Does the pentagon really authorize selling technology as it's developed?

I’m crossing my fingers as I write this, but I fear that’s no good.

I read today in Jessica Williams’ 50 Facts that Should Change the World:

I’m in the process of looking up the sources she sites from the CDI and from the Council for a Livable Planet, but I want to know if anyone’s ever heard of this.

I know the old Bill Hicks routine about how there is no one in the world that we need to worry about except the people we arm first, but I was kind of hoping that was exaggerating. What can I say, I’m young and naive.

If anyone’s got sources, I’d love to see 'em…

      • It’s a wonderfully trite example of why “spending money on guns is like, uncool for Mother Gaia, man” but it’s simply not true.
  • Most of the “high tech” weapons the US develops are so expensive that most other countries could not afford a useable number of them anyway–and most likely the country that would be first in line to buy would be China. Go ask Jessica Williams how many B-2 bombers the Pentagon has sold to China so far. I’m remembering, , , , -none.

You are rather asking us here to prove that ghosts don’t exist; perhaps the CDI would be so kind as to provide you with some actual examples of items with which this was allowed, and we can work on researching it from that end. My bet is that anything immediately allowed for foreign sales is generally not thought to be technologically significant.

  • Here’s my example it’s BS: in the US, anybody with $3500 to spend can buy a top-of-the-line night-vision scope through the mail. The sellers don’t have to check anything concerning you, if your credit card number is good, it comes in a box to your door. It is basically functionally equivalent to what the military uses, and you can buy as many as you can pay for and the builders can get their mitts on. The internal parts are made in the same factories making the military scopes. Trying to export or transport it to any non-NATO country however is an export violation, and a federal offense. These scopes have been commercially available for at least twenty years now, and the export restrictions are still in place.
    ~

I checked the table of contents on Amazon for this book and found some of the “facts” (which are the chapter titles) to be misleading or quite dubious. So, I’m doubting credibility a little bit, as is often the case with “X number of fun/odd/true/scary facts” books. As Doug has pointed out with his stealth bomber and night vision example, it is clearly not as simple in reality. I’m guessing misleading at best, a lie at worst.