the following is a commentary posted by the sites creator as a preamble to a following article, which i haven't read. what's posted below caught my eye and also summed up some of the situation in this land of the 'free' in a short few words;
Imagine, for a moment, a country that no longer rebuilds or reinforces its sagging infrastructure
but just can’t stop pouring money into its military. Oh wait, you don’t
have to imagine that at all! You just have to look at the United
States. This fall, for instance, the president who swore he was going to
give us an infrastructure plan that would blow our minds discovered
that, after a tax cut for billionaires, a ballooning national debt, and a staggering $716 billion Pentagon budget, there were few dollars left
over for much of anything else. In October, Donald Trump began talking
about cutting agency spending by 5% across the board and about a
possible $700 billion limit
on the 2020 Pentagon budget. As December began, he became even more
emphatic on that point, tweeting that he should talk to the Chinese and
Russian presidents about halting an arms race and so cut down on
military spending that was... well, not to put too fine a point on it, “Crazy!”
Hmm... and just how long did that sentiment survive? Well, that was
Monday, December 4th. On Tuesday, the newly nominated head of U.S.
Central Command, Lieutenant General Kenneth McKenzie, appeared before
the Senate Armed Services Committee and insisted
that any future Pentagon budget below $733 billion would “increase risk
and that risk would be manifested across the force.” That very day,
Secretary of Defense James Mattis and the chairmen of the House and
Senate Armed Services committees, Congressman Mac Thornberry (R-TX) and
Senator James Inhofe (R-OK) trooped to the White House for a lunch
meeting. The next thing anyone knew, the 2020 Pentagon budget was to be a
modest $750 billion.
"The President fully supports the National Defense Strategy and
continuing to rebuild the military," an administration official told
CNN. "With the help of Sen. Inhofe and Chairman Thornberry, President
Trump agreed to $750 billion topline."
Well, honestly, what can you expect of a Pentagon incapable of auditing itself?
How could it possibly solve a total stumper of a division and
subtraction problem like: What’s 5% less than its 2019 budget? (And
here’s a little footnote to that change in numbers: Senator Inhofe
walked out of that lunch and within the week had purchased “tens of thousands of dollars of stock in one of the nation’s top defense contractors.” Raytheon,
to be exact. When that buy made news, he blamed it all on his
“financial adviser,” claimed to know nothing about it, and cancelled the
order.)
And then, of course, there’s always the purely secondary question:
What is the U.S. military -- its budget already bigger than of that
those of god-knows-how-many-other countries combined -- going to spend all that money on? Fortunately, TomDispatch regular
Michael Klare has a thought on the subject. He suggests that, in the
years to come, increasing billions of those dollars are going to be
invested in creating a future battlespace in which “intelligent”
machines fight our wars and, in the end, the only role left for humans
may be the dying. In other words, we’re heading for a militarized,
remarkably automated, artificially intelligent hell on Earth. What about
an $850 billion budget, just to ensure that we’re the first ones there?
Tom.........http://www.tomdispatch.com/
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