Parker wrote:
Kmarion wrote:
Their both a waste of money.
agreed.
its not like our enemies can even get in the fucking air, much less compete with the latest technology.
I debated this out awhile ago. It's not as if we are ever going to be fighting Chinese over the Siberian forest.
Kmarion wrote:
The military buys Ferrari's when the family really needs a Minivan .
The Navy insists the program is within budget, but maintains its numbers only by deferring problems. The F-22 Raptor, a supremely-unnecessary air-superiority fighter, is over budget $667 million years before the first plane has been produced for combat. The contractor, in a wonderful blackmail effort, has warned that costs will shoot higher if the Air Force does not continue to buy an unwanted aircraft, the C-130J, to keep assembly lines open. The final aircraft, the Joint Strike Fighter, is lagging in development, but being rushed forward. Its purchase will force an annual doubling of the aircraft procurement budget, even if costs do not increase one dollar beyond current projections. Yet, in an air campaign such as those in Yugoslavia or Iraq, it offers little more than planes we have.
You are inventing possible threats that most likely will never happen to justify a new toy. Meanwhile you end up paying much more for an aircraft that does little more to protect you here in the real world (You get less of what you need).
We are buying the future force the generals and admirals, Congressmen and contractors want, not the one we will need. This is waste just short of treason.
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/featur … itary.html