You mean like subsidized housing projects that are skyscrapers full of filth?Simon_Jester wrote:When America's big project goals have to do with reshaping the face of human societies (war on terrordrugpovertychristmas), then what you get is a big roll of blueprints smacking into a human face, for... well, maybe not forever, but for a long time.
This city is afraid of me. I have seen its true face.
We were already doing that in the Cold War.But with the end of the Cold War, the US finds that it has plenty of muscle to flex whenever it wants, and that wars can be fought seemingly without consequence
From 1981-1983, we had RC-135s from Offut AFB, nominally assigned to Strategic Air Command, trolling off the coast of El Salvador, listening for radio intercepts from FMLN guerillas inside El Salvador.
When we found something of interest via triangulation, we had AC-130H Gunships take off from airfields in Panama and fly into El Salvador in complete utter secrecy to vaporize the FMLN camps.
You're reading a little too much into your own biases -- here's my own take:
Murca has long had an instinctive love of technology for technology's sake, particularly in wartime.
War always brings out the crackpots and crazy ideas; for America wants to win it's wars cheaply and without much bloodshed.
Like the crazy coot who invented a KILLING MACHINE during the Civil War which he claimed would WIN THE WAR against the Rebels in no time: It consisted of a railroad locomotive with scythes attached to the driving wheels. Naturally, the Rebels would all stand in nice rows next to the track to be cut down like wheat.
Other coots are more successful. To Quoth Vendetta:
Richard Gatling was a pioneer in US national healthcare. On discovering that most soldiers during the American Civil War were dying of disease rather than gunshots, he turned his mind to, rather than providing better sanitary conditions and medical care for troops, creating a machine to make sure they got shot faster.
Then we have the more recent technological love of AIRPOWER, first through the apostles Mitchell and then de Seversky.
During the Vietnam War; we had the McNamara Line. Instead of deploying hundreds of thousands of troops in a static defensive line on the South/North Vietnamese Border, we'd solve the problem via SCIENCE!
The plan was for a mere 20,000 airdropped remote listening devices, combined with 240 million gravel mines, 300 million button mines, and 19,200 Sadeye cluster bombs to be deployed, allowing us to control the border with North Vietnam against infiltrators for a mere $1 billion dollars a year, at the cost of $1.6 billion in R&D and a $600m command center in Thailand to run it all.
Some elements of it was incorporated into IGLOO WHITE
The Drone War is just a recent manifestation of this practice. Only now we're controlling them with XBRICK360 controllers, kind of blurring the line between entertainment and actual war.