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Hey Homeowners, Bush Blames You -- Not Iraq -- for Our Tanking Economy

By Tom Engelhardt and Frida Berrigan, Tomdispatch.com. Posted February 29, 2008.


Five years into Iraq, Bush denies any link between Americans' economic pain and war spending.
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In the week that oil prices once again crested above $100 a barrel and more Americans than at any time since the Great Depression owed more on their homes than the homes were worth; in the year that the subprime market crashed, global markets shuddered, the previously unnoticed credit-default swap market threatened to go into the tank, stagflation returned, unemployment rose, the "R" word (for recession) hit the headlines (while the "D" word lurked), within weeks of the fifth anniversary of his invasion of Iraq, the President of the United States officially discovered the war economy.

George W. Bush and Laura Bush were being interviewed by NBC's Ann Curry when the subject turned to the war in Iraq. Curry reminded the President that his wife had once said, "No one suffers more than their president. I hope they know the burden of worry that's on his shoulders every single day for our troops." The conversation continued thusly:

"Bush: And as people are now beginning to see, Iraq is changing, democracy is beginning to tak[e] hold. And I'm convinced 50 years from now people look back and say thank God there was those who were willing to sacrifice.


"Curry: But you're saying you're going to have to carry that burden … Some Americans believe that they feel they're carrying the burden because of this economy.

"Bush: Yeah, well --
"Curry: They say -- they say they're suffering because of this.


"Bush: I don't agree with that.

"Curry: You don't agree with that? Has nothing do with the economy, the war? The spending on the war?


"Bush: I don't think so. I think actually, the spending on the war might help with jobs.


"Curry: Oh, yeah?
"Bush: Yeah, because we're buying equipment, and people are working. I think this economy is down because we built too many houses."
In other words, in honor of the soon-to-arrive fifth anniversary of his war without end, the President has offered a formula for economic success in bad times that might be summed up this way: less houses, more bases, more weaponry, more war. This, of course, comes from the man who, between 2001 and today, presided over an official Pentagon budget that leapt by more than 60% from $316 billion to $507 billion, and by more than 30% since Iraq was invaded. Looked at another way, between 2001 and the latest emergency supplemental request to pay for his wars (first in Afghanistan and then in Iraq), supplemental funding for war-fighting has jumped from $17 billion to $189 billion, an increase of 1,011%. At the same time, almost miraculously, the U.S. armed forces have been driven to the edge of the military equivalent of default.


It's clear that as a "war president" our Commander-in-Chef has really whipped up a storm in the White House kitchen between the moment he launched his invasion on March 19, 2003 and the present. Think of it as a tale of two recipes:


George Bush's Commander-in-Chef Mission Accomplished Baghdad Victory Stew


Ingredients:
3 tablespoons, Iraqi extra virgin oil [no olives]


A "sea" of crude oil (and the necessary no-bid contracts to protect it)




Misinformation and disinformation (including Iraqi mushroom [clouds] and 9/11 Saddam [pork] links)


Shock 'n awe-tichoke cruise missiles and B-1 bombers (in quantity)


130,000 American troops (Army Chief of Staff Gen. Eric Shinseki suggested that, for this victory stew, "several hundred thousand" American troops were needed, but he was hustled out of the kitchen.)


1 head of Saddam Hussein





Spices:
1 bunch, coalition of the dilling, finely chopped


1 cup, Congressional authorization for war


2 sprigs of Iraqi exiles
Embedded reporters (to taste)

Dough for accompanying Iraqi flatbread, $50-60 million worth (Top Bush economic advisor Larry Lindsey suggested that $200 billion might be a more reasonable figure, but he, too, was promptly ousted from the kitchen.)


Flower petals (edible and in season)


To prepare:





In a heavy casserole, heat extra virgin Iraqi oil over a medium flame.


Add disinformation (mushrooms and links) and sauté until brown; repeat process. (You cannot repeat too many times.)


Add sprigs of Iraqi exiles.
Pour in cup of Congressional authorization for war. Stir vigorously as this tends to evaporate.


Pour in sea of crude oil. Raise heat to high. Quickly add shock 'n awe-tichoke cruise missiles and B-1 bombers. Cover tightly and bring to a boil. (If this "decapitation" cooking process works and you suddenly find yourself with the head of Saddam Hussein, add it as well.)

Stir in 130,000 American troops. Grind in embedded reporters (to taste). Add chopped coalition of the dilling. Bring back to a boil.


Cover, lower the heat, and simmer, stirring periodically, for three weeks.


Remove to a platter. Serve piping hot, otherwise "stuff happens." If possible, hire Shiite waiters to strew edible flower petals atop the victory stew at the table for dramatic effect.

In fact, we know who sat down to that "table" in the years after 2003 to eat more than their fill. It was, of course, a cast of characters from the war economy.




The Feasters (a non-inclusive list):


Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR): Until April 2007 a subsidiary of Halliburton, KBR garnered $20.1 billion in Iraq contracts from the Bush administration. The company reported a $2.3 billion profit in 2006. According to a Center for Public Integrity investigation, KBR was the single biggest corporate winner from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In terms of the dollar value of its Iraq contracts, it received nine times as much as the second largest Iraq contractor, DynCorp.


Halliburton: In 2002, Halliburton was number 37 on the Pentagon's list of top 100 contractors with $500 million in contracts. By 2006, it was number six, with $6.1 billion in contracts, an increase of more than 1,000%.

Brookings Institution Senior Fellow Peter W. Singer puts this in context, noting in a September 2007 policy paper that "the amount paid to Halliburton-KBR for just that period is roughly three times what the U.S. government paid to fight the entire 1991 Persian Gulf War. When putting other wars into current dollar amounts, the U.S. government paid Halliburton about $7 billion more than it cost the United States to fight the American Revolution, the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, and the Spanish American War combined."


Bechtel: In all, Bechtel was granted about $3 billion in contracts for work in Iraq between 2003 and 2007. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, some of its projects included: $1.075 billion for repairs to power stations and the electrical grid; $210 million for water and sanitation projects; $109 million for surface transportation repairs, including roads and railways; and $90 million for repairing or replacing buildings. The company ran afoul of investigators for not finishing many of the jobs it started. Stuart Bowen, the U.S. special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, issued a report in 2006 that repeatedly cited Bechtel mismanagement, including for the construction of the Basra Children's Hospital, a project that was supposed to be completed by December 2005 at a cost of $50 million. By July 2007, costs had soared to between $90 million and $131 million. The company was dropped from the project which to this day remains uncompleted.

Blackwater: According to investigative journalist Jeremy Scahill, Blackwater, the notorious private security company, has won about $1 billion in State Department contracts.


Lockheed Martin: This company is the largest recipient of Pentagon contracts. It received $26.6 billion in contracts from the Pentagon in 2006, a 36% increase over 2005. Since 2003, when the war against Iraq began, the company has seen its Pentagon contracts jump 20% or nearly $5 billion. Lockheed Martin's slogan, "we never forget who we're working for," clearly refers to the Pentagon, the company's best customer by a long shot. According to the Orlando Business Journal, "Lockheed Martin Corp. reported profits up 9.6 percent last quarter… The Bethesda-based defense contractor posted fourth-quarter [2007] net income of $799 million, or $1.89 per share, compared with $729 million, or $1.68 per share in the same quarter a year ago… Sales rose in every category of Lockheed's business except its aeronautics division."

Boeing: In 2003, the number two recipient of Pentagon contracts received $17.3 billion worth of them. By 2006, the Pentagon had upped that figure to $20.3 billion. According to the Chicago Tribune, "Boeing's net income rose a better-than-expected 4 percent, to $1.03 billion, or $1.36 per share" in the fourth quarter of 2007. The paper went on to note that the company "expects to build on its strong results from 2007, when its net income jumped 84 percent…to $4.07 billion… on sales of $66.39 billion."


Northrop Grumman: The third largest recipient of Pentagon contracts recorded a net profit of $454 million for the last quarter of 2007, according to Reuters. In 2003, the company took in $11.1 billion in Pentagon contracts. Three years later, that figure had jumped nearly 50% to $16.6 billion.


General Dynamics: According to analysts, because the work of General Dynamics is concentrated on Army systems, it has reaped the most direct benefits of all the large weapons makers from the Iraq war. "The combat-systems business… it's a cash cow for them, it's a solid business," said Eric Hugel, an industry analyst for Stephens Inc. The New York Times reported that fourth-quarter 2007 earnings for General Dynamics were up 42%. "For all of 2007, General Dynamics had net earnings of $2.1 billion," up 11% from $1.86 billion in 2006.

The Oil Majors: The oil majors have not actually entered Iraq (yet) in any significant way, but they have profited enormously from the havoc the Iraq War has unleashed in the Middle East as well as from the fact that, in these years, less Iraqi oil has been heading to market than in the worst years of the Saddam Hussein era. The Washington Post reported, for instance, that Exxon Mobil set new records for quarterly and annual corporate profits in 2007, breaking its own 2006 record by making $40.6 billion. Chevron was next in line with an almost 30% increase in profits from 2006 to 2007. The Post went on to note that profits from the five biggest international oil companies have tripled since 2002.


Parsons: This Pasadena-based engineering and construction company has been awarded more than $5 billion in contracts to rebuild the country's health care and security facilities as well as its water and sewage systems. With Worley Group of Australia, Parsons has also received $800 million in contracts to restore Iraq's northern oil infrastructure. In negotiating its Iraq reconstruction contracts, Parsons built in an additional bonus of up to 12% for good performance. Fortunately for taxpayers, good performance has been in short supply. Awarded a $75 million contract to build a police academy, Parsons typically cut corners. In the "completed" project, the bathrooms leaked waste water into student barracks to such an extent that one room was dubbed "the rainforest." The Pentagon terminated one contract when an audit found that, after two years' work, only six of the 142 health clinics Parsons had signed on to build were completed.

All in all, the Commander-in-Chef whipped up quite a meal back in 2003. As late as March 2006, he was still trying to serve a version of it at a "strategy for victory" event (though he was no longer accompanying it with a desert of Cakewalk Ice Cream Cake).


Finally, on the eve of the fifth anniversary of the invasion, the war economy seems to have had its fill. Now, the rest of us are being seated at a table with an oil-stained tablecloth, uncleared places, dirty dishes, used silverware, and bones strewn everywhere. Of course, it's for a multi-trillion dollar meal and, for us, it's a pay-as-you-go affair. (Bring your home mortgage papers with you.) Oh, and when you get your bill, note that the tip, a 150% gratuity, is already included. (Another thing, skip the ice water in those dirty glasses. Cholera is passing around Baghdad right now.) This time, however, the President is offering us a new dish, a special anniversary recipe:

George W. Bush's Commander-in-Chef Losing Mulligatawny Soup


Ingredients:
At least 140,000 American troops


Tens of thousands of private security contractors



Nearly 4,000 dead Americans


Tens of thousands of wounded Americans
From several hundred thousand to a million or more dead Iraqis


4.5 million Iraqi refugees or internally displaced persons

4 million hungry Iraqis


Assorted Shiite militias and death squads


Assorted Kurdish militias
80,000 U.S.-armed Sunni "concerned citizens" (militias)




At least 24,000 Iraqi prisoners in American jails


Thousands of Sunni insurgents.
Hundreds (or thousands) of Al-Qaeda-in-Mesopotamia militants


Hundreds of foreign jihadis and suicide bombers.

Up to 10,000 Turkish troops.


Numerous Iranian agents


Crude oil (where available)




Water (polluted)
Hundreds of IEDs (roadside bombs)
361 U.S. Army unmanned drones operating in Iraqi airspace


Hundreds of thousands of pounds of explosives released by U.S. Air Force planes



Dough for accompanying Iraqi flatbread, now possibly $3 trillion -- and rising.


To prepare:
Heat whatever crude oil is available in the largest kettle you can find until smoking. Dump in all ingredients in whatever quantities in any order you choose. (Warning: popping oil, shield eyes.) Add polluted water. Bring to a roiling boil at highest heat. Cook for as much -- or as little -- time as you want. Pour the soup, boiling hot, across the table (no need for bowls) and dig in.

Bon appétit! Happy anniversary!

And keep in mind, for the next 11 months our Iron (Commander-in-) Chef will still be in the kitchen cookin' up a storm and undoubtedly hummin' to himself:


"War! -- huh -- yeah --

What is it good for?

Absolutely nothing

Uh-huh."


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See more stories tagged with: bush, iraq, disaster

Tom Engelhardt, editor of Tomdispatch.com, is co-founder of the American Empire Project and author of The End of Victory Culture. Frida Berrigan is Senior Program Associate with the Arms and Security Initiative at the New America Foundation. She is a columnist for Foreign Policy in Focus and a contributing editor at In These Times magazine.

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Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Feb 29, 2008 1:12 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bush administration: Try 'em & Fry 'em

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» Try em and Fry em? Posted by: harryf200
Bad Dream
Posted by: Tom Degan on Feb 29, 2008 2:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A couple of weeks ago I had the strangest dream. It involved the writer, Frank Rich. In my dream, he had never evolved into the brilliant political writer he has become in recent years but was still the theater critic he had been for so many years. All of the thousands of words he has written over the past seven years critisizing the administration of George W. Bush turned out to be merely a very long revue for an extremely badly written play.

[sigh]

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"Oh, Ralph, You've Done It Again!

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» Andie Posted by: Tom Degan
Here's The Link
Posted by: Tom Degan on Feb 29, 2008 2:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
alcoholic thinking...
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Feb 29, 2008 3:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i said it before and i'll say it again...bush exhibits classic alcoholic thinking...

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» RE: alcoholic thinking... Posted by: maninmoon
» RE: alcoholic thinking... Posted by: penstamen
» RE: alcoholic thinking... Posted by: harryf200
» RE: alcoholic thinking... Posted by: clvngodess
I saw the interview...
Posted by: adp3d on Feb 29, 2008 3:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..actually Ms. Curry was more deferential than the transcript implies. The thing is that Bush undoubtably believes his was a successful administration because he enriched his base constituency, that he did a good job. That said, I truely believe the man needs to be tried for treason and high crimes against the Constitution and the American people. He also need to be put on trial for international war crimes.

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» but he never will be...nm Posted by: Bbear41
Greedy Homeowners
Posted by: farmertx on Feb 29, 2008 4:07 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If homeowners would band together and start "donating" millions of dollars, the failings of the Economy that Shrubs' handler's foisted upon us, would be the fault of another group.
We must remember that Shrub cannot actually think beyond the basics; eating, sleeping and smirking.
He can only parrot words that his handler's throw his way.
Reality has always been an alien concept to him. This is the person who proclaimed that Ronnie Raygun "proved that the Federal deficit meant absolutely nothing." Which is true if a Democrat follows to set things right again.

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This Nightmare was all Planned
Posted by: ronheri on Feb 29, 2008 4:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From day one of the Bush/Cheney's appointment by the Supreme Court the plan was on the table to invade Afganistan and Iraq. The events of 911 (which demands a new and transparent investigation) was the perfect opportunity to fuel this lie of WMD, Al Queda in Iraq. and bring democracy to the rest of the world. Terrorists cells behind every rock one can dream of; so we must forgo all of our Constitutional rights of privacy and freedom. Tap all phones, open all mail (Postal and e-mail) haebeus corpus, no that is old fashioned. Presidential signing orders: "If you protest the war, you may be subject to having the Treasury confiscate your property." Hundreds of FEMA prisons built around the USA. The President has the right to declare a state of emergency for any reason; Congress does'nt need to know the details! (And most don't want to!) This list could go on and on; I think you the reader get the big picture. Now that they have destroyed the economy with the unstastainable deficits the next piece of the plan is to join Mexico, Canada, and the USA and usher in the Amero to replace the dollar (green wothless IOU). If this plan falters; the backup is to start another war in Iran. Gasoline at almost $4.00 a gallon in California yesterday will soon be the norm. The Federal Reserve (not Federal-no Reserves) have done a good job of crashing our economy. Rockefeller, The CFR, Bilderbergers and the Illumaniti should be quite pleased. The New World Order is on a fast track and will shortly become a reality. I for one will tell them what to do with their Real I.D. and the RFID implant coming down the pike. To all you good patriots out there; tell them, "We won't be your slaves"! The second American Revolution is under way. God Bless America.

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» Sorry, the link is... Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
Depressing
Posted by: Sushi on Feb 29, 2008 4:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Baby boy bush is a criminal that has squandered our treasury, trashed our credibility and wiped his butt with our Constitution. America is nothing more than a giant play-toy to him, and he broke it.

You should see all the formerly thriving businesses closed down, the vacant, weed-choked houses, people putting food back on the shelf because they can no longer afford to buy "luxuries" like a bag of cherries or corn for $1 an ear. Before bush took office, I had $200 to spare after bills and necessities; my paycheck is bigger than it ever was but I come up about $200 short each week and have to dip into my savings to keep pace. Had to switch health insurance companies when the premiums jumped higher than my mortgage. (And I have never been sick!)

If "trickle down" works so well, how come bush needs to "jump-start" the economy by handing out checks so it can trickle back up? If we all have our "taxes" given back to the people to spend, do you think we are all going to collectively improve our roads, repair bridges or fund education? No, we're going to buy plasma TV's and spinner wheels.

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» RE: Depressing Posted by: Nick747
» What's Worse... Posted by: ItsNeverOver
Stock up on the pork & beans
Posted by: nochicagoboys on Feb 29, 2008 4:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article, Mr. Engelhardt and Ms. Berrigan. Converting that massive treasure-eating boondoggle, into a formula anybody who's spent time in the kitchen can understand, proves that it's way too expensive a culinary art form for just anybody to attempt -- even the "richest nation on earth".

Ironically, LBJ attempted to change the age-old economic axiom, "guns or butter", to "guns and butter". It didn't work. All it did was throw the economy into a tail-chasing morass of stagflation for most of the 1970s. Now, government-spending of borrowed treasure, on more "guns", is almost replicating the same failed formula, except this time there's no "butter" involved in the equation -- just "guns", "guns", and more "guns".

I'm afraid this unqualified and ill-equipped president has created irreparable harm to our already fragile economy. When the Chairman of the Federal Reserve comments publicly that stagflation isn't a concern; that these conditions aren't similar to the conditions that transpired prior to the stagflation suffered during the 1970s, my only reaction is to see several red flags run up the flagpole in unison.

We're in deep trouble, I think they know it, and they're preparing for the worse. It's the encore recipe called disaster capitalism we've all been waiting for. Bon Appetit!

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Let them eat cake?
Posted by: rwday@cox.net on Feb 29, 2008 5:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Too many houses. Sure, that's it. Just saw an article on local TV news about the rise in homelessness, and we've got too many houses. We selfish, selfish Americans wanted actual roofs over our heads, and the market, which Bush would normally praise to the skies, btw, provided them. Please. Too many unaffordable houses, maybe, but even so, that's not why the economy is tanking.

While it's true that building bombs and planes and tanks does create jobs, so does fixing roads and bridges, teaching kids, maintaining and creating parks. You, Mr. Bush, representative of a party that claims to be for fiscal responsibility and smaller government, have managed to turn President Clinton's surplus into a massive deficit for the benefit, not of the American people, but for the elitest of the elites. And for all that, we're not even safer than we were before you started.

January 2009 can't come soon enough for me.

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Manipulation Thru Guilt
Posted by: Gravitas on Feb 29, 2008 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Going back to 'blamining" homeowners instead of the war, sadly that might be effective. For centuries people have been whipped with guilt by religion. When religion lost its grip over many, the morality of health and fitness took its place. The consequences of always feeling like "sinners" of one kind or another is conditioning ourselves to always accept blame uncritically. The people who rise to the top and profit understand this dynamic. They are the exploiters who get away with murder (literally) while the rest of the population is too blinded with their own guilt to see their antics clearly.

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ILLTH
Posted by: Cybershaman on Feb 29, 2008 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Creating jobs this way only does us more harm. No wealth is generated by creating things that are only going to be blown up, except when you replace them. That is why we have to have continuous war. Even then you are not generating anything that will produce more wealth. We blasted Iraq and Afghanistan to pieces and now have to spend vast amounts of our tax dollars rebuilding their infrastructures ... all while being shot at. Stimulating an economy this way only leads to a deeper and deeper hole. If I ran my family the way the Bush League runs this country, I would be arrested for neglect.

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» RE: ILLTH Posted by: Cybershaman
Fifty years from now!
Posted by: cisc on Feb 29, 2008 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our lying eyes will no longer be deceiving us, the greatness of George will be known. We will be paying for this debacle at least that long. If they are not tried with a little more justice than the people at Gitmo, with a Justice Department that has had its integrity restored, then this will all happen again. We did not learn from Vietnam. The people who want to keep fighting Vietnam were the same chickenhawks that wouldn't put their butts in the line of fire the first time. They sent other people then, they sent other people now. They set here and rake in the profit and tell us to be very, very afraid because the people they screw over are going to come and hurt us. So, who are the REAL terrorist? They have cried wolf too many times. We're slow, but we get it. Sorry (not really) that your world class arrogance will not let you accept that you cheated your way in and you will leave in disgrace. Our fault lies in not sticking to the constitution and letting you get away with it this long without impeaching.

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So much for the "ownership society"
Posted by: xvictor on Feb 29, 2008 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush whored this for a long time. Now he feels the bitch slap.

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NOW THEY NOTICE
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Feb 29, 2008 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The war in Iraq didn't come close enough to home for most people. Now it's the roof over their heads and suddenly they notice that the country is run by a man who doesn't care about much of anything telling them that it's all their own fault. He's done this for 7 yrs. He'll last until January 09. "We built too many houses". That's brilliant. He can't bail out the banks without helping homeowners just a little. I know it'll break his heart. Careful who you vote for. Thanks, ANNA

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Housing done it???
Posted by: harryf200 on Feb 29, 2008 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, you guys in the States will know better than a Brit, but I heard an interview with one of your citizens on a BBC radio Current Affairs programme who reported his research shows the Iraq war has already cost the US tax payer $3 Zillion ... I gather than would be enough to finance the shortfall in US pensions for the next 90-95 years ...

Allegedly the spending is so great that around 10 days of US costs in Iraq could eliminate illiteracy in the entire World ...

And it's housing that created your economic downturn? Hmmmmm ... if I were you, I'd question that a little more.

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Bush is partly right, for all the wrong reasons.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Feb 29, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The subprime/subwisdom ffiasco is causing the economy to tank rapidly.

Financially ignorant people signed off on loans they couldn't afford, and greedy, stupid people bought those loans and sold them to fairly smart folks who made their money and then got out when the getting was good.

Lax regulation, and the idea that people should be able to mortgage themselves and their families to the hilt--a pro-choice approach--let this happen.

Undoubtedly, Iraq spending takes away from the U.S. coffers--if there was anything there. As it is, we borrow from the Chinese, we borrow from young workers (that "lockbox" isn't really there, hint, hint), we borrow to buy groceries.

The U.S. may well be in immediate trouble because of mortgages that thinking folks would never have signed, but Bush and our Congresscritters are mortgaging even more...spreading us even further.

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» Err.... Posted by: ABetterFuture
Iron Chef's more likely humming
Posted by: ScoobyDoobyDoo on Feb 29, 2008 7:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"War! -- huh -- yeah --

What is it good for?

Absolutely PROFIT!

Uh-huh."

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Not enough war
Posted by: ClassAct on Feb 29, 2008 7:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the problem is an oversupply of housing, then obviously the underlying problem is not enough war to finance the housing. Forget that interest rates were stifled at 1% in June 2003 for almost a full year to enable Bush to finance his war beyond the anticipated 90 days at little cost, thus encouraging excessive borrowing. In topsy-turvy conservative world, prosperity trickles down from the wealthy and recession trickles up from the public.

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Rowland
Posted by: motamanx on Feb 29, 2008 7:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has the MSM EVER asked Bush the hard questions?

And received straight answers?

Please, show me when and where. When the questions might have been hard, it was the 9/11 Commission, and Bush had to have Dick come along, and recite off the record. And that stuff, like the Secret Energy Policy, is still secret!

The media was complicit in all his manifold crimes...

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kool-aid for the base
Posted by: QCao009 on Feb 29, 2008 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is sad to watch this tragi-comedy of a dry drunk on the world stage, lest we remember that we are the ones drinking the kool-aid.

In the name of helping us, our leaders, scripted by CiC himself, they passed a tax whachamacallit and "return" the money of the people, all the while winking away millions on a daily basis directly into their pockets from war profiteering. We laugh at Putin, but how differently is Putin representing Russians than Dubya representing us ?

In the name of Mom, apple pie, country and decency, this war deserter continues to send young men from the poorest states and cities to fight his war, all the while destroying our military and strategic base to ensure our national safety and security.

In the name of literacy and education reform, they continue to peddle reading software and tests and inane statistics which they spin as their answer to the lack of achievement of the next generation.

Lest we continue to ponder the moral bankruptcy of this dry drunk, we really should ask ourselves as we look at another warmonger the Republican Party is getting ready to runn for the WH: why do we keep drinking the koolaid? Why do we listen to any lie they are feeding us as reasonable or logical or even ingenuous? Have we been that dumbed down ?

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"Ownership Society & De-regulation
Posted by: Andie927 on Feb 29, 2008 7:45 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Come on folks! Think back, don't you remember?
Try harder, I know you can do it!

Bush pushed this ownership (BS), told the Banks to reduce the requiremnts to qualify for home loans, and refinance so they could 'go shopping'. Had the Fed. lower the interest rate, to below 1%!!
And how many of you, at the time, said "how nice"!!

Yes, some home buyer's were greedy! I want the McMansion I can't afford! Mostly it was realitor's and morgage lenders, talking them into big new, fancy homes they couldn't afford, so they (the realtor & morgage lender) would make a Bigger commision!

None of it wouldn;t hae happened, if the rules, had stayed in place! Like verifying income, checking credit, and honestly explaining the loans!!

Get the interest rate up where it belongs, (5 to 7%), reinstate the rules, and for God-Sake, don't fall into the next "trap", these $5,000 tax crdits being proposed!

Think twice about Barack Obama who in favor of De-Regulation!!!(All about his BIG doners Wall Street, and what's good for them, like privatizing Social Security, & Private Retirement Accts.)

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OFF THE TRACK
Posted by: crazy carlos on Feb 29, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back cover of the 3-10-08 Nation--CHENYCARE.ORG
Two Nurse Organizations have co-sponsered a bill in Congress HR 676 for health care for all that is the same as what Cheney got for his heart problems(unfortunately he survived)If it is good enough for government employees, then we should have the same!!

The heavy lifting has been done, now all we the people have to do is get off our dead asses, stroke a few keys and get behind this bill!! Please at least take a look. Type in CHENEYCARE.ORG. Do it now. Crazy Carlos

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Theory of economics by Der Fueher.
Posted by: symcokid on Feb 29, 2008 8:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is the basis for our economy since the Gold Standard was removed? It has to be consumerism, but that is problematical as households are supersaturated with junk plastics products made in China and elsewhere. At least China has money to borrow this US for the upcoming rebate or refund and to help finance America in it's War on Iraq, does any of this make sense? Somebody must have some answers?

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Can anyone say 'Crazy Cracker'
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Feb 29, 2008 9:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So,let's have a look back. Before we went into Iraq,we went to Afghanistan. During that operation's infancy,Uncle Pissy Pants got on the mic and told us how 'American's love to 'own' things" and sent us out to buy,buy,buy, and now because we bought and some got screwed by slippery mortagage agents,
WE'RE THE PROBLEM?!!??!
It must be true. Because it sure could'nt be the corrupted world finance organizations that used the US military as their Muscle/hitmen hiding in their glass towers oppressing the people of smaller nations,doing underhanded dealings and generally making life a bitch for everyone in a developing Nation,under the blessings of every Whitehouse since the 1950's that wound up giving us 9/11.
No it could never be them that's caused the economy to start failing,$4/gallon gas,housing collapses and poisoned air and water. It was we the homeowners. Hey Goerge...FUCK YOU!!!
Draft Jeffrey7 for Prez '08

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Project for a New Fascist Century (PNFC)
Posted by: srob on Feb 29, 2008 9:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
one party + two names= fascism

go back to sleep america, its to late to do anything. while you listen to the pundits yammer on, the plan has already been implemented. the corporations are running the show. americans are more worried about the three "G's" (guns,god and gays) than they are about the constitution. go back to sleep and when you wake up, go shopping at walmart

I PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE..TO THE FLAG..OF THE UNITED STATES OF HALLIBURTON..AND TO THE REPUBLICAN..FOR WHICH HE PROFITS..ONE CORPORATION..UNDER "DOD"..INVINCIBLE..W/ LIBERTY OIL..A BLOODY IRAQ..AND A CORPORATE FASCIST WAR MACHINE..4 ALL!

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50 years from now, people would look back and say....
Posted by: eosrk on Feb 29, 2008 10:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...that fucker is the one whom blown Earth back to the Stone Age!!!

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Why "War on Iraq"?
Posted by: Sushi on Feb 29, 2008 10:28 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why does Alternet continue to title this section of the issues War On Iraq, even after I mentioned it several times?

Aren't we there to "liberate" them and help them become a democracy and self-sufficient? Aren't we supposedly on their side? Why is this a war ON Iraq and not a war IN Iraq?

Oh, yeah...perpetuating the ignorance about who attacked America keeps us frightened and easy to manipulate. Keep up the good work.

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» RE: Why "War on Iraq"? Posted by: babs
» RE: Why "War on Iraq"? Posted by: Crazy H
» Actually "War on Iraqis" Posted by: Rod from Canada
Peak Oil
Posted by: healinghawk on Feb 29, 2008 11:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Peak Oil drove the cost of living in the US up by nearly 20% in the past year, in fuel and food costs. We eat oil, in the form of petrochemicals we dump on our depleted soil to grow GM crops we didn't choose and can't stop in the current version of corporate rule. Virtually all of our food comes in by trucks that require fuel. The US economy is predicated on cheap oil, which no longer exists. By election time, predictions are we will have $200/barrel oil prices, which means $6/gallon gas. Dubya has a short-term fix: drill for oil everywhere it might exist in the US, no matter the ecological consequences. It seems way past time to ask the obvious question: when do we get off oil and create a sustainable economy in the US? Until we do, we will continue to live in a horrible bind.

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Can't we ALL just ignore the P.O.S. Bush now that he's utterly irrelevant?
Posted by: xbj on Feb 29, 2008 11:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We couldn't ignore him when the Supreme Court declared him President; we couldn't ignore him when he commited war crimes and atrocities in his god Lucifer's and in our name; we couldn't ignore him when he was Diebolded (yes, it's now a verb) into office in 2004.

Can we please ignore the human piece of excrement NOW, when he's utterly irrelevant to anything? The man has been a piece of shit since the day he was born, when are we going to treat him and his as they all deserve to be treated; as if they never existed at all?

Ignore him. Or try and hang him and BE DONE WITH IT.

That's the question posed from the other side, where he and his NEVER EVER EXISTED.

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Bush puke horror excrement
Posted by: drsivana99 on Feb 29, 2008 11:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do wish this asshole of a commander-in-chief would worry just a little bit about what's going on right goddamn now, instead of what some unborn jackoffs 50 years in the future might think. Of course, his thinking may be a bit mudled by the heavy burden of worry he carries on behalf of our troops, who he cares SOOO much about. Jesus.

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What do global warming and the economy have in common?
Posted by: Trazom on Feb 29, 2008 12:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Both are looming catastrophes and it's just about too late to do anything about either of them.

2. More people will be drowning and homeless in the future.

3. Both were mismanaged by an administration that doesn't understand science nor economics.

4. Both were allowed to grow (abnormally) thanks to cheap oil.

Got any others?

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good bunot the recipe analogy
Posted by: whealeydj on Feb 29, 2008 3:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the facts about the profiteers was great but i am not enthusiastic about recipe part.

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Matrix Economy
Posted by: ronheri on Feb 29, 2008 4:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everyone go to matrixeconomy.com; its free and educational. Click on the 28 July MP3 download and sit back and listen to these two analysts describe what we are in for. It start out rather slow, but gets very interesting. Get yourselves prepared and quick.

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It took less than 20 years
Posted by: drfun on Feb 29, 2008 10:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for Reagan "Freedom Fighters" Saddam Hussien, and Osma Bin Laden to be called "Terrorists" by republicans. The same goes for the Shah of Iran, Marcos of the Philippines, Samoza of Nicaragua, or Pinochet of Chile, just to name a few who have been turn-coated by the U.S..
So, 50 years from now, Bu$h & Co. will be still be viewed as committing Treason and labeled War Criminal's, and people will ask; why they weren't tried and punished?
Bu$h rational thinking is clouded from years of cocaine and alcohol abuse,and quite delusional.

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How does Bush look at himself in a mirror?
Posted by: common intelligence on Mar 1, 2008 12:32 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He is the most unbelievablly obsurd baffoon I could even imagine. That a nation of citizens or a bunch of blackmailed congressional representative could allow him to continue to "Act" in the role of a leader is beyond comprehension.

What in hell is this thing called America about?

I have no more concern for the well being of this bunch of boneheaded ignorant mass in denial. You whom don't carry an attitude of blattant out right discust for this country on your shoulder ever step in public you take should be down right ashamed of being compliant and stupid.

Obama is a damn distraction to your duty, as an American, to be instamental at purging this country of one whom has ruined it and set into motion the literal end to the country that you would want it to be. (And Obama isn't going to return it to you either.) Throw Hope away and grab the ggawd damn bull by the horns your selves.
As well, McCain, if any of you are thinking is the answer, then you are dumber than dog dirt.

This whole transition period is like a nice cushion period you are all allowing Bush to nuzzle into for his little retirement nap. But you will all get no retirement, health care, medical care, Just a broken nation.
The Federal Reserve and the Iraq Invasion are both at the root of the problem.

Everything is falling right into place as it did before WW1 And WW2.
( figure it out dummies, I'm tied of trying to teach a bunch of test dummies that the friggin train is on the road to ruin.)

Why should I even address the article above. It's just more rhetoic. And none of you are actually going to do, nor would it mean anything, about getting that bastard in office ....in Jail, where he belongs.

Man, I can't even understand why those that are working in the service or service of the government continue to do so. Where in hell are their/your minds at? This jerk has got the whole country by the balls. All by telling lies and deceiving you all, And this sissy nation believes the drek that come out of his mouth and office as being some kind of truth or gospel? Un-frigging-believable .

I guess this country better believe in something other than God because he/she has certainly left you all with pile of sh***.

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CommonDreamer
Posted by: CommonDreamer on Mar 1, 2008 9:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is the fallout of garbage economics promulgated by the mighty wizards of Wall Street and Greenspan's merry band of sophistry spewing pundits. This economy is for investors, not for regular citizens. It has been engineered with tax cuts ensuring money flowing to the top but with no benefits to the bottom....unless you call unaffordable housing, bogus loan packages that won't make housing any more affordable, and the depression of wages "benefits"..and now people are having a hard time getting jobs at that.

Regressive tax policies are a disaster...war aside....and now we are just seeing the fallout. Of course they are blaming the home "owners" (a temporary state for many)....it's always the regular, powerless citizen's fault in this mercenary, greedy environment they have created. Whether it's not getting enough education, not working long enough hours, not buying enough goods...(despite having usury tax rates unlike those for Wall Street bankers, and despite having depressed wages and the like)....it's still their fault. Only this time I think the voters are seeing through the bill of goods and just have had enough.

We need an inclusive economy that does not harm workers and does not separate "skilled and unskilled" and so on. Everyone has a part to play, whether it is as a trashman or doctor or teacher or physicist...and regressive tax rates are amoral, pointless and deceptive - and worst of all, destructive. You cannot build an economy based on bankrupting the middle and lower income classes...because one day they're just going to run out of money.

Vote the financial criminals out and get a decent, moral and progressive government in place...and maybe America can recover from this abuse.

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» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: Trazom
Bianca Patrick
Posted by: PJ White on Mar 2, 2008 7:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Could this fukker possibly be any dumber? Goddess, help us! It's going to take all the brain cells we can muster to pull our collective fat from the fire after 8 years of this moron.

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Bush has an MBA from where??
Posted by: corazon on Mar 2, 2008 2:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush was elected out of spite, ignorance, and more than likely, election fraud.

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Homelessnes for the afluent?
Posted by: compu on Mar 3, 2008 12:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do know for the rest of the country.
This morning I saw a woman walking the streets
of Miami pushing a wheeled suitcase.
She was not any woman,the beauty and class was
very evident.
Iam wrong,she wasn't walking,she was drifting
aimless,coming from a afluent area.
She went to atm and the machine dispense nothing
I went up and down observing her.What a woman
like that can possible do in that circuntances.
I can tell when a person has difficulties,having
experienced it.

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Bush's personal war
Posted by: donl51 on Mar 3, 2008 2:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is to blame for our country digging a deeper ditch,its responsible for lots of things but not for the delemna of the housing market and why people are up to their eyebrows in det,nobody told any of us to go nuts and spend,we do that quite nicely ourselves,of course so does our Gov.I was always of the impression Dems spend on the people Repubs,concentrate on smaller gov.less spending and they're corp.minded,well seems somebody forgot,we got big gov.in our faces,spending like drunken sailors,so anyway if any of us needs an example of how we should spend,we ain't got it!

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» RE: Bush's personal war Posted by: Trazom
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