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John Feffer

John Feffer

Posted: August 18, 2010 04:08 PM

I have a simple question for Robert Gibbs, the outspoken press secretary of the Obama administration who recently told the "professional left" to quit criticizing the president. Yes, the president has successfully pushed through some major legislation on health care and financial reform, has negotiated an important arms control treaty with Russia, and has brought a measure of intelligence back to the White House. Still, I have a question.

Robert, where's our money?

The Obama administration has bailed out a couple too-big-to-fail corporations. It has bailed out the insurance companies with the generous provisions of the health care reform. It has continued to bail out the banks.

And it has bailed out the biggest barrel of pork of them all: the Pentagon. Sure, Pentagon chief Robert Gates wants to cut $100 billion in overhead costs over five years. And the defense sector is bracing for thousands of job cuts. But the Pentagon won't actually cut its overall spending. It will simply use those savings for its other missions, namely fighting wars. Pentagon spending for 2011 is projected to rise 3.4 percent. And that doesn't even include the $159 billion to cover the wars in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq.

With all those dollars for "defense," where's our money? Let's put it in starker terms. The money we need to create jobs at home is going to fund a war in Afghanistan where just as many U.S. soldiers have now died under Obama as under Bush and civilian casualties have surged by 30 percent in the first six months of 2010. The money we need to repair our infrastructure is being used to build Cold War weapons systems that are so unnecessary even the Pentagon opposes a number of them. The money we need to deal with climate change and the energy crisis is going to secret military missions like the one in Yemen where an air strike in May killed a provincial governor who was trying to convince al-Qaeda members to surrender.

We've bailed out the big boys. We've bailed out the Pentagon. We've even bailed out the people the Pentagon is fighting! The Taliban is skimming off as much as $1 billion a year in protection money from the shipments we send to the troops in Afghanistan. For the last several years, we've been bailing out our previous enemies, the Sunni insurgents in Iraq, to the tune of $300 a month (though al-Qaeda is now reportedly offering better rates).

So, where's our money? Where's the money that is supposed to put people to work and rebuild the U.S. economy?

The United States is still in the middle of a major economic crisis, with the unemployment rate at just under 10 percent. The Obama administration pushed through an $800 billion-plus economic stimulus package, but half of the infrastructure investment hasn't been paid out yet. Although most economists agree that the government should provide more stimulus money to avoid a double-dip crisis, there is no political support in Washington for a serious jobs bill. Instead, deficit-reduction fever has descended on Washington, and the Obama administration is willing to put almost everything on the cutting table, including Social Security.

And yet the Obama administration refuses to put the largest source of discretionary spending - the military - on the chopping block. Robert Gibbs accused the "professional left" of not being happy until the Pentagon is abolished. Actually, if he would simply read our latest Unified Security Budget, he would see that we are calling for a sensible reduction in military spending. It's not an all-or-nothing proposition. We call for $75 billion in reductions in military spending and redirecting those funds to diplomacy and economic development abroad, short-term investments into education and infrastructure improvements at home, and long-term deficit reduction.

Where's our money - that's not a question just from the "professional left." The American public's number one concern is the economy, and the vast majority of citizens have become pessimistic about the war in Afghanistan. Shifting money out of the Pentagon and into human needs, out of Afghanistan and into job creation at home, is a popular position. "Where's our money" is the cry of a new populism that, unfortunately, is represented at the moment by the "professional right," the organizations that are funding and framing the tea-party rage, the birthers, the anti-gun-control crowd, the Palinites, and all the other fringe elements that see government as an elite conspiracy against the little guy.

All of Obama's legislative victories, all the fine rhetoric about improving U.S. standing in the world - this will mean nothing at the polls. If the Obama administration doesn't turn around the economy fast and extract our soldiers from overseas quagmires, it will lose its congressional mandate and then, in 2012, its hold on the White House. If Robert Gibbs can't answer the simple question - where's our money - voters will do what they usually do in elections and let their pocketbooks determine their choices.

The result, like the U.S. economy at the moment, will not be pretty. In a word: refudiation.

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05:22 PM on 08/21/2010
Unfortunately, it seems that the U.S. has become so reliant on the war economy that came into being in the 1940s, that any attempt to control or reduce Pentagon spending would cause massive waves of new unemployment.

A possible way to work on it would be to have non-military programs recruit from military ones over a period of time, with the government ramping up one and ramping down the other. Unfortunately, the 4 year election cycle combined with the mixture of showman and religious zealot that is the modern politician means that neither the time nor the expertise is likely to be available for a long-term complex process such as this.
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martintillier
human
06:01 PM on 08/20/2010
John, I do not think anybody can turn the US economy around "fast", the dynamics of any economy are the result of many people's influence and actions and inactions. Maybe if the Republicans did not stall every reform that would help steer the economy out of greater danger, maybe if the most powerful men in American politics and industry, especially the war industries,would give an inch and think and act for the greater good instead of their own profit and power laden agenda, maybe then the President could do more of what he so obviously would like to.Remember he has not got the kind of power that many assume he has, there is inevitably going to be compromise and accommodation, the very nature of politics and especially the top job, mean that his choices are always limited and his Presidency has been fraught from day one with the "damned if he does, damned if he doesn't" set of non-options, he certainly has his work cut-out dealing with the war industries and oil industries vested interests, people who in some very real ways are more powerful than he is, and that's just unfortunately true.I agree that the troops should just be brought back home, and the money spent on better projects both domestic and foreign, but the Republican base are making money from the wars and really would rather not admit that they profit from the unnecessary deaths of young Americans, as well as Iraqi's and Afghans.
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John Feffer
09:55 AM on 08/25/2010
Yes, I agree. "Fast" is a relative term, and I mean it here in the political sense, not the economic sense. The political sense of fast is that the electorate perceives that the economy has turned the corner. But we must also acknowledge that the economy is an enormous ship that does not turn easily, and it will take a long time to see true economic reform in the sense that we both mean.
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martintillier
human
11:49 AM on 08/25/2010
John ---- Thank you for taking the time to respond to my post, and yes, even if the right things ARE done, it will take time for any effects to make themselves felt by "the little guy". The perception of the economy as you describe it, has been manipulated to a great extent by the Republican media demagogues like Breitbart and Beck,who seem intent on propping-up the elitist agenda favoured by their masters in the GOP and teapot party. This, coupled with the relentless attacks on the President and his family,as well as the Democrat base in general,has had a cumulative effect on the way that many perceive the current administration in a purely negative light. This is so obviously deliberate and its a shame that between the fear of disapproval,litigation and accusation, the liberal,Democratic base has failed to take any sort of lead in the propagation of their message to the electorate. The cowardice that results from the fear of lawyers accusations,as well as the smear tactics of the Republican owned media outlets,has, at least to some extent, neutered the Democratic argument and given the revisionists a free ticket to attack the Democrat base which does itself no favours by retaining an almost collegiate style of narrative on its policies and principles.The liberal base has, for too long, been apologetic in its eagerness to be all things to all people, this aesthetic works well within the confines of the Democratic conclaves, but fails miserably to engage with voters.
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Mike Armstrong
05:30 PM on 08/20/2010
Does this administration actually believe Democrats can hold public office in the midst of this economic disaster? Do they think the economy can do anything but contract with the public unable to get any kind of bank loan? Do they think the happy talk is working for them? Yes, evidently they do. In November, their eyes will be opened. Maybe somebody can get a message to Obama on his blackberry between his meetings with Geithner and Summers, just to let him know that these folks are the cause, not the solution.
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08:24 AM on 08/19/2010
It is not only the "fringe elements that see government as an elite conspiracy against the little guy." Especially since the government clearly is owned and operated by and for global corporate and financial interests.

Many of us are seeing the unending Left versus Right drama as the divide and conquer strategy that it is. It has truly become us, the little guys, against them, the ruling elite.

But I take your point. Where is our money? Wherever it went, it clearly hasn't been used in our own interests.
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Areyoukiddingg
We need a Reset
04:52 PM on 08/18/2010
Great article but you didn't mention the $1.3 Trillion the Pentagon cannot account for. I'd like to know where THAT money is. Seriously, there are so many so-called "black-ops" programs, so many bribes, under-the-table payments of our tax money..do you seriously think we peons will ever be told the true story?