PENTAGON SCORES A BIGGER RIP-OFF THAN BAILOUT

by White Noise | September 27, 2008 at 06:07 am
260 views | 22 Recommendations | 8 comments

Photos

PENTAGON SCORES A BIGGER RIP-OFF THAN BAILOUT

PENTAGON SCORES A BIGGER RIP-OFF THAN BAILOUT

see larger image

uploaded by White Noise

A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT THE 1000 POUNDS GORILLA, BEAR OR GODZILLA STOMPING THROUGH CONGRESS, SENATE & DEMOCRACY THAT EVERYONE (BIG MEDIA INCLUDED) IGNORES SO ELEQUANTLY... 

Just like a magician; while you are watching the left hand , the right one does the trick ! 

With All Eyes on the Bailout, House Passes Trillion-Dollar Defense Bill 

*********************** SHOCKING ************************* 

IT'S EMPIRE BUILDING, NOT DEFENSE SPENDING ! 
http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/100524/ 

"The legislation came together in a remarkably secret process that concentrated decision-making power in the hands of a few lawmakers." 

In keeping with the tradition of recent years, Bush held a gun to his own head and threatened to pull the trigger if his demands weren't met. According to the AP, "To earn President Bush's signature rather than a veto, House and Senate negotiators dropped several provisions he opposed. They include a ban on private interrogators in U.S. military detention facilities and what would have amounted to congressional veto power over a security pact with Iraq." 

ALSO... 

THE WAR ECONOMY 
http://pr.thinkprogress.org/ 

IRAQ FOR SALE: THE WAR PROFITEERS 
http://freedocumentaries.org/theatre.php?filmid=130&... 

NO END IN SIGHT 
http://freedocumentaries.org/theatre.php?filmid=184&... 

WHY WE FIGHT 
http://freedocumentaries.org/theatre.php?filmid=93&... 

THE $3 TRILLION WAR : After wildly lowballing the cost of the Iraq conflict at a mere $50 to $60 billion, the Bush administration has been concealing the full economic toll. The spending on military operations is merely the tip of a vast fiscal iceberg. - by Joseph E. Stiglitz and Linda J. Bilmes / Vanity Fair April 2008 

Number Of Iraqis Slaughtered Since The U.S. Invaded Iraq "1,267,401" 
http://www.justforeignpolicy.org/iraq/iraqdeaths.html 

Number of U.S. Military Personnel Sacrificed (Officially acknowledged) In America'sWar On Iraq 4,173 
http://icasualties.org/oif/ 

The War And Occupation Of Iraq Costs 
$557,402,608,931 

See the cost in your community 
http://nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_wrap... 

"We are watching a poorly staged rendition of Wag the Dog , interpreted for the morbidly stupid and performed by the criminally insane." - Jules Carlysle

Advertisement
recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
White Noise

"They tell us that we live in a great free republic; that our institutions are democratic; that we are a free and self-governing people. That is too much, even for a joke. ... Wars throughout history have been waged for conquest and plunder... And that is war in a nutshell. The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles." : Eugene Victor Debs

"It is genuinely incredible. The U.S. Treasury is empty, we are losing that stupid, fraudulent chickencrap war in Iraq, and every country in the world except a handful of corrupt Brits despises us. We are losers, and that is the one unforgivable sin in America. "

"Beyond that, we have lost the respect of the world and lost two disastrous wars in three years. Afghanistan is lost, Iraq is a permanent war zone, our national economy is crashing all around us, the Pentagon's ‘war strategy’ has failed miserably, nobody has any money to spend, and our once-mighty U.S. America is paralyzed by mutinies in Iraq and even Fort Bragg. "

"The American nation is in the worst condition I can remember in my lifetime, and our prospects for the immediate future are even worse. I am surprised and embarrassed to be a part of the first American generation to leave the country in far worse shape than it was when we first came into it. Our highway system is crumbling, our police are dishonest, our children are poor, our vaunted Social Security, once the envy of the world, has been looted and neglected and destroyed by the same gang of ignorant greed-crazed bastards who brought us Vietnam, Afghanistan, the disastrous Gaza Strip and ignominious defeat all over the world. The stock market will never come back, our armies will never again be No. 1, and our children will drink filthy water for the rest of our lives. Big Darkness Come Soon" - Hunter "Gonzo" Thompson / The day before he left us...

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:27 on September 27th, 2008

White Noise, I like this story. It's great stuff.

Uwe Paschen
Uwe Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:29 on September 27th, 2008

White Noise, I like this story. It's good stuff.

dunkelberg
dunkelberg
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:42 on September 27th, 2008

White Noise, I like this story. It's good stuff.

René
René
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:02 on September 27th, 2008

While I disagree with some of your points, basically you are right. This huge bill got passed in the House, but still has to pass the Senate. What is amazing is that some Republicans objected to no debate on the bill, pointing out the 2,000 plus earmarks attached, that were supposedly not to be added according to prior agreements. So what was the actual vote in the House? Republicans vs Democrats?

Barbara McPherson
Barbara McPherson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:45 on September 27th, 2008

White Noise, I like this story. It's good stuff.  A trillion dollars?  Where is it coming from?  Are they mortgaging the grandchildren of this generation?  Even more important, who is lending the money, cause you can be sure there are strings attached.

0
White Noise

“One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we've been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We're no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It is simply too painful to acknowledge -- even to ourselves -- that we've been so credulous“ - Carl Sagan 

ECONOMISTS AGAINST THE PAULSON PLAN
http://current.com/items/89344263_economists_against_the_paulson_plan

THE GREATEST THEFT IN THE HISTORY OF HUMANKIND
http://www.nowpublic.com/world/greatest-theft-history-humankind

THE FINANCIAL MELTDOWN EXPLAINED ! http://current.com/items/89322147_the_financial_meltdown_explained

These past years were more than just the most shameful, corrupt and incompetent period in the history of the American legislative branch. These were the years when the U.S. parliament became a historical punch line, a political obscenity on par with the court of Nero or Caligula -- a stable of thieves and perverts who committed crimes rolling out of bed in the morning and did their very best to turn the mighty American empire into a debt-laden, despotic backwater, a Burkina Faso with cable. - Matt TAIBBI

"Private interests have looted the treasury, and the administration has sanctioned unrestrained fraud and corruption. We have watched Congress and the press become weak and willing handmaidens to those who would rip apart the fabric and laws of our democratic society. We hunger for the restoration of hope, common sense and purpose." - Jann S. Wenner 10/26/07 RS40

0
White Noise

September 28, 2008
Tomgram: Chalmers Johnson, The Pentagon Bailout Fraud

Let's start with the money the Bush administration has already thrown at the war in Iraq. According to the June congressional testimony of William Beach, director of the Center for Data Analysis, the war has cost $646 billion so far. The new defense budget for 2009 tacks on another $68.6 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan in the coming year. However, military expert Bill Hartung of the New America Foundation puts a conservative estimate of the costs of a single week of the Iraq War at approximately $3.5 billion (or about $180 billion a year).

In other words, the war in Iraq will cost far more in the next year than the Iraq portion of that $68.6 billion Congress is about to pony up in the defense budget, and so will be funded, as has long been true, through supplemental war bills submitted by the Bush administration (and then whatever administration follows). In other words, sometime in 2009 the direct costs of the war the Bush administration once predicted would cost perhaps $50-60 billion in total will stand at more than $800 billion, or $100 billion above the cost (if all goes well, which it won't) of the bailout of the financial system now being proposed in Washington.

Estimates of the true long-term costs of the President's war of choice, including payments of health care and veterans benefits into the distant future, soar into the budgetary stratosphere. They range from the Congressional Budget Office's $1-2 trillion to an estimate by economists Joseph Stiglitz and Linda J. Bilmes of up to $4-5 trillion. So we're talking somewhere between one-and-a-half and seven bailouts-worth of taxpayer dollars flowing into the morass of disaster, corruption, and carnage in Iraq.

And here's another curious bit of information: Just the other day, the website ThinkProgress pointed out a strange glitch in Iraq planning. The Bush administration, deep into negotiations with the Iraqi government, evidently managed to wheedle an extra year's time for the prospective withdrawal of American combat troops from Iraq; its negotiators pushed the date from 2010 -- the year suggested by both Barack Obama and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki -- to 2011. According to Maliki in an interview with an Iraqi TV station, this change came from the administration's concern over the "domestic situation" in the U.S. (that is, the needs of the McCain campaign).

"Actually," said Maliki, "the final date was really the end of 2010 and the period between the end of 2010 and the end of 2011 was for withdrawing the remaining troops from all of Iraq, but they asked for a change [in date] due to political circumstances related to the [U.S] domestic situation so it will not be said to the end of 2010 followed by one year for withdrawal but the end of 2011 as a final date." So we're talking about another perhaps $150-180 billion in 2011 -- or approximately the full suggested initial payout in the Washington bailout plan of at least one key Democrat. This gives the phrase "presidential politics" new meaning. Now, just imagine for a moment the situation we might be in if there had been no Iraq War. We could have bailed ourselves out many times over.

As Chalmers Johnson, author most recently of Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic, the final volume of his Blowback Trilogy, has pointed out for years, the Pentagon, the military-industrial complex, and America's wars are in the process of bankrupting us. How strange then that, as he indicates below, no one in the mainstream even blinks when a staggering new Pentagon budget sails through the House of Representatives and then, by voice vote, through the Senate just as negotiators in Washington are scrambling to find a similar sum to deal with a catastrophic financial meltdown; nor does anyone in the mainstream bother to make any connection between that budget and the funds we don't have available to use elsewhere, or between the looting of Iraq and the looting of our financial system (and, in both cases, of course, the looting of the American taxpayer). Tom


This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from