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Recipes for Disaster in Iraq: The Commander-in-Chef Cooks Up a Storm
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 appetit! 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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31 Comments so far
Show AllBush couldn't have done more damage to this country if he had been working for Osama bin Laden himself. OBL assumed that the United States would react to 9/11 by doing something incredibly stupid, but even he must be surprised and overjoyed at how much of a mess Bush has made. Osama's using the old Muhammad Ali rope-a-dope strategy: get your opponent to exhaust himself, then knock him out. Works even better if your opponent runs headfirst into the turnbuckle and knocks himself out for you. Boxcutters: $1.99. Flying lessons: a few hundred thousand bucks. Causing the U.S. empire to self-destruct? Priceless.
I'm predicting a 90% chance that their will be no substantive pullout of troops under a democrat president.
With the amount of money spent on this invasion of the middle east, we could have paid all of it's citizens a life time wage to leave us alone, run their respective countries, provide us with oil, we could have taken our troops and equipment home, and it would still have cost us less than it will after we finish destroying and rebuilding.
Keyinside, I'm predicting a 90% chance that bush and cheney may hang on to power (via marshall law due to a terrorist attack or natural disaster in or around mid-October) or find a way to hand their dynasty over to Lil Bush McCain and keep our umbrella force in place to protect the oil corps and war profiteers.
Edward1793
Who's "we"? Read the article above again. The war is being fought for the exclusive benefit of the corporations named above. These people are not about to let such a giant cash cow slip away from them. As far as they're concerned, Bush is the greatest president of all time and "we", the citizens of the United States, are not even players in this game.
And on top of all that, yesterday Bush said we're just having a "slowdown" - no recession in sight. Of course from his perspective, I guess it looks pretty good. He's gotten just about everything he wanted, while our senators and congressmen kowtow to the boss.
Remember and never forget,___ the reasons Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, started the war with Iraq, ___ with the help of Rove, our "free" press, our congress and the pentagon experts.
Saddam had WMDs.___ Saddam had purchased uranium from Africa. ___ Saddam had assisted Osama bin Ladin with the 9-11 attacks and they were going to do it again. ___ Saddam's Iraq was a threat to world peace. ___Hans Bliss was wrong, the WMDs were there and our CIA had the proof of it. ___ All lies ___ and Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld knew they were all lies.
Why Didn't Ann Curry ask Bush about those most pertanent lies? Why does no one ask him, or the presidential candidates speak of them? When is the truth of it all, ever going to be broadcast, other than on sites such as this?
Right on, purvis ames !
Military Industrial complex is bigger than governments and controlled by poerful families which include the Bushes and the Ben Ladins and many a neo-con.
In most criminal cases, investigators always follow the money...no difference here...except who is powerful enough to procecute these folks?
Shortly after 9/11, bin Laden released a video where he said his goal was merely to bankrupt the US. That's quite a goal for a guy living in a cave in Tora Bora. Without a little help, it would seem as impossible as willing yourself to land on the moon. So now we're bankrupt. Where'd that help come from, and why? But all's not lost.
Even as Americans cancel their cable and dish TV contracts because they can't afford them anymore, they will rediscover the empowerment of a library card.
National literacy may be just around the corner. Cheers.
The Buzh needs to be someplace where he can no longer hurt anyone OR hisself.This man is certifiable.
Not to worry. The Bush family has purchased vast tracts of land in Uraguay. No extradition treaty with the US. Very nice.
Edward1793, we are not known for rebuilding what we destroy - at least not since WWII.
That interview with Bush seemed almost psychotic. "What tsunami? I don't see a tsunami." Last year he was touting how wonderful it was that everyone gets to own their own home. It's like living with a drunk where reality keeps shifting until you start thinking you're the one who is crazy.
But with Bush as president, we are living with a drunk, a dry drunk suffering from megalomania.
What most concerns me is the belly flop of Congressional leaders. There has to be something going on there. I suspect blackmail. Not new in Washington, LBJ was famous for his little black book which he used to keep Congress in line.
kathyodat
>Shortly after 9/11, bin Laden released a video where he said his goal was merely to bankrupt the US.<
He should give Bush some sort of medal or something for a job well done. I mean, if Bush isn't actually on his payroll then he oughta be.
THERE IS A GOOD BOOK OUT. "THE BUSH TRADGEDY" BY JACOB WEISBERG. HOW FITTING THE TITLE. INDEED IT IS A TRADGEDY THAT OUR CHILDREN WILL HAVE TO PAY FOR THE WAR STARTED WITH LIES.
this is almost too much reality to bear in one article. how deeply distressing it is to have a Pres. as empty and evil as Bush.
ON ENTERING TEXAS FROM LOUISIANA THERE IS A SIGN THAT SAYS "PROUD HOME OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES". WHO PUT THAT SIGN UP, WHO PAID FOR THIS BS. I AM ASHAMED THAT OUR PRESIDENT HAILS FROM TEXAS. I AM A TEXAN AND I DO NOT APPROVE OF THIS SIGN.
If you guyz wanna give up fine, I do not.
THERE IS NO STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ON WAR CRIMES. THERE IS NO WAY THEY CAN OUTRUN US IF we all act in unison.
Here is the plan .. and PLEASE read it and pass it on. BuZh admitted war crimes publically 6 February 2008. File your complaints to the International Criminal Court.
http://ladybroadoak.blogspot.com/2008/02/special-prosecutor-information-plz.html
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/global-people-for-the-impeachment-of-richard-cheney
Do not allow BuZh to admit guilt, pardon his conspirators and then have Cheney commute BuZh's sentence of federal crimes. Work with all people globally and get these men behind bars. IMPEACH INDICT IMPRISION.
Without the rule of law in upcoming days, our society will go the way of Rome.
The deprivation of care for many of our wounded and deserving veteran, who will now bear lifelong scars from this ill conceived war, is not only a violation of trust–but is contemptuous.
As the worlds richest nation, we have always had the means to prevent & alleviate such dreadful inequities.
The unprecedented profiteering that has accompanying their sacrifices only adds to the outrage.
Responsible parties should be charged with criminal neglect. This includes those at the top.
It's end times. But guess what? No one gets raputured out of this mess. We're condemned to stay and clean it up ourselves. And we'd better get started. How? Never let a vapid statement derived from faux news or a ditto head go unchallenged whether in the neighborhood bar or the country club. Teach your children to not only distrust authority but to consider it corrupt a priori.
IF Bush gives up his position in 09, he will then move to Argentina like most war criminals do.
He will grow switchgrass or cannabis on his hundreds of acres and watch the USA fall apart.
This article illustrates how the citizens of this country are brainwashed to the point of complete ignorance. To allow this President to steal us blind and destroy our Constitution is shameful. It's time for us to cook our own stew. Stop using that credit card, stop wasting energy, support local business establishments, make your community self-sustaining, stop patronizing corporations like Wal-Mart that feed this Washington Monster, and vote that Congressperson that's complicit with this President out of office.
Just a few thoughts. Lord Trigo's comment sparks off this reminder within that Osama Bin Laden may well have had nothing to do or very little to do with 9/11. Where is the evidence? The much heralded official investigation has already been rendered totally useless according to its compilers because it was deliberately designed to NOT find the answers. Now if those who conducted and put together the report say this why has nothing come of it? It is certainly not beyond the bounds of critical thought to infer that something smells really bad here. Also, I recollect having had a strong instinctive sensation that Osama Bin Laden had next to nothing to do with it. I am not one easily inclined to conspiracy theories but there is something so wrong here. Recollect that in the surge of emotion when Laws were enacted and the USA gave its ultimatum to The Taliban to hand over Bin Laden they were apparently ready to do so if good evidence was produced. Of course that was totally out of the question and the invasion began.
Whether or not Bin Laden was responsible is no longer considered but why was the official comprehensive government report accepted as fact when it was not designed to find out the truth? Are US citizens satisfied that Bin Laden did it?
If so why? Where is the evidence?
Well we can all see clearly enough just who stands to gain from the war on terror. So few and such people. And just consider the price being paid for this. Not only US citizens but everyone everywhere. And that we in the west are affected is nothing at all compared to the poor people in Afghanistan, Iraq,, Somalia, Palestine, and so on and on and on...! And most of all couldn't we have seen if we'd paid attention to the State of Israel? Well?
Count the numbers. Add them up. You might as well since that is your money and the truth is their is a lot of blood on it. Count the bodies if not the billions. Count something and then ask ... did they get anything done for all this? Did they build the hospitals they got paid for? Or anything else?
It wasn't hippies who 'lost' this war it was republican cronyism and rampant corruption by CORPORATIONS.
But don't ask them to care because they did not then and they surely don't care now. Historians will not dismiss all this. It is so deep a blow to our image of who we are that we are avoiding facing it, hoping it will all fade away.
But look at how the billions wasted while drawing blood. They did not do the jobs they were paid to do and it watched as Iraq became a bloodbath and then a lost cause.
You'd think a free people would demand an accounting for the blood this shameless greed caused to happen first... and then drag the corporate corrupt into court to demand our money back. You pay a roofer to fix a roof. He says you need a new roof so you pay him even more. He rips away the old roof and then says he cannot put up a new one because it's raining and then leaves ...leaving you worse than you were before... but yet he keeps the money you paid for a new roof.
What would you do but take the thief to court to get your money back.
Hell no we shouldn't have gone into Iraq at all.
But it wasn't hippies that lost this war... it was the corporations that laughed all the way to the bank... you can see the trail of their footsteps... they had to walk through a lot of soldiers' blood to get there.
They say hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have died as a result of this uber corrupt disaster. Maybe even a million souls... yeah from the five years of weekly deaths, I believe it.
You can take that to the bank.
there*
Correction (this one matters)...
I wrote "You can take that to the bank". Well you and I both know that phrase isn't true.
THEY took that to the bank.
But of course that was obvious from the tallies. The money is gone. All that is left is the debt...
and blood.
and more blood to come the longer we stay.
I'd say that counts but whose counting?
All this blood was apparently very profitable.
Thanks to Tom and Frida for reminding us that our media... doen't count.
Don't forget the fake gay marriage in the White House to "da Terminator" in his pretty white dress, high heels, and wig which W's momma got from Nieman Marcus no less, Pat Robertson as the lovely flower girl, and obviously Diebold.
I am only left to wonder why the American public isn't furious over this blatant waste of tax payer's dollars by this Administration?????? We seem to have quickly accepted this kind of corruption and embraced it. Who ever thought this country would go down with only a whimper???? I always thought we had more moral's than to accept this kind of corruption.
Dubahyah Ballad
Let me tell ya bout a man
Let me tell ya bout a man
Got to be the biggest Texan in all the land
And as everybody knows ain't no big like Texas big
ain't no big like Texas big Not just monsta truck big
Not just tycoon texas tea big
Well this man's pappy he made it Big…made it real big
He made it big he made it big on the make
He made it big for the MIC
You see the MIC was on a slide
After the pinko empire done broke up
Pappy gave MIC new texas life (that would be life lite)
Pappy gave it new Texas life.
Pappy didn't just make them ordinary six shooters look lame.
Pappy didn't just them MIC shooters look tame
Yah pappy took war plunder to a new Texas level in Gulf War I (Desert Storm)
Where thousands were burned beyond compassionate recognition
And plowed under by Pappy Carlyle's tanks.
Hey but that warn't enough for Texas big.
So this outlaw's boy is out to undo his Daddy… So this outlaw's boy is out to undo his Daddy…Like Pap
He oiled his way to power and got to be the superpower top gun.
He was so quick couldn't get a word out sideways,
But no one seemed to mind
But hey this was after he got a bunch of folks to buy him a stadium
For his ball team….and he had to fail in business once or twice and get bailed out by
Big Saudi money first
He even managed to pull a fast one on the SEC
But hark he got his bread out before the corporation tanked
(the little scrub what a Harken dud!
For this he got to fill his Pappy's boots
And he's got the world to lookin at it's roots
He passioned up the gulf, just like his Daddy done
Only bigger more body bags… bigger shock and awe
He busted up them treaties (and readied up the noose)
As he polished off the nukes
And has everyone quaken in their boots
As the most powerful boy in all the land
Is thinking of makin the world's last stand
The currency has been devalued dramatically and costs are being incurred every minute that are part of the occupation but are not accounted for in any record yet. The Dow Jones average is reported as the stock market even though many companies with better financial fundamentals have replaced the companies formerly in the list. This makes the market (and the economy) appear much better than it is.
Almost all of the economic numbers are confounded by omissions, outsourcing and adjustments that are not logical. Why are prisoners, homeless, and others not collecting unemployment compensation, not counted as unemployed? In Europe many are counted because the social safety net counts them as unemployed. So is European unemployment really higher?
The median English worker now makes more than the median American worker even though 20 years ago the American made much more and the US has reported higher economic growth over the years by a wide margin. How does that work?
Why in the world would anyone expect an economic, military, and moral disaster like Bu$h the inferior to say anything intelligent on any topic at this point in time? How do they listen to his babbling without laughing out loud or puking?
Many excellent points, there, shakker.
Alfred Einstein warned of the perils posed by the influences of munition makers before WW2, and later President Eisenhower during his farewell speech. This link has always been a concern but never in our history has profiteering been carried to these extremes.
Nonetheless, the prime blame for the tragic consequences of the dreadful policies of this administration lies mainly with our legislators, and the populace, for allowing this reckless zealot to pursue these unprecedented abuses unchecked.