Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- Worse Than Obama's Kill List? American Support for It
- States Take On GMOs in Battle Over Labeling
- Nearly 50 Climate Activists Arrested Outside Obama's White House
- Genetically Engineered Meat, Coming Soon to a Supermarket Near You
- DOJ Kill List Memo Forces Many Dems Out of the Closet as Overtly Unprincipled Hacks
- Watch a City-Sized Glacier Collapse
- Nearly 50 Climate Activists Arrested Outside Obama's White House
- Around the World, A 'Billion Rise' to Fight Violence Against Women and Girls
- Study Finds 80% of All Antibiotics in US Used for Big-Ag
- DOJ Kill List Memo Forces Many Dems Out of the Closet as Overtly Unprincipled Hacks
Popular content
Today's Top News
Ready to Rumble for Jobs, Not War and More Weapons?
Something is missing in the swirl of news reporting on the debt ceiling deal struck on August 2 by the Congress and the President for close to $1 trillion in cuts in discretionary programs over the next decade.
Will the 56% of discretionary spending that goes to the Pentagon take a hit in the name of deficit reduction?
The short answer is not necessarily, not unless we are ready to rumble.
Even the Senate Armed Services Committee leaders Sens. Carl Levin and John McCain have no idea what the deal does to the Pentagon budget.
The cruel irony is the debt ceiling deal exempts spending on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, even though war costs are one of the biggest factors driving up the national debt by over a trillion dollars.
Caps have been set for “security and non security” spending. The cuts will follow. The security category lumps together the Pentagon with the State Department, Veterans Affairs, Homeland Security and nuclear weapons systems.
Right now cuts to the Pentagon budget are not guaranteed. It is threat. Without a grassroots rumble the ax won’t fall on the Pentagon or weapons of mass destruction, it will land on veteran’s benefits or diplomatic efforts.
It’s a fight, not a discussion.
The military budget has doubled in the last 13 years. Up until now there has been a bottomless till for weapons and wars. Lawrence Korb, former assistant secretary of Defense under President Reagan, says, "in real or inflation adjusted dollars it is higher than at any time since World War II, including the Korean and Vietnam wars and the height of the Reagan buildup."
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta released a statement stirring up fear about the threat of across the board cuts if the "sequester mechanism" took effect and the Committee of 12 Congressional representatives fail to reach a compromise on how to make the next $1.5 trillion in cuts.
He also said,”We must be accountable to the American people for what we spend, where we spend it, and with what result. While we have reasonable controls over much of our budgetary information, it is unacceptable to me that the Department of Defense cannot produce a financial statement that passes all financial audit standards.”
That’s our mandate to rumble. The Pentagon and the Congress must be made accountable to us for what they cut, spend and the result. Pouring scarce resources into Pentagon is not a jobs program.
Unemployment has become a constant. CNBC, the business news website, reported on August 2, “The job cuts were up 60 percent from June, and 59 percent higher than the 41,676 layoffs recorded in July 2010. It was the largest monthly total since March 2010, and the first month this year that the government was not the biggest job cutter.”
Cuts in “non security” discretionary spending means layoffs. The 26 million people unemployed or underemployed in our communities can’t afford for that to happen.
Nick Johnson of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities notes that the deal “inevitably will lead to large federal cuts in programs for state and local governments,” and that these cuts will begin “in the middle of the worst year for state budgets." State and local governments have eliminated more than 400,000 jobs since the start of 2010.
So let’s rumble during the August Congressional recess. Take the facts to our Congressional representatives. We can and must cut the Pentagon budget to fund jobs and services in our communities.
Although the The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, the bipartisan commission chaired by former Senator Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles, did not have many recommendations to cheer about, but they got one thing right. Cutting military spending is possible.
They proposed closing one third of US bases around the world as an immediate savings. Not only is it a wise budget cut, it fits with how US foreign policy needs to change in the 21st century. We can’t afford a militarized foreign policy of endless wars and occupations and the modernizing of nuclear weapons systems.
In The Hill, Tom Colina, the research director at Arms Control Association wrote, “By carefully reducing our nuclear forces and scaling back new weapon systems, the United States can save billions. Moreover, by reducing the incentive for Russia to rebuild its arsenal, these budget savings can make America safer.”
In June, 2010,the bi-partisan Sustainable Defense Taskforce initiated by
Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), working in cooperation with Rep. Walter B. Jones (R-NC), Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), proposed ways to cut Pentagon spending in their report “Debt, Deficits and Defense: A Way Forward.” It can be done if the political will is mustered.
That’s where the peace and economic justice movements come in: generating the political will.
Along side of the misery of the budget cuts, there is an opportunity to win real cuts in military spending. Joel Rubin in Ploughshares Blog, “There is still much to be defined, yet the inherently competitive situation now shaping up on defense spending is welcome news to those who have been long seeking to get rid of the bloated weapons systems that weaken our economy while doing scant little to advance our national security.”
The President said in April when he announced his framework for dealing with the federal budget that "we're going to have to conduct a fundamental review of America's missions, capabilities, and our role in a changing world."
New movements are taking the opportunity for such a fundamental review and a change in the spending priorities. On August 4, the AFL-CIO issued a statement, “Fake Political Crisis and Real Economic Crisis- A Call for Leadership and Action.” The AFL-CIO Executive Council said, “It doesn’t have to be this way. There are real solutions to the job crisis, but real solutions require government action.”
They also noted, “There is no way to fund what we must do as a nation without bringing our troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The militarization of our foreign policy has proven to be a costly mistake. It is time to invest at home.”
It’s going to take a an adamant, militant grassroots rumble to demand demilitarization of US foreign policy, to end the insanity of endless and countless wars draining the scarce resources needed for people, the world over, to have jobs and a decent life.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


24 Comments so far
Show All"It’s going to take a an adamant, militant grassroots rumble to demand demilitarization of US foreign policy, to end the insanity of endless and countless wars draining the scarce resources needed for people, the world over, to have jobs and a decent life."
_____________________
With all due respect to the man in the photograph accompanying the article, with whom I sympathize and feel affinity, I can't help but wonder if the photo was deliberately chosen as an ironic counterpoint to the tough, militant "rumble" rhetoric in the article.
No matter how much money you take out of war, it will not insure the jobs will come to the US.
You want jobs? Put a flame under corporations to hire Americans. Here are some ideas:
Any company having under 60% of it’s workforce located in America and dealing with any other company that has under 60% of it’s workforce located in America is considered an “Off shore” or foreign company and should be taxed as foreign receiving NO US tax deductions.
Any US company that has under 60% of it’s workforce located in America and dealing with any other US company that has under 60% of it’s workforce located in America must pay back all of the deferred taxes for Research and Development back to the US as foreign countries should not receiving the benefits of our subsidies.
Any importation form a foreign country found to contain any US “Intellectual Property” infringement will be impounded and used to enhance US coffers. (It will become property of the US government).
This could be tweeked and added to. We shouldn't give breaks companies who hire more than 40% foreign labor.
There is only one way to stop funding the wars. Stop paying federale' taxes.
Jobs, not, ...................bombs!
Taxes have nothing to do with it at this point. . Don't ya know? They just print or borrow what they want.
Want war? Vote for conservatives suits.
Direct democracy
Actually, the top campaign contribution to my FL Dem Sen Bill Nelson in 2007-2008 was $64,300 from employees of DRS Technologies, Inc. (DRS) is a US-based defense contractor. Previously traded on the NYSE, the company was purchased by the Italian firm Finmeccanica in October 2008
After Obama, how can people still assume all Democrats are liberals?
www.october2011.org
Wall Street occupation, September 17
Be there...because we can no longer be complicit !
"So, let's have the discussion. I think we need to call for a General Strike for Jobs, Healthcare, Housing, and Education for All. This could be tried first in a number of major cities in the U.S. and then build into a national movement." -- Visiting Professor
I agree with your post. It's time!!
we could begin multi-cultural festivals in towns, cities and counties from coast to coast and beyond with craft shows, games, food, music and all that jazz. others might suit-up and march on d.c. while others confront wall street. some kind of growing woodstock. that way people can form smaller brain storming groups on all those issues that cry for intelligent response.
veterans for peace, friends of nature, native powwowers, bikers, same sex and hetero couples, wind and solar innovators, vegans and more joining in mutual respect could make a grand feast for eyes, ears tummies and minds. how about closing ceremonies with controlled candle lighting dedications at sunset, each new member light and hold his small candle. watch the light grow! ENLIGHTENMENT!
spark any interest?
yes indeed! we need to work together, consolidate our special interests, teach and support one another and move in a new direction; withdrawing our support and faith in those who have only faith in fiat dollars.
VP,.. the very word congress derives from 'gress' as in move and 'con' as in with, right? those at the top of this toppling pymamid seen to believe the prefix 'con' to means against. we PROs need to teach them!
the Time is Now!
when better?
Americans are not going to strike. Perhaps a few, but 99.99% of 'em just aren't going to do it. That's the truth. Youy're going to have to grin & bare it. This situation (i.e. slo-motion collapse) is just going to have to run its ugly course.
I believe it is time, lets make it happen!
I salute you, VP, for proposing ACTION to bring progressive change (or resist reactionary change). I doubt America is ready yet for a successful General Strike like the ones in Greece, Spain, Italy etc.
But that doesn't mean the idea is a bad one. I would suggest trying local actions that might build into a wider movement as a starting point. Maybe I'm too timid, though -- look at Wisconsin. But without radical mass action, all that's left is hoping Frank and Paul can win over their House colleagues -- a faint hope indeed.
@ vaialdiavolo
we should check out that site, vaialdiavolo. thanks!
@ Claudia L
i don't think "putting a flame under corporations" would solve anything. the Earth is running low on precious resources and at current rates consumption of so called "renewable" resources eats away at any real progress to heal the wounded lands and oceans.. also, one of our biggest government contract industries is the defense industry. defense might be the wrong word , here. very little attention is paid to rumblings from homegrown jihadist-type anti-multi-culturalism cells who could act out any minute just like we saw in oslo! what do you really think the corporate spokespersons mean by the phrase, "protecting 'american' interests in the middle east," means?
if your first answer wasn't WALL STREET INVESTORS, think again.
I appreciate your comment in re: the "wounded" earth and your wall st angle (which is correct)...which is why I truly believe we do need to follow some of Korten's ideas in re: liberating ourselves from wall st rule. . . . check it out http://www.yesmagazine.org/blogs/david-korten/liberate-america or http://www.yesmagazine.org/pdf/liberateamericadownload.pdf
I disagree with you totally. It is the "military industrial complex" that declares war. Our greatest exports are arms. I said in my opinion that Jobs and the business of war really have little effect on each other. We are in more wars now and have less jobs than ever.
"Renewable Resources" as a subject is not being address by either me or the author. Loss of intellectual property to China has cost us more jobs than any other factor. This article is about WAR and JOBS. Nothing belongs to us in the Mideast. OPEC governs the flow and International investment (the international market, not even Wall Street - the richest man in the world is Mexican and lives in Mexico) governs the cost of oil. China now administers the flow of oil in Iraq. That war wasn't about oil it was about diversion as the largest shift of wealth in the history of mankind across the classes took place soon after 9/11. Search the net on the day before and you will see Donald Rumsfeld admitting they, the government "'Lost' 2 trillion dollars". (This is connected to building #7)
The difference between Oslo and us is they didn't give up one ounce of their freedom because of a fringe ass hole. They're not takin' THEIR shoos of at the airport.
The higher oil prices go the better chance we have at developing "Renewable Resources."
9/11 - bin Laden said he did it because of "the suppression of the Palestinian people" by Israel. Seeing that we're giving them money, arms, uniforms and nukes, he saw us as the heart of the problem. He was correct. This is what happens when you support suppression in other countries, you stand the chance of getting your pee pee waked.
just checking back to see how the discussion goes.
?????????????????????????????????????
S&Poor's kicks U.S debt off triple-A rating, a day after Dow-Jones drops over 500 points less than a week after Obama signs Boehner/McConnell debt-ceiling "deal," thus assuring new "borrowing taxes" for anyone owing anything.
Mellon bank reported now charging fees to those putting cash in their bank for putting cash in their bank.
Is this hoarding, or what?
If you thought your ARM real estate mortgage was teetering, good luck!
In half a century of watching money, I've never seen anything like this miasma.
Friday's NPR "Science Friday," offered hope: there is water on Mars. (If I could I would reach through the radio waves and strangle the glib bastards [and bitches] of NPR.)
"Public" Radio my ass. CIA assets... listen to the names of their sponsors, then when donation time comes around, be sure to send your check.
Welcome to fiscal "austerity."
I think that today I'd rather be in Moscow... Gorbachev and Putin got it right! But we at The Council on Foreign Relations will never admit it.
Are you invested in "a basket of currencies" yet?
Next week: gasoline again at $4 a gallon, chemical bread at $5 a loaf.
Here comes winter... Got heat? If not, drink tea. Hemlock would be welcome, if surrounded by those with whom to commiserate as one sinks into economic blather. There is no mental cave, and there is no light to which you can crawl in your desperation.
Is any reliable agency keeping track of our suicide rate lately?
Good night and Good luck. ---Edward R Morrow CBS News...
-30-
Leblanc is right on in calling for a "rumble". But without defining that vague word, she leaves me guessing what she means. Send emails? Write to local media? Tweet to your friends?
Or does she mean ACTION? if so, what kind?
Yes, write letters to the editor, tweet, and raise a ruckus about the absolute necessity to cut the Pentagon budget to fund human needs.
Let's start the rumble at town hall meetings being convened by Congresspeople during the Congressional recess.
Let's organize grassroots coalitions of community, labor, faith and peace groups and set up a meeting with Congressional representitives.
We need to put together coalitions in our communitites that press local electeds, state legislators, city/town councils to get on board and demand that our Congressional representitives work to change national spending priorities...move the money from 56% of Federal descretionary spending going to the Pentagon budget to funding human servces.
There never has been any great social change made without a grassroots movement....if we are going to beat the military industrial complex then we have to organize an even stronger grassroots movement that preaches, teaches and takes action to link cutting military spending as one of the main ways to fund jobs and human services.
It is not a deficit crisis, it is a revenue crisis. Take the money from the Pentagon, make the rich and corporations pay their fair share and end the subsidies to Big Oil. There's revenue but it's going to the wrong places.