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Super Cuts! Military Budget, Not Social Spending, Prompts Media Concern
The failure of the Congressional “supercommittee” to come up with a $1.2 trillion, 10-year deficit reduction plan means that automatic “trigger” cuts might take place in discretionary spending—roughly half of which is supposed to come from the military budget. Corporate media have given extensive time to panicked warnings about the dangerous impact of military cuts, but made little mention of the effects of cutting other spending.
Under the “trigger” plan, the military budget is supposed to be reduced by almost $600 billion over the next decade—a move Republican politicians have vowed to block. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has been quoted widely about this “catastrophic” possibility that would “tear a seam in the nation’s defenses,” decrying the reliance on a “crazy doomsday mechanism” and “a goofy meat-ax approach” (Washington Post, 11/4/11).
That message has been heard—and repeated—across the media. A Washington Post editorial (11/7/11) called the potential military cuts “an unconscionable act of political irresponsibility.” ABC correspondent Jack Tapper (11/22/11) talked about “draconian cuts to the Pentagon budget.”
On the CBS Evening News (11/22/11), Pentagon correspondent David Martin discussed Panetta’s dire letter to Congress before reporting that the “across-the-board cuts would, according to the Pentagon, mean the loss of a million or more jobs in the defense industry, increasing unemployment by one percent.” Those jobs figures have been challenged by experts outside the Pentagon (CNN.com, 11/3/11).
ABC pundit Cokie Roberts gushed (This Week, 11/27/11): “[Panetta’s] a former budget director.... For him to say that quite strongly really means something.” It’s not at all surprising, of course, for D.C. officials to oppose cuts to their own departments’ budgets.
These stories generally fail to present the military budget in any meaningful context. The Pentagon’s base budget, which does not include much of the spending for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, has increased substantially over the past 10 years—“from $390 billion in FY01 to $540 billion in FY11, a real increase of 38 percent,” according to the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation (3/11/10).
The proposed “draconian” cuts would force the Pentagon to make do with a budget equivalent to what it spent in 2007 (Project on Defense Alternatives, 10/11/11). Military analyst Winslow Wheeler (Center for Defense Information, 8/24/11) points out an annual base budget of this size—$472 billion—is $70 billion more than was spent in 2000, and would still constitute “more than twice the defense spending of China, Russia, Iran, Syria, Somalia, Cuba and any other potential adversary—combined.”
And the proposed cuts are often reported as raw numbers—$800 billion or $1 trillion in total cuts over the next decade. As economist Dean Baker has noted (CEPR, 8/4/11), coverage should explain that over this period the military is scheduled to spend close to $8 trillion.
Claims of catastrophic consequences from military cuts might also have been tempered by reminders that the Pentagon budget declined by close to 25 percent from 1989 to 1994—a historical context missing from most reports.
But what about the other half of the projected cuts—the ones that would affect an array of domestic spending? While there are no details about what is to be cut, media have shown far less interest in even exploring the possibilities, especially when compared to the panic over cutting military spending.
The “trigger” cuts exclude Social Security, Medicaid and some other key mandatory spending programs; they also place a limit on how much Medicare can be cut. The total non-military cuts for 2013 would be something on the order of $54.7 billion, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (11/22/11). According to the Congressional Budget Office (9/12/11), this could means cuts “ranging from 7.8 percent (in 2013) to 5.5 percent (in 2021) in the caps on new discretionary appropriations for nondefense programs.”
Jim Davy of the non-partisan Education Trust (11/20/11) wrote of an 8 percent annual cut in Title I educational funding, which is directed at low-income students. A coalition warned that cuts at the Food and Drug Administration could be “substantial and serious” (Food Safety News, 11/23/11)— somewhere around 7 percent in 2013. And a Kaiser Health News article (11/21/11) laid out an array of areas that could see similar decreases, from public health to medical research to assistance for people living with HIV.
With such an array of spending cuts possible, one might expect more coverage to be devoted to the likely effects. But even reports that seemed designed to do that provided very little insight. On ABC’s Good Morning America (11/21/11), host George Stephanopoulos introduced a segment on what the supercommittee failure “means for all of us”—along with an on-screen graphic that said, “How Will Cuts Affect You?”
But “you” seemed to mostly mean the military. After a passing reference to “automatic cuts that will hit virtually everything,” correspondent Jonathan Karl (see Extra!, 7/11) declared that “the Pentagon will get hit hard,” using Pentagon secretary Panetta for affirmation: “He says that he will be forced to cut the size of American ground forces to the smallest level since 1940.”
On NBC Nightly News (11/21/11), anchor Brian Williams asked, “Do automatic and potentially cruel budget cuts now go into effect?” Reporter Kelly O’Donnell talked about cuts to a “range of domestic programs,” but, like ABC’s Karl, spent more time talking about the military, including a soundbite from Panetta and a warning from Republican Sen. John McCain that the cuts should be blocked.
The New York Times (11/22/11) described the budget battles to come as “likely to be a yearlong political fight over the automatic cuts to a broad range of military and domestic programs that would go into effect starting in 2013.” The corporate media have shown a keen interest in discussing the military cuts. When will they explore what the rest of the budget cuts will mean to the country?
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25 Comments so far
Show AllDon't give them a dime.
Ho hum... mmm... anything new here?
Super-Boring
boy here we go quoting the msm and the corporate press
hey if you can't believe brian boo boo williams then i ask you - is life worth living
then quoting mccain - hmmmmm
zzzzzzzzzzz!!!!!
i guess this is the kind of article the thought police at common dreams like to have on the site - blah blah blah
you are getting sleepy.......very sleepy.......obummer is good.....amerika is the beacon of the world....you are getting sleepy.....
"Winslow Wheeler (Center for Defense Information, 8/24/11) points out an annual base budget of this size—$472 billion—is $70 billion more than was spent in 2000, and would still constitute “more than twice the defense spending of China, Russia, Iran, Syria, Somalia, Cuba and any other potential adversary—combined.” Iran, Syria, Somalia, and Cuba are supposed to be considered threats to a military power like the United States? With hysterical statements like this, it is no wonder that Americans get caught up in war fervor whenever the U.S. government and the corporate media unleashe the dogs of war.
Even crazier is that all this money somehow defends our country from supposed attacks from imaginary boogeymen. war is for wall st. profits to prop up this failed econ syst
The military über alles!
And they call that kind of media coverage "objective."
I suppose the military is our standard setting government agency in the domain of objectivity.
Will someone please tell me who is threatening to invade us? Is there someone out there ready to bomb us back to the Stone Age? I must be missing something.
Follow the money. The Pentagon is the feed trough of the parasitic MIC which receives little scrutiny as to the efficacy of expenditures and with virtually no competition.
Yes! We're under fear of invasion by Shish Kabob. Or is it Ala Kassam? Oingo Boingo maybe? Well one of them. Or worse, one after another.
This is one thing that might be a positive that flows from the gridlock of last year. If they can't agree to anything there are automatic cuts to the military. Good. That is probably the only way there are going to ever be cuts is to have it happen this way.
The American media despite its apparent diversity is actually very much like the media in the old Soviet Union. These people are part of the governing class of the United States and they share the same values and beliefs as the corrupt and stupid politicians.
The difference is the Russian people knew the media was lying.
For Cokie Roberts to validate Pannettas opinion by saying he has been a budget director in the past is like saying Hitler knows what is best for the Jews. He is one source of many directly responsible for our current dilema of an unaccountable military, deficits as far as the eye can see, world hegemony, and austerity for the tax payers that support these parasites. I agree with thalidomide
that the press in this country are bought and paid for by the elite 1% and should not be given any credibility what so ever. In fact the whole political process is so corrupt we may never find our way out of this swamp. Thanks Cokie for your expert analysis...
So true, this comment of Thalidomide's:
"The American media despite its apparent diversity is actually very much like the media in the old Soviet Union."
Hmmm
We have a zionist controlled media. Without a bloated defense budget there might not be money for continuing the war in the Middle East for Israel. So protecting the defense budget is a major priority for the media. If it means starving 30 millino poor Americans so be it. As far as the media is concerned (and all the GOP candidates save Ron Paul) Israel always comes first.
And for the record the 2001 dfense budget was well under 300 Billion. Additional money was spent after 9-11 that was not in the original budget. Which of course presents the current trillion dollar defense spending (including the wars) completely crazy.
Besides the ghastly high numbers (that finance the MIC and its myriad tentacles), this article glaringly reveals the fact that Mars rules the U.S.A. As is witnessed by the ease with which the MSM pundits conflate cuts to the MIC with the real PAIN, while not really discussing the severe blow to the quality of everyday people's lives!
With all the vacant housing (thanks to the balloon & engineered crash of the housing market), and housing generally constituting the highest item on the family budget... the times are ripe for opening those homes to persons with skills who will take a very minimal salary in exchange for residing in said home(s) in exchange for donating their time to services for the community.
For instance, pre-med students might get "free" housing in exchange for agreeing to donate time to clinics; and out-of-work teachers might agree to teach in exchange for occupancy in a decent, currently abandoned home, etc.
We have so many resources, human and material, that go unused... there must be creative will put in place to redirect these assets towards the places they can do the most good.
They'll make the cuts, but give an emergency exemption for the "defense" part because we'll be at war with Iran. Watch it happen.
"In the past our politicians offered us dreams of a better world. Now they promise to protect us from nightmares." --BBC television special
"the only way to achieve a practical, livable peace in a world of competing nations is to take the profit out of war. ”
-- Richard Nixon in "Real Peace," 1983
"You can't shake hands with a clenched fist.”
-- Indira Ghandi
"The means of defense against foreign danger historically have become instruments of tyranny at home."
-- James Madison
"When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold gradually to the masses over generations, the truth will seem utterly preposterous and its speaker a raving lunatic."
--Dresden James
"The propagandist's purpose is to make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are human." --Aldous Huxley
"When one hundred million people don't vote, the nation is not bitterly divided. The nation mostly doesn't give a shit." -- Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone writer
"You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore." --Cesar Chavez, 1984
" If you don't know what your government is doing, you don't live in a democracy."
--Jane Anne Morris
"No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability, or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification of torture."
-- U.N. Convention Against Torture
"Never do anything against conscience -- even if the state demands it."
-- Albert Einstein
"Big business is not dangerous because it is big, but because its bigness is an unwholesome inflation created by privileges and exemptions which it ought not to enjoy."
-- Woodrow Wilson, 1912
"The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without."
-- President Dwight Eisenhower
"Make sure you vote, if you haven't already. Because there are places in this world where powerful forces will do everything they can to try to stop you. Places such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Ohio."
-- Jay Bookman, in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Neutral men are the devil's allies."
--Edwin Hubbel Chapin
" If you ask the government for permission to protest it, you deserve to be told no."
--Manhattan Libertarian Party Chair, Jim Lesczynski
"Perhaps it is a universal truth that the loss of liberty at home is to be charged to provisions against danger, real or pretended, from abroad."
-- James Madison, writing to Thomas Jefferson, May 13, 1798
"If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy."
-- James Madison, while a U.S. Congressman
"No nation can preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.
--James Madison, from "Political Observations," 1795
The media blackout on SS and Medicare cuts is nothing short of astonishing.
Obama demands cuts deeper than even the rightest of the right... no coverage.
Democrats on the "super" committee agree to major slashing of our social safety net... nada.
These are issues that hit home with everyone. Even the Tea Partiers don't want SS and Medicare touched. And... these stories are huge, ratings-wise. So the silence is surely imposed from the top.
Ask even right-wingers to choose between SS and Medicare and a new war with Iran, and guess what the answer will be.
But... while cuts to these programs are truly the third rail of politics, what will voters do when *both* parties agree to screw them? And when the complicit MSM refuses to even tell the story before it's too late?
Well, that's what indefinite military detention is really about.
Because when most people realize that their retirement years have been stolen, and when children have to take in their bankrupt parents, there will be hell to pay.
What could be more important, more sublime than forcing others to do our will by threatening them with annihilation. If it brings about our own end--what a great way to go. How boring and banal peace is by comparison. America's elites know what greatness is. Will its citizens go along? They always have in the past and likely will again. We aren't going to let those puny Iranians push us around are we? Not when we can all share share in imperial glory. This is surely what greatness means--anyone else have a different idea?.
Despite a 10yr old promise to audit the DOD, we are still waiting. I suspect that we will see Social Security and MediCare gutted, and all recipients of benefits drug-tested, before a single Auditor ever sets foot in the Pentagon.
If there ever were an audit of the DoD, it would be interesting to see how much of "defense spending" actually goes to private contractors, and then how much the latter actually pay in taxes versus profits and shareholder distributions (and CEO "earnings").
............... As for Social Security, it is already being gutted, and not merely by the Obama "payroll tax" cut. After two years with no cost-of-living adjustment, in 2012 the COLA is a mere 3.6% increase. Compare this with Ohio voter-mandated COLA for the state's minimum wage, of 4%. Both figures are figments of political ass-hole calculations compared with "real" inflation and represent intentional declines in living standards. In addition the Medicare Part B "premium" INCREASE deducted from SS, to $99.90 per month, probably eats up most if not all of the 3.6% SS increase.
.............. Cain't win for losing. This kind of "stealth austerity" does nothing to grow the economy and thus provide more jobs. Quite the contrary, it is a vicious downward spiral.
..... -30-
Let talk about indoctrination. Consider yourself playing two different roles, one is the rank/file Merkan, and the other is paid analyst to measure the destructivity of the Pentagun crying for Godzilla's welfare while smirking at the people's welfare. In your role as rank/file Merkan, you're not too enthusiastic about that paid analyst entertaining objectivity. Your ego pride is invested fully in the empire, and whatever the Pentagun thugs want, you feel, the Pentagun thugs should have. After all, if they don't get what they want, the Chinese will invade, conquer, occupy, plunder, rape/pillage. In your role as the paid analyst, you understand a lot better than that. Objectivity is your job. No objectivity, no munny. You have to leave your ego pride at the door. Now if you agree that these two views are plausible, then you should understand how people can move rather easily between these viewpoints, and if so, then much of the excuse Merkans use to stay entrenched in their beliefs is rendered bogus. The empire indoctrination can be undone rather easily. Many will dismiss the exercise and lurch back to their petro-opiate feeding tubes. What will YOU do?
Hey, rtdrury---
My report on a couple of details about the degradation of Social Security as a form of "stealth austerity" was merely a Dean Baker-type report but from a very personal perspective. The MSM has generally not informed here. Retirees on "fixed income" are no longer on "fixed income." Our Standard of Living is being intentionally reduced. ("Actual" rate of inflation since 2007?)
Also, I am well aware of the extent to which I am DEPENDENT on the existing socio-economic paradigm that upholds our current slavery.
You write, in sprawling part:
"Your ego pride is invested fully in the empire, and whatever the Pentagun thugs want, you feel, the Pentagun thugs should have. After all, if they don't get what they want, the Chinese will invade, conquer, occupy, plunder, rape/pillage. In your role as the paid analyst, you understand a lot better than that. Objectivity is your job. No objectivity, no munny. You have to leave your ego pride at the door."
Certainly, you are not describing me!
I am an amateur historian and a somewhat avid student of Economics. For some reason, I have been enabled to become a nearly completely INDEPENDENT agent of Humanity. Thus, for example, I have a PERSONAL opinion as to why "Liberal Economics" is now failing and why Keynesianism is now never brought up (versus Nixon: "We're all Keynesians now"!)---even as Academic Economists refuse to confront what has happened. (Nor is my view necessarily Marxist-driven, because I am not sure that he predicted our current dilemma...!)
I am paid by nobody. I live very rural. I grow my own tomatoes. Legacy seed.
One more thing---and this goes to Stiglitz. Back in 2007-2008, when the fed was dropping rates, I was yelling at the television, "WRONG, WRONG, WRONG. RAISE THE RATES!"
Tell me how I was wrong.
-30-
The corporate media is echoing the fears of their masters. What else do you expect?