The Donbass is no Sudetenland. Ukraine is no Czechoslovakia.
But the youth of the US does not have the skill set for heavy manufaccturing that the labor force of the 1930s had, with over
8.3 million farms then , and only 1.9 million today. Considering farming was more labor intensive then, there were at least five times as many farmers, and large families were the order of the day, as the kids worked the fields with their parents, also acquiring mechanical skills. That's just part of that picture, as most then repaired and maintained what they had in the way of equipment, and those who had automobiles did much the same,something rendered difficult now by the relative complexity of vehicles (that complexity being a byproduct of emission controls).
We have exported much of our heavy manufacturing, commonly due to environmental regulations, and have severely curtailed mining our own resources as well, instead opting to become dependent on foreign supplies and manufacturing to place emissions outside the direct purview of our own regulatory agencies.
In doing so, we have made a potential adversary into a manufacturing superpower, unfettered by the regulatory morass we impose domestically, and driven by a central Party apparatus that amounts to totalitarian control.
In the wake of that, our own organic industry has languished, and the skills, work ethic, and ability to produce have suffered. While there are notable exceptions, they are the exceptions and not the rule. Mechanization can only do so much to compensate for the dearth of facilities: every production line has its limits, no matter how efficient.
While the manufacturing of the 1930s suffered from the Depression, the facilities had not been demolished, and often were acquired by more successful enterprises in a consolidation typical of market contractions. As events transpired in Europe, however, manufacturing here gained a war footing in anticipation of the coming conflict; that we would become a supplier of war materiel to the powers which survived the Nazi onslaught. No doubt, the end run around the Maginot line and disregard for Belgian neutrality came as a surprise to 'civilized' folks who had anticipated "Peace in our time", but then, war is about conquest or reprisal, not being civilized.
We became the
de facto "Arsenal of Democracy" but we had a head start on our own entry into the war which gave time to anticipate our own needs.
Now, we are part and parcel of that same scenario, in what may amount to a fulfillment of George S Patton Jr's expected conflict at the end of the Axis defeat, delayed some 80 years, and with more at stake because of the destructive power of nuclear weapons, something not yet deployed while Patton lived.
But our population is sadly physically out of shape, dependent on medication for a wide variety of reasons (not all psychological), and often ill-equipped to deal with the realities of armed conflict--something nothing can prepare one for, really, just dealt with after the experience. Morally and spiritually, we do not have the grounding in a solid moral basis for many of our youth. Discovering God in a foxhole might be an effective conversion, but it's stronger to have made that discovery before going in. He takes all who turn to him in their hour of need, into His arms or under His wing.
However, it might be even better to have established the moral fiber needed to avoid the rare sort of incidents that make headlines in the Leftmedia back home; incidents used to paint all honorable troops with the blood of innocents.
I believe these shortcomings can be overcome, that those who will need to rise to the defense of our Nation will do so, of whatever age, provided we have the sort of leadership that will not cave, will not sell us out, and will not waver in the coming storm.
And for that reason, I pray we make wise choices as a nation in the near future.