Texas factory cost $469M using old equipment, makes zero artillery shells
ilamont
18 points
6 comments
July 15, 2026
Related Discussions
Found 5 related stories in 584.1ms across 14,015 title embeddings via pgvector HNSW
- Texas is America Inc's new centre of gravity andsoitis · 25 pts · June 05, 2026 · 45% similar
- Texas is America Inc's new centre of gravity alephnerd · 38 pts · June 13, 2026 · 45% similar
- Texas spent $4.5M in Spy SUVs that scan phones in 3 minutes Muhammad523 · 36 pts · July 17, 2026 · 44% similar
- Jim Keller's startup is building a factory to mass-produce small chip fabs logickkk1 · 118 pts · July 05, 2026 · 43% similar
- Texas Police Spent $4.5M on Four Chevy Tahoes ethandmd · 12 pts · July 15, 2026 · 42% similar
Discussion Highlights (6 comments)
zippyman55
The low level employees were probably raising concerns. This stuff makes me sick.
quantified
I am glad that anyone is still looking into or complaining about amounts less than $500MM. Still, it's the usual suspects, won't make a difference, can't get blood back from a tick.
bell-cot
> The Mesquite factory was commissioned with a series of expedited contracts in 2022 and 2023... > The facility, in Mesquite, Texas, was brought online in 2024... > [now] the facility has yet to produce a single round in two years... Vs. WWII-era America needed less than 3 1/2 year to go from Pearl Harbor to Eisenhower commanding 61 US Army Divisions as they overran Germany. Where 40,000 tons of artillery shells might be provided for offensives so (relatively) minor that only a few military history buffs remember them today. Why the difference? Because back then, a Mesquite-style failure would have had devastating social, financial, and probably legal consequences for the managers and companies involved.
exabrial
Typically if I don't work, I don't get paid. Perhaps we could learn something here.
klooney
> A "high-risk" plan to use old machines to produce modern M795 artillery shells backfired, an Inspector General report found. I would say that this indicates that the decision makers adequately appreciated the possibility this wouldn't work. This is generally what a high risk plan is.
general1465
I can see that USA and Russia are more similar than one could expect. This kind of corruption of opening a factory and then delivering nothing or delivering overpriced garbage is so typical for Russia and one of the reasons why they struggle so much in Ukraine.