MeDotOrg wrote:This to me is the classic example of why it is wrong to assume a businessman has the solutions for running a Government.
Trump says we should consider letting Japan and Korea arm themselves with nuclear weapons so they can reduce their dependency on the costly U.S. umbrella.
This is the classic thinking of a businessman, who is trained to look at all departments as 'profit centers'. Looking at our high military expenditures and the relatively low military expenditures of our allies, he asks 'why are we propping these folks up? Cut 'em loose and they will pick up the slack.' And the simplest and lowest cost way to do that is for them to a nuclear capability as a fallback defense.
And again, as a business strategy that makes perfect sense. But for someone who understands the threads of nuclear proliferation that occur as every new nation joins the nuclear club, the world is less safe, not more.
But that is long-term strategic thinking, and Trump is more bottom-line, what's-the-next quarterly-statement mentality. And the problem is that Donald Trump's hubris is so great, he really thinks he can just apply his business sensibilities to government. He is not humble enough to admit he is a babe in the woods when it comes to understanding crucial aspects of American foreign policy.
Seeing this man stumble around when it comes to nuclear proliferation...I'm sorry, but if this guy were a contestant on The Apprentice, how many of you would be hiring?
Just out of qualifying curiosity, have you ever taken a risk to invest capital and actually created jobs for anyone?