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U.S. tanks appear during a military training exercise in May of 2016 in Vaziani, Georgia. (Photo: Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Congress recently announced a bipartisan budget deal to fund the federal government through 2022. It's a lopsided budget if there ever was one.
This special treatment for the Pentagon recklessly squanders precious resources that could be used to strengthen our families and communities against our compounding crises at home.
Even after America's longest war in Afghanistan ended last year, military spending isn't going down. In fact, it's skyrocketing upwards--from $740 billion in the last budget set under Trump to $782 billion in this deal.
The same new budget offers just $730 billion to meet urgent domestic needs at home.
That means that even during a pandemic, supply chain crisis, and painful inflation, we'll put more resources into the military and war than public health, education, green jobs, affordable housing, scientific and medical research, child care, and every other domestic need--combined.
This special treatment for the Pentagon recklessly squanders precious resources that could be used to strengthen our families and communities against our compounding crises at home.
Families are fearful for their economic security. The pandemic hasn't yet ended, schools and hospitals face ongoing staffing shortages, and the opioid epidemic is raging. Meanwhile our dependence on oil continues to fuel the climate crisis, while supporting corrupt authoritarian states and subjecting families to wild price swings.
Increasing military spending does nothing to address these problems. And it won't make us safer, even as war rages in Ukraine. The U.S. military budget is already larger than the next 11 countries combined--and more than 12 times larger than Russia's.
Yet neither that spending, the advanced U.S. military hardware scattered across Eastern Europe, nor the thousands of U.S. troops already positioned throughout the continent prevented Russia from invading Ukraine and sparking a giant humanitarian crisis.
If anything, that military presence has only aggravated tensions with Russia--and put innocent people in countries like Ukraine squarely in the middle of a superpower conflict.
President Biden has wisely decided not to risk nuclear war by sending U.S. troops or air power to engage militarily with Russia. But aggressively ramping up our overall military spending--less than 1 percent of which is actually earmarked for the Ukraine response--only ratchets up those superpower tensions and risks dragging us into a larger war.
The budget deal also prioritizes militarization at home. It continues to fund the immigration enforcement agencies responsible for the worst abuses of the Trump era, including family separations and millions of deportations. It even maintains prior funding for Trump's inhumane and destructive border wall, which has already proven a costly boondoggle.
The main winners here are contractors who profit off human suffering.
In recent years, more than half of all military spending has gone to for-profit, private contractors.
In recent years, more than half of all military spending has gone to for-profit, private contractors. The new spending bill continues this windfall. It spends more on expensive weapons systems than even the Pentagon requested, and it continues lucrative contracts for companies that detain and surveil immigrants.
Our longstanding patterns of spending on war have enriched corporate profiteers while leaving less for our needs here at home. They didn't prevent a disastrous war in Europe, either. And yet conservatives in Congress have insisted on plowing more money into the Pentagon year after year.
In recent years, congressional opposition to unlimited Pentagon budgets and abusive immigrant detention practices has grown, with record numbers of members voting against completely unwarranted military spending hikes. But while their numbers are growing, they're still a minority.
This deal is a sign that there's still a long way to go before our funding priorities match our needs.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Congress recently announced a bipartisan budget deal to fund the federal government through 2022. It's a lopsided budget if there ever was one.
This special treatment for the Pentagon recklessly squanders precious resources that could be used to strengthen our families and communities against our compounding crises at home.
Even after America's longest war in Afghanistan ended last year, military spending isn't going down. In fact, it's skyrocketing upwards--from $740 billion in the last budget set under Trump to $782 billion in this deal.
The same new budget offers just $730 billion to meet urgent domestic needs at home.
That means that even during a pandemic, supply chain crisis, and painful inflation, we'll put more resources into the military and war than public health, education, green jobs, affordable housing, scientific and medical research, child care, and every other domestic need--combined.
This special treatment for the Pentagon recklessly squanders precious resources that could be used to strengthen our families and communities against our compounding crises at home.
Families are fearful for their economic security. The pandemic hasn't yet ended, schools and hospitals face ongoing staffing shortages, and the opioid epidemic is raging. Meanwhile our dependence on oil continues to fuel the climate crisis, while supporting corrupt authoritarian states and subjecting families to wild price swings.
Increasing military spending does nothing to address these problems. And it won't make us safer, even as war rages in Ukraine. The U.S. military budget is already larger than the next 11 countries combined--and more than 12 times larger than Russia's.
Yet neither that spending, the advanced U.S. military hardware scattered across Eastern Europe, nor the thousands of U.S. troops already positioned throughout the continent prevented Russia from invading Ukraine and sparking a giant humanitarian crisis.
If anything, that military presence has only aggravated tensions with Russia--and put innocent people in countries like Ukraine squarely in the middle of a superpower conflict.
President Biden has wisely decided not to risk nuclear war by sending U.S. troops or air power to engage militarily with Russia. But aggressively ramping up our overall military spending--less than 1 percent of which is actually earmarked for the Ukraine response--only ratchets up those superpower tensions and risks dragging us into a larger war.
The budget deal also prioritizes militarization at home. It continues to fund the immigration enforcement agencies responsible for the worst abuses of the Trump era, including family separations and millions of deportations. It even maintains prior funding for Trump's inhumane and destructive border wall, which has already proven a costly boondoggle.
The main winners here are contractors who profit off human suffering.
In recent years, more than half of all military spending has gone to for-profit, private contractors.
In recent years, more than half of all military spending has gone to for-profit, private contractors. The new spending bill continues this windfall. It spends more on expensive weapons systems than even the Pentagon requested, and it continues lucrative contracts for companies that detain and surveil immigrants.
Our longstanding patterns of spending on war have enriched corporate profiteers while leaving less for our needs here at home. They didn't prevent a disastrous war in Europe, either. And yet conservatives in Congress have insisted on plowing more money into the Pentagon year after year.
In recent years, congressional opposition to unlimited Pentagon budgets and abusive immigrant detention practices has grown, with record numbers of members voting against completely unwarranted military spending hikes. But while their numbers are growing, they're still a minority.
This deal is a sign that there's still a long way to go before our funding priorities match our needs.
Congress recently announced a bipartisan budget deal to fund the federal government through 2022. It's a lopsided budget if there ever was one.
This special treatment for the Pentagon recklessly squanders precious resources that could be used to strengthen our families and communities against our compounding crises at home.
Even after America's longest war in Afghanistan ended last year, military spending isn't going down. In fact, it's skyrocketing upwards--from $740 billion in the last budget set under Trump to $782 billion in this deal.
The same new budget offers just $730 billion to meet urgent domestic needs at home.
That means that even during a pandemic, supply chain crisis, and painful inflation, we'll put more resources into the military and war than public health, education, green jobs, affordable housing, scientific and medical research, child care, and every other domestic need--combined.
This special treatment for the Pentagon recklessly squanders precious resources that could be used to strengthen our families and communities against our compounding crises at home.
Families are fearful for their economic security. The pandemic hasn't yet ended, schools and hospitals face ongoing staffing shortages, and the opioid epidemic is raging. Meanwhile our dependence on oil continues to fuel the climate crisis, while supporting corrupt authoritarian states and subjecting families to wild price swings.
Increasing military spending does nothing to address these problems. And it won't make us safer, even as war rages in Ukraine. The U.S. military budget is already larger than the next 11 countries combined--and more than 12 times larger than Russia's.
Yet neither that spending, the advanced U.S. military hardware scattered across Eastern Europe, nor the thousands of U.S. troops already positioned throughout the continent prevented Russia from invading Ukraine and sparking a giant humanitarian crisis.
If anything, that military presence has only aggravated tensions with Russia--and put innocent people in countries like Ukraine squarely in the middle of a superpower conflict.
President Biden has wisely decided not to risk nuclear war by sending U.S. troops or air power to engage militarily with Russia. But aggressively ramping up our overall military spending--less than 1 percent of which is actually earmarked for the Ukraine response--only ratchets up those superpower tensions and risks dragging us into a larger war.
The budget deal also prioritizes militarization at home. It continues to fund the immigration enforcement agencies responsible for the worst abuses of the Trump era, including family separations and millions of deportations. It even maintains prior funding for Trump's inhumane and destructive border wall, which has already proven a costly boondoggle.
The main winners here are contractors who profit off human suffering.
In recent years, more than half of all military spending has gone to for-profit, private contractors.
In recent years, more than half of all military spending has gone to for-profit, private contractors. The new spending bill continues this windfall. It spends more on expensive weapons systems than even the Pentagon requested, and it continues lucrative contracts for companies that detain and surveil immigrants.
Our longstanding patterns of spending on war have enriched corporate profiteers while leaving less for our needs here at home. They didn't prevent a disastrous war in Europe, either. And yet conservatives in Congress have insisted on plowing more money into the Pentagon year after year.
In recent years, congressional opposition to unlimited Pentagon budgets and abusive immigrant detention practices has grown, with record numbers of members voting against completely unwarranted military spending hikes. But while their numbers are growing, they're still a minority.
This deal is a sign that there's still a long way to go before our funding priorities match our needs.