Ron Paul on The Case for Radical Changes In US National Defense, With Guest Col. Douglas Macgregor

On today’s Ron Paul Liberty Report:

Col. Douglas Macgregor (ret.) is one of the most innovative thinkers of our time. In today’s Liberty Report he explains his recently-published detailed blueprint for a less expensive – and better – US military and a safer America.

Watch all speeches from the recent Ron Paul Institute Conference.

Reprinted from The Ron Paul Institute for Peace & Prosperity.

4 thoughts on “Ron Paul on The Case for Radical Changes In US National Defense, With Guest Col. Douglas Macgregor”

  1. If only he wasn't obsessed with the current Conservative bug-a-boo: border control, which is an utterly pointless issue, given that it's the US who devastated Central and South American countries' economies, thus precipitating the migration. Go see Max Blumenthal, Aaron Mate and Anya Parampil on that issue at The Grayzone.

    At least he's right about the coming war with Iran: it's inevitable.

    1. We didn't do that, the billionaire class did mostly by telling them to come and work because they want to keep wages falling, but you want us to suffer. There are 3 billion people who would come to the USA if allowed so we'd be outnumbered 10 to 1 with millions of starving people roaming our streets. So yes, that's an issue that needs immediate attention. If poor nations need help send them help.

      1. “There are 3 billion people who would come to the USA if allowed”

        In some alternative reality, perhaps.

        In this universe, only a tiny fraction of those three billion would have the ability to make it here even if 1) the US regime got out of the way, 2) whatever regimes treat them at livestock at the moment got out of the way, and 3) all of the regimes with turf between them and the US got out of the way. Transportation doesn’t grow on trees, and one-way transportation to the US for one individual from most places is a considerable chunk of global median household, not individual, income.

        And even if all of those things happened, which they won’t, and even if a bunch of people’s rich uncles sent them airplane tickets, which isn’t going to happen either, and even if all the airlines dectupled their daily flights from abroad to the US, which also isn’t going to happen, the flow would turn to a trickle if, and as soon as, the US economy and job market started looking comparatively worse.

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