want MAGA to preside over the 'demise of the American empire'. At the same time, he completely backs what is being done by Trump et al. right now, and he disagrees with methods that are at odds with what he views as 'American values'.
I get a bit annoyed by this argument. Every country in the world has pencils, and no blob. For the materials, there is perfect competition, so even if Malaysia puts an export ban on, nothing will happen. Also, while putting diplomatic pressure may be legitimate, corrupting judges and labor unions (which he seemed to explicitly endorse) are not in my view.
Thoughts? Is he having second thoughts? Did they get to him? Is he playing devil's advocate to prevent people from going overboard in his view? Was he always a double agent (no, he wasn't)?
Someone hasn’t seen inner city school stats lately lol
I'm fully aware of that. Even with those numbers, literacy in the US is closer to 93%. Literacy during the 40s was surprisingly high. It wasn't truly outlandish, or exceptional given the time, but it didn't even crest 75% nation wide until the 60's IIRC.
I know you're trying to point something out but he's correct on the rest of it. I think his point is we did more with less.
The reason why corporations are as retarded as they are and why our economy has so many issues is because of over-regulation. It allowed corporations to grow bigger, resize, merge into bigger ones. There was less competition, yet the demand was still there, so to satisfy that demand, we chose to outsource it to produce it for cheaper with slave labor.
General MacArthur thinking we could kill Communist China with Capitalism in the 80s was one of the WORST fucking things that was done to the US government and the US as a superpower.
Also I imagine the ratification of the 19th just added fuel to the fire by essentially doubling our workforce pool.