mustangdriver wrote:
You also have to look at the chance of it falling into wrong hands. I think it depends on what we are talking about. A P-51, no problem, but an F-117 or F-15? I just don't feel that they should be sold off in flyable shape.
I
personally don't have any problems letting any of that be owned by civilians. There's nothing magical about them -- they're no more dangerous than anything else. I can roll a bomb out the door of a Cessna much cheaper than buying a surplus fighter jet, getting all the systems working, and training myself to drop it. I think it would be pretty neat to have some civil-owned jets.
I don't, however, demonize the US military for destroying the equipment rather than selling it off to be used by the public. The "hey, it was paid for with taxpayer money" argument doesn't fly with me -- I object to it philisophically as well as pragmatically. Just because tax funds bought it doesn't imply any sort of ownership right. The taxes were paid to the government for ALL of the services that government provides.
You can't go stake a claim to live in the Capitol Building because your taxpayer dollars help light, heat, and maintain it. You can't go cut down trees from a National Forest because your taxpayer funds helped buy it. You don't see your local Police department distributing surplus firearms to the neighborhood when they're done with them because they were purchased with community tax funds.
Now, I DO NOT believe that the government has any special rights or priveleges that the average citizen does not...but I do believe that they have the need to discharge the duties they have been given by the American Public.
The military has reasons for what they do -- sometimes they're haphazard and stupid, and sometimes they're well thought out and highly calculated. Unfortunately, the taxpayers don't get a say on that level. The taxpayer doesn't get to decide what tactic I'm going to fly, or what ordnance I'm going to use on an attack, simply because he is footing 1/1,000,000,000,000 of the bill. His/her decisionmaking power lies with their elected representation.