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War on Iraq

There's Always Money For War

By Jared Bernstein, TomPaine.com. Posted March 14, 2007.


Why is it that our representatives can easily raise endless amounts of money for war, but can't adequately fund human needs?
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Okay, this is going to sound really naïve. It's the kind of question you'd expect from an earnest, if not slightly annoying, 12-year-old, not from a hard-boiled wonk like yours truly. But why is it that our representatives can easily raise endless amounts of money for war, but can't adequately fund human needs?

Exhibit #1: The Washington Post recently ran an important article documenting the loss of child-care subsidies to low-income, working parents. One of the lessons from welfare reform is that such work supports are a critical component of a pro-work, anti-poverty agenda. But because the program is terribly underfunded -- fewer than a fifth of eligible people receive help -- there's a huge waiting list, and families are left to give up on work or patch together less-than-desirable child-care situations.

Exhibit #2: If the president gets his way on budget requests over the next few years, and he always has, the Congressional Budget Office tells us that spending on the Iraq war will soon top $500 billion -- $746 billion if you throw in Afghanistan. According to OMBWatch, the Congress will soon begin evaluating the largest supplemental funding bill ever requested by an administration: just shy of $100 billion, mostly for the war on terror and its sundry components.

Exhibit #3: We currently spend about $5 billion a year at the federal level on the block grant that funds child care. Last year, we added a $1 billion increase over five years. A bill to dedicate $6 billion more died in the Senate. Because these values are not adjusted for either inflation or population growth, the demand for child-care slots is outpacing capacity. According to the Bush administration's own budget, if we fail to devote more resources to child care, by 2010, the families of 300,000 fewer children will get the help they need.

Exhibit #4: I recently testified before the Senate Finance Committee on the question of whether there needed to be $8 billion worth of tax cuts to businesses to offset the impact of the federal minimum wage increase. I argued that the cuts were unnecessary, but in this context, consider this point: Because tax cuts must now be paid for, the committee was able to come up with $8 billion of offsets to pay for these cuts.

In other words, when they want to, Congress can allocate or raise money. The problem, as put by my colleague Lawrence Mishel, is "... the direct consequence of maintaining other priorities. Some [policy makers] are wedded to maintaining the recent tax cuts. Many more believe we have to spend whatever it takes for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan ... [o]thers believe that moving toward a balanced budget is essential. Whatever one thinks of these positions it is clear that the result is that human capital investments get the leftover fiscal scraps."

For those of us unhappy with this state of affairs, who believe that these are the wrong priorities, the big -- giant, really -- question is what has to change?

The answer, I think, comes from a meeting of top-down and bottom-up. Today's priorities are the result of politicians' perceptions that their constituents, at least the ones they care about, want government to wage war and cut taxes, not to provide child and health care. Thus, the first step in turning this around is to tap and nurture demand among the electorate for the best solutions to the problems we face. I've stressed child care for low-income workers because it's so important to their ability to escape poverty, but think of national health care in this light, along with retirement security and the inequalities associated with globalization.

Progressive policy advocates need to shape and promote an agenda that reaches people on these issues and is at the scale of the challenges they face. If such an agenda is articulated by a 2008 candidate, it may well start to resonate and reverberate in precisely the way that's needed to reshape the priorities of those who hold the purse strings. Then I can go back to being a hard-boiled wonk instead of a naïve ingénue who wants to trade guns for butter.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: war, economy, budget, money

Jared Bernstein is senior economist with the Economic Policy Institute and author of All Together Now: Common Sense for a Fair Economy.

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I wonder why...
Posted by: Thundergod on Mar 14, 2007 12:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reason is because those that have control of budget of America are like pigs in the book 1984 that can not control their greed and are destroying the America I grew up in...

Their day will end...

It is in the stars...

The people will choose the correct course and vote the pigs out!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: I wonder why... Posted by: pingoo
» Probably meant Animal Farm Posted by: WhatNow?
» RE: I wonder why... Posted by: willymack
» RE: I wonder why... Posted by: digitalfrenzy
Nicola Tesla--Disclosure Project
Posted by: disgusted on Mar 14, 2007 12:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At one time there was a great war in heaven between the
arcangels Michael and Gabriel. So the story goes and the evil
angels inheirted the earth. They are now represented by the likes of Dearth vp Cheney and Commander Codpiece who rule the planet for the forces of greed and power. They are the wolves and we are the rabbitts
WAR IS PROFITABLE for McDonald Douglass, Martin Marietta
Halliburton,KBR Caico, Boeing,SAIC, Blackwater, GE, Westinghouse, Raytheon,Motorolla,Att&T, Verizon and a host of lesser ghouls and profiteers. Who profits hugely from peace?

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Everyone can profit from peace
Posted by: Thundergod on Mar 14, 2007 1:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The more money the rich steals from the poor makes everyone poorer...

The more everyone has makes everyone richer...

Basic fact of economics...

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» RE: veryone can profit from peace Posted by: staringatthesun
Why? Because their sponsors want the oil, that's why!
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 14, 2007 1:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Come on - an article about war in the modern age that ignores the oil factor? Let's make a list - always lots of fun, making lists:

1) Iraq - the world's cheapest untouched oil reserves - let's go to war and seize the oil!

2) Iran - also with lots of oil, and also natural gas - another target for pre-emptive war.

3) The Sudan, Chad and Cameroon - you wouldn't know it from reading the corporate press, but it's all about the oil reserves - pretty small compared to Iraq, but still worth killing for! And what about Niger? Hey! Who are you calling a Niger? What - you mean that's a country, with oil reserves, where people are being slaughtered as we speak?

4) Nigeria (different from Niger) where there's a full scale war going on - $45 billion in oil gets shipped out of the Nigerian delta every year - guess where the cash ends up?

5) Somalia - another hot spot - also with lots of oil, and right across from the Arabian Peninsula

6) Colombia and Ecuador - another hot spot for oil production and repression of indigenous peoples.

7) Central Asia - why do you think the Saudis were funding the Chechyan rebels? Oil and gas.

Most of the war in the world today revolves around the control of oil... which is also causing global warming. The solution to this mess is renewable energy - solar, wind, tidal energy, biofuels, - anything but fossil fuels.

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» A Troll: www.hemplobby.org/ Posted by: Douglas
» RE: slow and easy... Posted by: blaine s
» RE: sanctimonious hypocrite! Posted by: blaine s
» A troll: www.hemplobby.org/ Posted by: Douglas
» www.hemplobby.org Posted by: Douglas
» RE: Soul Cleasing? Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
"In the councils of government....
Posted by: Tom Degan on Mar 14, 2007 2:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....we must guard against the acquisition of misplaced power, wheteher sought or unsought by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disatrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties and democratic processes"

That was Dwight D. Eisenhower in the last public address of his presidency, two nights before the oldest president in history would hand over the reins of power to John F. Kennedy, the youngest elected president in history.

Say what you want about Ike (his meddling into the affairs of sovereign governments the world over led to the atrocious political conditions which exist today in Guatelmalia and Iran among other countries), in this case, the old bastard was fairly prescient - to say the least. It is this nation's insatiable appetite for guns that is leading to the depletion of butter. This country is doomed unless Weeda People shut down the armaments industry - That's all there is to it. Don't say it can't be done; It will be done. And you and I are the ones that are going to do it.

Pray for peace

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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War Makes more money
Posted by: marid on Mar 14, 2007 4:04 AM   
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Of course there is always more money for war. The Merchants of Death have to keep the factories running. Take a look, our major exports are high profit weapons systems. Gotta use em up to keep the orders coming. All them regular folks can just go to hades. Only need enough poor and regular folks to run our factories, clean our toilets, and anything else the Rich folks don't want to do.

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Follow the Money
Posted by: edraven on Mar 14, 2007 5:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good blog, but you say that the reason is - - politicians think we want war. The real reason is money. People (really rich ones) make most of their money on war and its product.

How are the politicians controlled? They are 'Dixie Chicked.'

I am very proud of the Democrats in my state that voted against the liar's war.

Ed Graham

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Campaign money
Posted by: tlees2 on Mar 14, 2007 6:03 AM   
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Politicians get campaign money from the military-industrial complex. The poor can't donate to politicians. Ipso facto the military-industrial complex gets what it wants and the poor don't.

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Bullets versus ballots
Posted by: sfortuna on Mar 14, 2007 5:59 AM   
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The top .5% who hold half this country's wealth will not stand by idly as we try to change the system from within. Voting will change nothing when only millionaires can run for office and corporate influence dictates who gets the ear of the public. Billions are spent annually on lobbying and consolidating propaganda channels by the Murdochs, Eisners, Waltons, Cox, Trumps, Mars and about 6,000 plutocract families. ONLY a mass revolution of the poor and disaffected, the hard-working people ala French or American Revolutions, will change this rigged 2 party system controlled by corporate greedmeisters. Only public financing of elections and mandatory coverage of all parties in debates and public forums will allow us tto choose more than the lesser of 2 evils. If America can become like most of the industrialized world, coalitions of class-aware parties (Green, Feminist, Socialist, Labor, etc) can challenge the status quo and break the power of the monied duopoly. It's becoming more and more obvious our middle class and intellectuals are morally broken, distracted and defeated as we slide ever closer to 3rd World status. ONLY a heroic uprising by 21st Century patriots willing to sacrifice to restore our democracy will be able to affect change. Time will tell whether this revolution can be peaceful or violent. There is no doubt the Bush/Cheney cabal would use mass roundup and execution of American dissenters to maintain the status quo. Reaching out to our police and military to educate them, show them how they've been used, lied to and manipulated to serve our despotic exploiters of the world's wealth, we might blunt the bloodshed to come. The president of Haliburton is moving to Dubai, Cheney, Bush et al are heavily invested in Saudi Arabian and Chinese funds. Any moron can see jobs outsourced, our education system raped, the social safety net decimated and America's blood and resources stolen to enrich these plutocrats. A few thousand bullets would be a small price to pay to return this country back to its people.

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» RE: Bullets versus ballots Posted by: xgroverx
» RE: Bullets versus ballots Posted by: djnoll
» SOLUTION: arm and prepare to defend yourself! Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon
Sub Prime Loans Sink Market - Quel surprise!!
Posted by: cognitorex on Mar 14, 2007 6:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
SHODDY BANK FINANCIAL PRACTICES ANNUALLY SPILL the REQUIREMENTS of MEDICARE and SOCIAL SECURITY

As regularly as the sun rises in the East, capitalism, as practiced in America today, spills, wastes or loses more financial resources every year than the total requirement of Medicare and Social Security combined. Greed leads to excessive risk taking. The U.S. financial industry regularly goes on speculative binges that enrich work-a-day bankers and thieves alike until the (always predicted) pyramid-like lending excesses end in catastrophe. Like a Value Added Tax, add a tenth of one per cent tax on financial transactions and the social programs for the average Joe and Jane would be well funded.--Who do you think (always, always, always) pays for the shoddy greedy self serving financial excesses in the first place? You guessed it, the same Janes and Joes that get sucker punched with the old, "Gee whiz, there just doesn't seem to be any money left over for you."
Craig Johnson

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» Hebrewnomics Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon
Money AND Power
Posted by: xgroverx on Mar 14, 2007 7:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While the greed of the military industrial complex and the welfare relationship they enjoy with our politicians are huge factors, we can't forget about the ever present lust for power. The neoconservative agenda, articulated by PNAC and adhered to by those in control of our nation, is complete and utter world domination. They have no concern for the people they govern because their only objective is perpetuating American and Western Hegemony. Their only goal is building an economic and political empire. We must remember that our government's actions and priorities are driven by greed AND the eternal quest for power.

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Cheney sheds light on what drives spending
Posted by: rwa on Mar 14, 2007 8:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Anyone can say they support the troops and we should take them at their word, but the proof will come when it's time to provide the money," Mr. Cheney said during a speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)...

The third and fourth myths, he said, are that "precipitous withdrawal" would strengthen America's hand in the war on terrorism, and would not have any serious consequences for the broader Middle East, and Israel.
Mr. Cheney linked the United States and Israel together as "prime targets of a terror movement that is global in nature and, yes, global in its ambitions."

http://washtimes.com/natio nal/20070312-104603-3322r.htm

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Paul Craig Roberts:
Posted by: rwa on Mar 14, 2007 8:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why is the US spending one trillion dollars on wars, the reasons for which are patently false. What is going on?

There are several parts to the answer. Like their forebears among the Jacobins of the French Revolution, the Bolsheviks of the communist revolution, and the National Socialists of Hitler's revolution, neoconservatives believe that they have a monopoly on virtue and the right to impose hegemony on the rest of the world. Neoconservative conquests began in the Middle East because oil and Israel, with which neocons are closely allied, are both in the MIddle East.

The American oil giant, UNOCAL, had plans for an oil and gas pipeline through Afghanistan, but the Taliban were not sufficiently cooperative. The US invasion of Afghanistan was used to install Hamid Karzai, who had been on UNOCAL's payroll, as puppet prime minister. US neoconservative Zalmay Khalilzad, who also had been on UNOCAL's payroll, was installed as US ambassador to Afghanistan...

The Israeli relationship is perhaps even more important. In 1996 Richard Perle and the usual collection of neocons proposed that all of Israel's enemies in the Middle East be overthrown. "Israel's enemies" consist of the Muslim countries not in the hands of US puppets or allies. For decades Israel has been stealing Palestine from the Palestinians such that today there is not enough of Palestine left to comprise an independent country. The US and Israeli governments blame Iran, Iraq, and Syria for aiding and abetting Palestinian resistance to Israel's theft of Palestine.

The Bush-Cheney regime came to power with the plans drawn to attack the remaining independent countries in the Middle East and with neoconservatives in office to implement the plans. However, an excuse was required. Neoconservatives had called for "a new Pearl Harbor," and 9/11 provided the propaganda event needed in order to stampede the public and Congress into war. Neoconservative Philip Zelikow was put in charge of the 9/11 Commission Report to make certain no uncomfortable facts emerged.

The neoconservatives have had enormous help from the corporate media, from Christian evangelicals, particularly from the "Rapture Evangelicals," from flag-waving superpatriots, and from the military-industrial complex whose profits have prospered...

http://www.counter punch.org/roberts03012007.html

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War Objectives exposed by the Jewish Global News Service
Posted by: rwa on Mar 14, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Flashback:


Saddam’s fall could benefit Israel, but for now it is only the first step

The key question, they say, is whether Saddam’s capture leads to a significant reduction in the number of guerrilla attacks on U.S. and allied forces and leads to a more stable, pro-American Iraqi regime.

If that happens, the benefits for Israel could be enormous. But if the attrition and chaos continue, the positive impact of Saddam’s capture could dissipate quickly.

On the face of it, Saddam’s final, ignominious exit should put more pressure on the Palestinians to seek an accommodation with Israel...

On the contrary, they expect American pressure on Israel to ease. Public Security Minister Tzachi Hanegbi, for example, believes the Untied States now will be “far more confident in carrying out its campaign against the ‘Axis of Evil,’ ” and give Israel more leeway in fighting terror.

Any reduction of American pressure would be a problem, said analyst Yossi Alpher, co-editor of the Israeli-Palestinian Bitterlemons.org Web site and a former senior Mossad operative...

In congratulating President Bush, Sharon suggested that Saddam’s capture could herald the beginning of the end for dictatorships throughout the Middle East, with major strategic benefits for Israel.

http://www.jta.org/cgi-bin/io wa/news/article/Saddamsfallcould.html

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WAR is the American Way
Posted by: DCostello2 on Mar 14, 2007 9:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
War is the American way. It's been so from the beginning and show little signs of changing. Ask most folks, including those who call themselves Progressives, and they'll say that THIS war is wrong not that ALL WAR is wrong.

War supports the American economy. Hell, War IS the American economy. Every single Congressional Distict in the country has at least one company doing business with the DoD, Department of Defense. Forget about a 'chicken in every pot', we've got a defense contractor in every District. The Arms industry is America's industry, forget about autos or steel or any of that crap they've told you. America has and does make a TON of money selling weapons to whomever has the cash.

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» RE: WAR is the American Way Posted by: Trazom
» RE: WAR is the American Way Posted by: willymack
» RE: WAR is the American Way Posted by: pingoo
Vive la revolution
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 14, 2007 9:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Things will eventually get bad enough a Robespierre, Marat & St. Just will emerge?

Nah, the American mob that rebelled against the excesses of aristocracy died win the war for Independence. We're all completely fracked.

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$$$ for OLIGARCHS @ AMERIKA CORP
Posted by: Hal on Mar 14, 2007 9:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One more time:

Significant wars are fought over public blood money extorted for private greed.

(Public war for private greed is the oldest con of all) As Smedely Butler said “War is a Racket”

Organized mass murder of hundreds of thousands at the vast obscenity of war is not a natural event. And nothing on the scale of a phony “war on terror” trumped up by an equally bogus 911 cover-up was left to chance.

As others on this thread and elsewhere have pointed out – this is about those silly old Big Oil trillions under the Mid East and Eurasian theatres. And as Paul Craig Roberts has said this is also about gullible Americans under the thumb of oligarchs who rule America thru their Washington-MSM puppet show.

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And in the meantime, how about Regime Change in Pakistan?
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 14, 2007 10:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Make Love not War
Posted by: janten on Mar 14, 2007 10:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But why is it that our representatives can easily raise endless amounts of money for war, but can't adequately fund human needs?

Everything in our lives - our perceptions, thoughts, feelings, actions - all of our behaviors are based either in love or fear. As individuals, as a culture, as a country, fear is the basis we primarily operate from. War funding comes from our self centered, fear based way of life. Support for our troops typically means money to send them into harm's way, between us and whatever it is we are afraid of.

Support for human needs grows out of love, something we are all very short of. Finding nonviolent solutions to our various national and world problems also grows out of love.

Our war president who says I've got war on my mind is a clear example of someone who is operating out of fear rather than love, and look where his way of doing things has gotten us. Into more trouble and further from caring for the real needs of our own citizens, including our physically, emotionally and mentally damaged veterans and their families, which is an essential part of providing support for our troops after we have fearfully sent them out to do battle for us.

Yes, we have to be aware of and protect ourselves from threats, because security from violence is one of our needs. But basing our individual and national behaviors only on a sense of fear has done nothing but make matters worse, as I believe the war in Iraq has clearly demonstrated. If we can approach things with more of a sense of love, we can still find ways to protect ourselves from threats of violence while we also find ways to take care of ourselves and each other, as well as others in the world who need help.

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Money For War!
Posted by: Darrell Kern on Mar 14, 2007 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What an excellent question! From out of the mouths of babes! Only a kid would ask that question- And I for one would love to hear the answer myself!

The truth of the matter is WAR=MONEY & Resources. It is very sad, but its true. Most of the people in Bush's administration have made millions of the deaths of American soldiers, American citizens (9/11), Iraqi citizens, Iraqi soldiers and list goes on ad infinitum.

A great source that may lead to the answer for this awesome question is: Haliburton

Research as much as you can about this mega corporation and it will not take you long to see the answer materialize!

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Bloggers vs. the Lobby
Posted by: rwa on Mar 14, 2007 11:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So why do leading politicians line up for “The Bush Doctrine: Take Two”? On the Republican side, it might be explained by a desire to cater to elements of the Christian Right that believe a final showdown with Islam is called for on religious grounds, or to talk-radio listeners who want to nuke the “Islamofascists” because that’s what weapons are made for. Such groups form part of the GOP base. But what of Edwards, what of Hillary Clinton—both eager to be on the record for keeping all options on the table? It’s a question that cannot be truthfully answered without reference to the subject of the Israel lobby.

It is a tough issue to address, as Gen. Wesley Clark, a middle-of-the-pack Democratic presidential contender in 2004, recently discovered. Upon reading an Arnaud de Borchgrave column that discussed a then incipient Israeli campaign to pressure Hillary Clinton and other Democrats to “publicly support immediate action by Bush against Iran,” he lost his cool, saying to Arianna Huffington, “How can you talk about bombing a country when you won’t even talk to them? It’s outrageous. We’re the United States of America; we don’t do that.” Pressed by Huffington to explain why he was sure Bush would attack Iran, he answered, “You just have to read what’s in the Israeli press. The Jewish community is divided but there is so much pressure being channeled from the New York money people to the office seekers.”

This was an awkward way to put it; the euphemism surely sounded more contentious than anything Clark might have said straightforwardly. And of course some people chose to ignore Clark’s correct assertion that the Jewish community was very divided on the Iran issue. Within days, the general was smeared as an instigator of anti-Semitism by some Republican Jewish organizations, his remarks headlined as “Protocols of the New York Money People” by a WSJ columnist.

At this point the story could have taken the same path it has virtually every time something similar has happened since 1970—the originator of the “anti-Semitic” gaffe apologizes, some taint remains attached to his name, and everyone is reminded once again of the perils of crossing swords with “the lobby.”

Glenn Greenwald, a New York attorney who recently published a book on the Patriot Act, wrote a blog entry that focused on the New York AIPAC gathering attended by both John Edwards and Hillary Clinton. Greenwald quoted an article from the New York Sun that featured Democratic political consultant Hank Sheinkopf’s claim that “New York is the ATM for American politicians. Large amounts of money come from the Jewish community. If you want dollars from that group, you need to show that you’re interested in the issue that matters most to them.” The issue that matters most, the article went on to say, is Israel, and what this group most wants to hear with regard to Israel is commitment to bellicosity toward Iran. Edwards and Mrs. Clinton did their best to comply, though according to a report in the New York Post, Clinton apparently disappointed some in attendance by suggesting that diplomacy might be attempted before war. “This is the wrong crowd to do that with,” commented one attendee.

Greenwald went on to point out that these articles made the same point that Clark made, adding, “It is simply true that there are large and extremely influential Jewish donor groups which are agitating for a U.S. war against Iran, and that is the case because those groups are devoted to promoting Israel’s interests and they perceive it to be in Israel’s interests for the U.S. to militarily confront Iran.”

Is it really practical to think that Israel’s long-term security needs can be satisfied by having the United States smash the country’s potential enemies as they arise, again and again?

http://amconmag.com

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Why? Because people are dumb and representatives are politicians
Posted by: mom'z the word on Mar 14, 2007 11:36 AM   
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Every politician shares one thing in common with other politicians. Whether they are a republican or a democrat they are first and foremost professional politicians. Their job is politics. Politics is their life. They have little or no common interest with the average voter who works for a living.

What is a politician? 2. One who seeks personal or partisan gain, often by scheming and maneuvering: Politics is always partisan. It is always their will to power. Professional politicians have nothing to do with the common folk. Contact between professional politicians and common folks happens only once every 2, 4, and 6 years on Election Day.

How many voters out there are professional politicians .0000001% of the population? Then why the hell is 99. 999999% of the voting population electing professional politicians as representatives? Is that dumb or dumber? Politicians can’t represent you. They have absolutely nothing whatsoever in common with the common person. What is your top priority?

Are you first and foremost a mom or dad who’s top priority is providing for you and your family’s well being? Is your main concern having enough money to provide, food, shelter, education, health care, and a safe environment for yourself and your family? If the answer to that question is yes then why in the hell did you elect a politician who shares none of these concerns? When was the last time you heard about a representative having trouble paying their gas bill, or getting health insurance, or denied credit because of a defaulted school loan? Are you stupid or just dumb? Both no doubt.

You want change? Then change yourself first. Change your attitude. Change your mind. Stop doing the same old things the same old way and then whine because nothing has changed. If you keep electing politicians to do your bidding you are going to keep getting screwed. Why? Because that is what they do by nature and you know it. You hired a bunch of professional screwballs and now you are whining because you got screwed. Grow up.

You want someone who shares your values and your concerns then for god sakes elect a mom or dad, grandmother, vet, nurse, teacher, customer service rep, and see what you get. You think they could do a worse job representing you than the pro you have in there now? Not in a hundred not in a million years because real people with real jobs earn an honest living working hard to provide a descent, respectable life for themselves and their family. Nothing to do with professional politicians who live a life of leisure compared to yours.

Life is a local affair. It starts at home. Apparently, being human is not good enough for the majority of the electorate. They just keep on electing carnivorous man eating politicians to the White House and Congress and wonder why nothing changes. Idiots.

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Many interesting, provocative answers...
Posted by: jbernstein on Mar 14, 2007 12:40 PM   
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...to the naive question I posed--thanks to all.

Greed, oil lust, and the military industrial complex just about cover it.

But haven't those all been around for a long time? And the current state of affairs as I describe in the post, while by no means historically unique, is not the norm either.

As recently as the 1990s we significantly expanded progressive policies: we expaned the Earned Income Tax Credit, we added SCHIP (public health ins for kids--it's now under siege), we raised the min wg, we acheived tight labor markets that helped spread some of the benefits of growth instead of the lion's share going to the top.

And we even balanced the budget while doing it.

Don't get me wrong--there was lots to complain about then too, from NAFTA to Rawanda to ignoring all kinds of economic and political distortions.

But I think it's fair to say that something positive was pushing back against the ever-present three problems listed above.

I tell you, they didn't teach this in grad school, but the post about being driven by fear vs. love really resonated.

So, let's make the military have a bake sale to finance its exploits, and build a politics based on love, not fear.

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