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What is the military-industrial complex?
Because Wikipedia is allergic to simple english, I will clarify a little (I am not trying to insult your intelligence, it's just annoying to have to read when people use so many big words in cases where little words will do). The military-industrial complex is a phrase that was coined by President Eisenhower in his farewell address where he said that we have to be careful to make sure that it does not gain too much influence over our politics. In its most basic form, the idea is that the government, the military, and equipment manufacturers are supposedly working together in order to make bigger profits for each other. Congress authorizes the military's budget, giving them more money, which they use to buy more equipment and weapons, giving those companies more money to allegedly bribe Congressmen into approving more money for the military and so on. Industrial does not just mean weapons manufacturers. Look at Lockheed-Martin, they are one of the biggest defense companies in America and they make loads of different stuff. They are best known for aircraft but they are also involved in developing a new kind of light ground vehicle for the Army, a new kind of attack ship for the Navy, computer security systems, and so on. To do make all this hardware they have loads of subcontractors working under them to make things like microchips or tires, and specialized stuff you would only find in aircraft. You've got other companies that make clothes for the military, they technically benefit from the military as well. So you see, the military-industrial complex is usually thought of as some kind of evil and ominous conspiracy and it might even be true, but it is actually a natural consequence of having a powerful army. It's kind of like how you go to the store to buy supplies for school but you never hear about the school-industrial complex. The biggest problem Eisenhower had with the military-industrial complex was that it might lead to America going to war so that the industrial bits could make a profit. Of course, this kind of logic gets applied to pretty much every little armed intervention we do nowadays. Iraq was not at all about Saddam, it was only about oil. Afghanistan is all about natural resources and corporation profits, let's just ignore the part where the Taliban harbored al-Qaeda and how the war was just not well-executed which is why it has gone on for so long. Anyway, in context, the idea of warning people about the military-industrial complex was actually a challenge to Americans to keep informed about what goes on in the world. This way, when America goes to war, we can be sure that we are going to war for the right reasons and not getting into a 10-year quagmire or another mistake like Vietnam. So that liberty AND security may prosper together.
is the industrial piercing really painful?
You will not cry. I was afraid that I would cry, but I ended up not even flinching! It was a 2 or 3 out of 10 for me, and I could compare it to a hard pinch on your cartilage. The second hole was a little sharper pain, but not much. Good luck!
Why can't the IT industry deliver large, faultless projects quickly as in other industries?
I have a shorter version for you: Whatever is easy to do, or streamlined, we write a program to do it instead of us.And then fight with the meta-process instead.It's not that much true, per se, but every day thousands of blogs are set up, instead of writing blog engines. Every workday, thousands of Excel macros are written, instead of writing specially-designed database applications for these.There are a lot of other factors - some of them mentioned here - but I wanted to add this point to the discussion