Hayek told us don't let the war planners get ahold of the economy.
They did in WWII, with rationing; then, the soldiers came home and went to school on the GI Bill. That is where war planning became the corporate culture of academia and economic theory, as those young soldiers' formative years were of being in war.
Hayek told us don't let the war planners get ahold of the economy.
They did in WWII, with rationing; then, the soldiers came home and went to school on the GI Bill. That is where war planning became the corporate culture of academia and economic theory, as those young soldiers' formative years were of being in war.
Part of that is that your troops are expendable, which meant Heritage America due to the low immigration rates allowed at the time. This is how Burnham's Managerial Class formed, as he wrote about it in the 1950s.
I remember that not only did WW2 help re-industrialize America, it cured the unemployment problem by killing a big group of people. It sounds disgusting but at national government level, table talk.
Hayek told us don't let the war planners get ahold of the economy.
They did in WWII, with rationing; then, the soldiers came home and went to school on the GI Bill. That is where war planning became the corporate culture of academia and economic theory, as those young soldiers' formative years were of being in war.
Part of that is that your troops are expendable, which meant Heritage America due to the low immigration rates allowed at the time. This is how Burnham's Managerial Class formed, as he wrote about it in the 1950s.
I remember that not only did WW2 help re-industrialize America, it cured the unemployment problem by killing a big group of people. It sounds disgusting but at national government level, table talk.