Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by nradov 237 days ago
Well that was my point. Argentina probably can't borrow any more from the IMF so that leaves the USA or China. China might do it for political reasons even if they lose money so we need to consider whether we're willing to accept the negative geopolitical consequences of that.
1 comments

If the US had any desire to maintain influence in the Americas (or anywhere else), it wouldn't be calling their leaders drug lords, cutting off foreign aid, engaging in extrajudicial killings off their shores, threatening them with carrier groups, violating previously agreed-upon trade deals, etc.

Argentina also would not be getting some special treatment. There are far more strategically important and similarly struggling economies in the Americas and elsewhere that the US could choose to assist and is not.

There's just no coherence to this theory.

This is rich guys helping out their rich guy buddies using taxpayer dollars.

> it wouldn't be calling their leaders drug lords, cutting off foreign aid, engaging in extrajudicial killings off their shores, threatening them with carrier groups, violating previously agreed-upon trade deals, etc.

The world policeman is doing world policeman things. Luckily things are starting to get worse for the world policeman so those things might happen less.

> The world policeman is doing world policeman things

Actually a lot of this is extremely aberrational, even measured by the United States' own "unique" standards.

Why would it happen less? Empires don't go down in peace. The dying Soviet empire morphed into the incredibly violent, dying Russian empire under Putin.
The US is playing nice with Argentina and El Salvador while harsh with Colombia and Venezuela due to the perceived difference in their politics.

Carrot, stick.

> This is rich guys helping out their rich guy buddies using taxpayer dollars.

Almost all foreign aid is this, complete with kickbacks such as donations to the Clinton Foundation, etc. Even domestically, eg, the high percentage of homeless and poverty support disappearing into NGO pockets.

What does "the high percentage" mean? I donate plenty of money to both foreign and domestic non-profits and a pretty bad overhead is 20% in my experience. I generally aim for overhead ratios of 10% or so and have no problems finding lots of quality orgs in that range.
That far more than 20% disappears into petite bourgeoisie pockets in government programs — what we were talking about in this thread.

Eg, of the budget in Seattle.

It's crazy how you can't just like give specific information about what exactly you're talking about. Is it just vague gesticulation all the way down?
It’s an intentionally difficult to parse network of public and private groups.

I did say specifically what I was talking about — public funds like Seattle, where $18000/homeless per year disappears through the network into employee pockets while delivering substantially less to those it’s nominally for.

https://www.pacificresearch.org/despite-big-budgets-homeless...

I think you’re being intentionally dense.