I appreciate the insight. I hang out over here a lot to learn about things like this that I'm not familiar with. I didn't see this posted so I thought I'd see what others thoughts were. I don't like the idea of us voluntarily removing ourselves from power positions in the world, but I'm not super well informed into the nuance of it all.
I’ve stated before in this thread, but I think my opinion is definitely less status quo, but it’s certainly not without its significant cons. I think Toronto pointed out, there are a lot of huge downsides that the average isolationist American doesn’t realize we would incur by withdrawing from the world stage.
Economically and diplomatically, there is a great benefit from the global footprint that we have militarily. We can quickly respond to crises around the world, our currency is important, and we as a nation can dictate global affairs to an extent no nation has ever been able to in the history of mankind. It’s something that a lot of people in America think as being innate and not something that we pay for to the tune of nearly a trillion dollars a year in military spending alone. I think it would be a huge shock to their average American if we withdrew from our global force presentation militarily and then our former military partners in the world stop giving a shit about what we think.
I’m not a complete isolationist, but I think the post Cold War neo conservatism has strategically stretched Us out far too thin, and we have strategically lost the ball on directly countering China strategically. Everyone sort of expects the US to respond to any global crisis, because for the past 80 years we have.