The authoritative guide to ensuring science and technology make life on Earth better, not worse.
By Hugh Gusterson | October 29, 2010
Congratulations to your movement for so quickly and fundamentally shifting the political debate in the United States. You have put a vital issue on the national agenda: the increasing share of our wealth as a nation that has been commandeered by the government, and the resulting budget deficits that are like a massive iceberg toward which our economic ship of state drifts at its peril.
If this is not corruption, what is? The sums of money involved here make the bailout of General Motors look like small change by comparison.
But your movement is ignoring a major sinkhole for American taxpayers’ money. If you want to find rage-inspiring examples of government spending, there is no better place to look than the military budget. Here are some examples that should raise the blood pressure of any self-respecting Tea Partier:
The $708 billion defense budget proposed for 2011 is, in constant dollars, the highest it has been since World War II — 36 percent higher than it was at the height of the Vietnam War in 1968, and as much as all other discretionary programs in the federal budget combined. Astonishingly, a half of all military spending in the world comes from the US taxpayer. The average American family gives $5,615 of its hard-earned money to the Pentagon every year. (See the excellent graphics published by Daily Kos.)
Inexplicably, some national politicians who profess to admire your movement seek to protect this outrageous waste of your money. John Boehner has said that we should raise the retirement age to stretch the social security budget, but that the military budget should be off-limits to budget cutting. And Foreign Policy reported that “Sarah Palin is waging a battle inside the ‘tea party’ movement to exempt defense spending from the group’s small-government, anti-deficit fervor.” Palin has even gone so far as to pick a fight with Defense Secretary Robert Gates over his plans to cut the military procurement budget.
Your movement has started a vital national conversation about the ways in which arrogant, out-of-touch Washington elites spend the hard-earned dollars of ordinary Americans like a kid blowing all of his allowance on candy. But this conversation will be incomplete if it only encompasses welfare programs, government health care spending, and social security. We need the power of your outrage to spotlight two of the great scandals in Washington life: first, the way politicians from both parties accept gifts from big defense contractors and then, in exchange, spend taxpayer money on defense contracts that are often padded, redundant, and wasteful; and, second, the lucrative double-dipping of retired military officers who earn as much as $400 an hour advising the Pentagon on contracts, while, simultaneously, earning consulting fees from the corporations whose products they are advising the government to buy. If this is not corruption, what is? The sums of money involved here make the bailout of General Motors look like small change by comparison.
Your movement has extraordinary power in American public life, but it has also brought you many false friends who hope to ride your coattails to Washington and have no real interest in cutting the federal budget. In the wake of the election, this is now the big question: Will the Tea Party change the game in Washington, or will it be captured by both defense contractors — who want to shrink social services so they can enlarge their share of the federal budget — and by politicians — who claim to be against government spending, but whose idea of “shrinking government” is to hand your money to corporations?
The founding fathers were suspicious of standing armies. They would be horrified to see how their beloved country has become a government of the people for the defense contractors. If you want to take your country back, you have to take it back from General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed, Halliburton, Bechtel, and their errand boys and girls in Congress, too.
The Bulletin elevates expert voices above the noise. But as an independent nonprofit organization, our operations depend on the support of readers like you. Help us continue to deliver quality journalism that holds leaders accountable. Your support of our work at any level is important. In return, we promise our coverage will be understandable, influential, vigilant, solution-oriented, and fair-minded. Together we can make a difference.
Topics: Columnists