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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawkmoon who wrote (68395)11/20/2010 3:48:25 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217886
 
QE: military "over-stretch" and a concomitant relative decline are the consistent threat facing powers whose ambitions and security requirements are greater than their resource base can provide for (summarized on pages 438–9).

Throughout the book he reiterates his early statement (page 71): "Military and naval endeavors may not always have been the raison d'être of the new nations-states, but it certainly was their most expensive and pressing activity", and it remains such until the power's decline.

Kennedy states his theory in the second paragraph of the introduction as follows(page xv).

The "military conflict" referred to in the book's subtitle is therefore always examined in the context of "economic change." The triumph of any one Great Power in this period, or the collapse of another, has usually been the consequence of lengthy fighting by its armed forces; but it has also been the consequences of the more or less efficient utilization of the state's productive economic resources in wartime, and, further in the background, of the way in which that state's economy had been rising or falling, relative to the other leading nations, in the decades preceding the actual conflict. For that reason, how a Great Power's position steadily alters in peacetime is as important to this study as how it fights in wartime.

en.wikipedia.org



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (68395)11/20/2010 5:00:34 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation  Respond to of 217886
 
Are you finding it to be true that you are choosing your words with more care, progressively, as what you thought was freedom dribble away into nothingness?

I find it so in your case, FYI.

You must hate hong kong for our freedom.