Main Logo
News and Articles
  • Latest DVD News
  • Latest Blu-Ray News
  • Latest Columns
DVD Reviews
  • Latest DVD Reviews
  • Latest Blu-ray Reviews
  • Search for
Discussion Forums
  • All Forums
  • General
  • Television
  • DVDs & Films
  • Hardware
  • PCs & Mobiles
  • Photography
  • Music
  • Gaming and Consoles
  • MAD
  • Sports
  • Trading
  • Retailer Reviews
  • Bargain Buckets
  • Region Hacks
Your Account
  • Login
  • Create an Account
  • Lost Password
Region Hacks
  • Multi-Region Hacks
  • Hack Help Forum
Support This Site
  • Support This Site
  • About This Site
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Advertising Policy
  • Privacy Policy

General Forum - What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US? - Page 1

Google Plus One
Submit to Digg
Submit to Slashdot
Submit to StumbleUpon
Submit to Reddit
Tweet this Page
Share on Facebook

IMPORTANT - Click here to read the Forum Rules before you post!

Create New Thread
What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by Cygre on Friday, 14th May 2004, 17:38

Competent

I have been trying to think this through and cannot come up with any immediate benefits apart from trade and increased kudos on the world stage. As far as trade goes I do not think that the USA imports a great deal of our goods (although I could be wrong) and if that only leaves international standing then surely that has been compromised by recent events.

I am not suggesting that we declare war on the USA or anything like that, I was just wondering if anyone knew what we the Brits get out of it.

(Sorry, had the day off so have been watching the news channels all day)

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by coops89 on Friday, 14th May 2004, 17:52

Competent

Not nuked I hope ! Shocked

Things like fast food shops all over the place , no hang on they are all ready !!! Confused



Coops

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by Mike G on Friday, 14th May 2004, 18:50

Elite

Quote:
As far as trade goes I do not think that the USA imports a great deal of our goods (although I could be wrong)


You're wrong. Grinning

The USA is actually our biggest customer as far as exports are concerned - I can't remember the exact figure, but we exported something like $45 billion worth of goods to the US last year.

Mike

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by Mark Oates on Friday, 14th May 2004, 19:03

Reviewer

And we're the US's biggest customer for second-hand and substandard armaments.

In return for backing the US up to the hilt, they promise not to cripple our economy by currency speculation, not to ruin British companies in the US by introducing punitive taxation and of course not to call in all those armaments debts the Tories got us into pre-1997 (like buying clapped out Chinook and Apache helicopters instead of investing in our own Westland Helicopters); not buying that hugely overpriced Trident missile system and having to build special rubber submarines to house them; buying second-hand AWAX early-warning planes...)

When are people going to realise the "special relationship" involves the phrase "bend over and squeal like a piggy"?

J Mark Oates
--------------------
I do not drink...wine.
And I do not smoke...sh*t.

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by cfgte3 on Friday, 14th May 2004, 19:06

Elite

Quote:
apart from trade and increased kudos on the world stage


Thats everything you'd want really isn't it? Happy

And yes thats certainly true, they are our main exporters with 15.7% of our total goods exported to USA in 2003.

Rich, statto

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by jeffthegun on Friday, 14th May 2004, 19:19

Elite

Its like when you were at school. You had to keep in with the big bully even though you thought he was a bit of a twat.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aw, people can come up with statistics to prove anything, Kent.
Forty percent of all people know that.

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by Cygre on Friday, 14th May 2004, 19:46

Competent

I thought I might be wrong about the trade, but is the only reason that they give us that trade because we back them.

Do we realistically have any other choice but to support the Americans? Is our economy that interlinked with them that we have to follow their lead, and if that is the case does Tony Blair deserve all the stick that he is getting for doing so?

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by David Beckett on Friday, 14th May 2004, 19:47

Reviewer

The UK gets security, plain and simple. This is from a paper I wrote last year
Quote:
The UK, it has been argued, cannot fire Tomahawk missiles without the U.S. as Raytheon, the Arizona-based manufacturer, keeps them in working order. In addition, Tomahawks use the U.S. guidance systems Tercom and GPS to find their targets. Furthermore, the U.K. requires U.S. permission to use its nuclear weapons as the U.S. sold Britain the 58 missiles for their four Trident submarines. U.S. Lockheed engineers control Trident from Coulport in Scotland and the missiles must return occasionally to the U.S. Navy's Kings Bay servicing depot in Georgia .


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"You know you've got the brain of a four-year old child, and I bet he was glad to get rid of it".

My Top 20 Horror Movies ---- My DVD Collection

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by cfgte3 on Friday, 14th May 2004, 20:06

Elite

I don't think we need permission from any nation to fire any of our weapons, nuclear included.

Rich

RE: What are the benefits of allying ourselves with the US?
posted by Alan Titherington on Friday, 14th May 2004, 20:08

Reviewer

..which is a little worrying, if true. 'We' being who exactly?

My collection

<<< Return to threads
Choose a Page:
1
2

Some images and content © of their respective copyright holders, All Rights Reserved. All images and content © 1999-2012 Reviewer Ltd., All Rights Reserved. DVD Reviewer and its logo is a registered trademark of Reviewer Ltd.