Bernie Sanders on the Military Budget

From TheGuardian.com:

Today in the United States, 60% of our people live paycheck to paycheck, 85 million people are uninsured or underinsured and 21.5m households are paying more than 50% of their income on housing. We have one of the highest rates of childhood poverty of almost any developed country on Earth, and 25% of older adults are trying to survive on $15,000 a year or less. In other words, the US has fallen far behind other major countries in protecting the most vulnerable, and our government has failed millions of working families.

But while so many Americans are struggling to get by, the United States is spending record-breaking amounts of money on the military. In the coming days, with relatively little debate, Congress will overwhelmingly pass the National Defense Authorization Act, approving close to $900bn for the Department of Defense (DoD). When spending on nuclear weapons and “emergency” defense spending is included, the total will approach $1tn. We now spend more than the next nine countries combined.

. . .

How does this happen? How do we keep handing huge amounts of money to companies that routinely overcharge the American taxpayer and often engage in fraud? The answer is not complicated. These companies – like the drug companies, insurance companies, Wall Street and the fossil fuel industry – spend millions on campaign contributions and lobbying. In the recent election cycle, defense contractors spent nearly $251m on lobbying and contributed almost $37m to political candidates. Surprise, surprise! Most members of Congress vote for greatly inflated military budgets with few questions asked.

Politics is politics wherever you are.

Read the whole column at TheGuardian.com.

2 comments

  1. Pretty much the same story here, but vanity projects rather then warplanes. The Pentagon hasn’t actually won a war since 1945 having discovered that forever conflicts are more profitable than victory.

  2. I have to agree with JerryK….Vietnam was a disaster. I just finished watching documentary about the French and Dien Bien Phu….the French lost and pulled out of Indochina (Vietnam) and the US steps in? To repeat the same mistakes as the French? Eisenhower was right about our Military-Industrial complex. In the “old days” the Caesar’s, Napoleon, Alexander the Great, etc. led from in Front. Now, our Generals sit way behind the lines, safe and secure from enemy fire.

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