Robert Scheer on Bush Spending

by mikepence 10 Replies latest jw friends

  • mikepence
    mikepence

    From the inimitable Salon.com:

    Collateral damage
    By Robert Scheer

    Now we get to see just how cowardly the Democrats in Congress can be. President Bush has proposed the most preposterous military buildup in human history .. annual spending of $451 billion by 2007 .. and nary
    a word of criticism has been heard from the other side of the aisle. The president is drunk with the popularity that his war on terrorism has brought, and those sober Democrats and Republicans, who know better, are afraid to wrestle him for the keys to the budget before he drives off a cliff.

    The red ink that Bush wants us to bleed to line the pockets of the defense industry, along with the tax cuts for the rich, will do more damage to our country than any terrorist. The result will be an economically hobbled United States, unable to solve its major domestic problems or support meaningful foreign aid, its enormous
    wealth sacrificed at the altar of military hardware that is largely without purpose.

    Why the panic to throw billions more at the military when even the Pentagon brass have told us it is not needed? Our military forces, much maligned by Bush as inadequate during the election campaign, proved to be lacking in nothing once the administration decided to stop playing footsie with the Taliban and eliminate those monsters of our own creation. It was obviously not a lack of hardware that made us vulnerable to the cruelty of Sept. 11 but rather a failure of will by President Clinton, and then Bush, to brand the Taliban as
    terrorists and then to take out the well.marked camps of al.Qaida with the counterinsurgency machine we have been perfecting since the Kennedy administration.

    Clinton authorized the elimination of Osama bin Laden in 1998, but the spy agencies simply failed to execute the order. Neither, apparently, were they competent enough to track Al Qaeda agents from training camps in Afghanistan to flight schools in Florida. All this even though these agencies possess secret budgets of at least $70 billion a year, combined.

    Despite the ability to read license plates from outer space and scan the world's e.mail, our intelligence The bottom line is that we need sharper agents, not more expensive equipment. There is not an item in the Bush budget that will make us more secure from the next terrorist attack.

    That being obvious, Bush is now resorting to the tried and true "evil empire" rhetorical strategy, grouping the disparate regimes of Iraq, Iran and North Korea as an "axis of evil."

    This alleged axis then becomes the rationale for a grossly expanded military budget, the idea being that the United States must be prepared to fight a conventional war on three fronts.

    However, no such axis exists. North Korea is a tottering relic of a state whose nuclear operation was about to be bought off under the skilled leadership of the South Korean government when Bush jettisoned the deal.

    Iraq and Iran have been implacable foes for 25 years, and both were despised by the Taliban and al.Qaida. Meanwhile, a key Muslim ally of the United States, Saudi Arabia, produced 15 of the 19 Sept. 11 hijackers ..and bin Laden. Saudi Arabia is also where al.Qaida does its biggest fundraising and yet, inexplicably, it is excluded from the new enemies list.

    Even if the accepted goal were the overthrow of the three brutal regimes targeted by President Bush, that would hardly require an expansion of a war machine built to humble the Soviet Union in its prime.

    Is Bush the younger now telling us that his father failed to topple Saddam Hussein because he lacked sufficient firepower? The road to Baghdad was wide open after we obliterated the vaunted Iraqi tank army in a matter of weeks. Or does Bush the younger have even more grandiose plans in mind?

    His astonishing budget makes sense only if we are planning to use our mighty military in a pseudo.religious quest to create a superdominant Pax Americana.

    Bizarre as that sounds, it may be the real framework for Bush's proposed spending orgy. In any case, almost every non.American speaker at the World Economic Forum in New York expressed fear at this specter.

    Even our own Bill Gates was alarmed at the United States' apparent hubris: "People who feel the world is tilted against them will spawn the kind of hatred that is very dangerous for all of us."

    Is it too much to ask that these billions, our billions, be spent to enhance our security rather than further erode it?

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    Bush fulfills daniel 4:17. God sets up the lowliest of mankind, giving him all power. Bush's debauched personal life, and record of business scams before taking office show his lowness. Now, he is poised to become emperor of the earth. As a god fearing christian, full of american values, he fits daniels prophecy well, better than nebechadnezzar.

    SS

  • mikepence
    mikepence

    This guy is the first columnist to ever grab my attention repeatedly.

    More at http://www.robertscheer.com/

    Mike

  • Mindchild
    Mindchild

    Here is a comment I read this morning in WIRED Magazine

    Patriotism is rampant in the United States these days, but not everyone is sold on the idea. Esteemed novelist Norman Mailer says that as horrific as Sept. 11 was, Americans have gone overboard. "America has an almost obscene infatuation with itself," Mailer, 79, told a British interviewer. "You'd really think we were some poor little republic, and that if one person lost his religion for one hour, the whole thing would crumble. America is the real religion in this country." Added Mailer: "The right wing benefited so much from September 11 that, if I were still a conspiratorialist, I would believe they'd done it."
    I believe the Right Wing is not only very bad for this country but hugely damaging to the whole world. Here is why:

    http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,50234,00.html

    Kind Regards,

    Skipper

  • badwillie
    badwillie

    Mike & Mind,
    These are 2 very good articles. Thanks.
    Only trouble is...Now I'm frickin' scared. What can be done about this military buildup? No wonder many peple feel the need to retreat into their religious "God will take care of us" ideologies.
    The JW's no doubt will capitalize on this new miltary strategy to drum up some new business too.

  • freeman
    freeman

    Does it need to be said that the articles cited so far are just a teency-weency-bit biased one way; or am I stating the obvious?

    Asbestos suit is on; awaiting a good flaming for speaking the unpopular truth.

    Freeman

  • DanielHaase
    DanielHaase

    And this budget also includes cuts in labor and worker protection laws. I saw "W" on Fox this morning talking about how it never costs too much to protect our country. Why doesn't he take the same view in protecting our workers? Social Security? Sad, sad. America is just turning into a police state....

  • mikepence
    mikepence

    It's called political involvement, Badwillie. I will definitely be registering and voting this year.

    Keep yourself educated with sites like Salon.com that have opinions from many sides of the argument, always well stated.

    The Enron scandal nicely typifies the corrupting influence of business on politics. The more the people stand up and insist on being counted, the better off we are. In that respect, at least, we have a good Constitution, with the ability to heal our nation built into its framework.

    Intelligent, educated voters can, and do, make a difference.

  • mikepence
    mikepence

    freeman,

    Care to substantiate your characterization of Scheer's article? Maybe pick a specific point and comment intelligently on it?

    It's easy to characterize a piece as biased. Harder to say why...

  • Mindchild
    Mindchild

    You guys might find this article I copied below interesting. As a student of sociology and futurism, I believe there are some general patterns or cycles in human history. These cycles are not caused by "demons" or Satan the Devil but by the social dynamics of family upbringing and enculturation. If you find this article interesting, you can go to this website to get more information about the "Fourth Turning" which I believe has already started.

    http://www.fourthturning.com/

    USA Today
    October 29, 2001
    by William Strauss and Neil Howe

    Sept. 11 Tragedy Marks Another Turning Point

    Since the Sept. 11 attacks, Americans have become a changed people. The attacks left us disoriented, depressed and angry -- but also patriotic, united and determined.

    The rules seem to have changed; our surroundings shifted. We yearn for "normalcy," but what will that new normal be?

    Senior citizens who came of age during the Great Depression and World War II remark on the similarity between how America felt then and how it feels now. Is this the new normal?

    The lesson of history is: yes. While history does not repeat in its particulars, it does in its rhythms. Why? Because of the rhythms -- and cycle -- of generations.

    The generations alive today have much in common with the generations alive in the USA around 1929. Elder veterans of the last total war -- the Civil War, that is -- were passing away. A moralistic generation born after the Civil War was deep in middle age. The free-agent barnstormers of the Lost Generation were wearing out, their Gen X-like pragmatism now a tired subject. A new generation of protected, special, scoutlike children was filling high schools and colleges.

    That is why the 1990s bore so many similarities to the 1920s. What we are experiencing now, post-Sept. 11, resembles no year as much as 1930, whose mood shift historian Frederick Lewis Allen described as "bewilderingly rapid," as "an old order was giving place to the new," reflecting an "aching disillusionment of the hard-boiled era, its oily scandals, its spiritual paralysis, the harshness of its gaiety."

    Sound familiar? It should. This mood shift -- into what we call a "Fourth Turning" -- has happened many times before.

    At the core of modern history lies this remarkable pattern: During the past 5 centuries, Anglo-American society has entered a new era -- a new turning -- every 2 decades or so.

    At the start of each turning, people change how they feel about themselves, the culture, the nation and the future.

    Turnings come in cycles of four, spanning four generations (or the length of a long human life), roughly 80 to 100 years.

    The First Turning is a High. Boomers and those older can recall the Great American High from V-J Day through the early 1960s.

    The Second Turning is an Awakening. Even Gen-Xers can recall (as kids) the Consciousness Revolution, from the John Kennedy assassination through the early 1980s.

    The Third Turning is an Unraveling. Every American recalls the most recent Third Turning, because this era of long booms and culture wars was still going strong as recently as Sept. 10, 2001.

    The Fourth Turning is a Crisis. The next Fourth Turning may have already begun. Only today's oldest Americans recall the last such era, which spanned the Great Depression and World War II.

    Each time, America encounters an abrupt shift in the social mood, triggered by every generation's passage into a new phase of life.

    Each time, the new mood shift catches nearly everyone by surprise. That has especially been true for Fourth Turnings. Nearly no one expected them -- but they came.

    In 1770, did colonists expect a revolution? No.

    In 1855, did Americans, North and South, expect a bloody civil war? No.

    In 1925, did a roaring nation expect a stock collapse, depression and global war? No.

    Reflect on the magnitude of the recent change. Violent movies are being shelved, and comics are cleaning up their acts. National identity cards are being proposed. Uniformed troops are patrolling public places. Nine out of 10 Americans support a huge war against an unseen enemy. A solid majority believes the government does the right thing most of the time. All of this would have been unthinkable, as recently as August.

    It's not yet possible to say whether this mood shift is permanent or merely suggestive of what's poised to come soon -- in other words, whether we're in the Fourth Turning or in the last throes of the third.

    Within the next year, we'll know. Here's a checklist. If the following trends deepen, then America will be in the Fourth Turning, a new era of crisis.

    Are leaders describing the problem in larger rather than smaller terms, proposing grand solutions, and seeking to destroy (and not just contain) enemies?

    Is there a shift away from individualism (and civil liberties) toward community purpose (and national survival)?

    Are the old "culture wars" arguments beginning to feel lame, ridiculous, even dangerous to national unity?

    Is the celebrity culture feeling newly irrelevant? Is youth fare becoming less gross and less violent?

    Is immigration reversing? Are mobility and openness declining? Is there more nativism in our culture and less "globalism" in our commerce?

    Is there a new willingness to pay a human price to achieve a national purpose? Will we harness technology only to reduce casualties and inconvenience, or also to achieve a total and lasting victory.

    Is each generation entering its new phase of life with a new attitude? Are aging boomers overcoming narcissism? Are Gen-Xers on the edge of midlife, circling their wagons around family? Are Millennials emerging as a special and celebrated crop of youth?

    Suppose we are in a Fourth Turning. How long will it last? Probably 2 decades. How will it turn out?

    Perhaps in triumph, or in tragedy, or in some unknowable combination of the two. That will be up to us.

    For a long time, Americans have been waiting for history to happen. It's happening. Let's hope we, and our leaders, handle it well.

    ------------------------------------------------------

    Skipper

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