According to an article on MSNBC, in his proposed 2008 budget, President "Bush has asked for an additional $100 billion for Iraq and the global war on terrorism this year, on top of $70 billion already sought...the Pentagon is scheduled to get a hefty increase in spending authority of 11 percent, pushing its 2008 budget to $481.4 billion." Now, get this. We’re talking about $170 billion, plus $481.4 billion for a total of $651.4 billion. Maybe it’s just me, but this seems like a lot of money. As Senator Everett Dirksen is reported to have said, "A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money."
Since these numbers are a little hard to comprehend, let’s see if we can gain some perspective by doing a little bit of counting. If we counted $1 per second around the clock, it would take us 31.69 years to count $1 Billion. If we counted $1 per second, how long would it take us to count $651.4 Billion? It would take us 20,641 years. Even if we cheated and counted $100 bills, it would still take us over 200 years of around-the-clock counting to reach the combined defense and war budget.
So, the President wants us to hand over to the Department of Defense so much money that it would take over 20,000 years to count it at $1 per second. Of course, that’s not all. There is also a lot of additional military spending that falls outside of the Department of Defense. For example, did you know that the Department of Energy spends around $7 billion a year on nuclear weapons projects maintaining nearly 10,000 nuclear warheads?
If we’re going to understand President Bush’s priorities, we need to compare the Defense Department numbers to spending in other areas. For example, according to Reuters, Bush has asked for $56 billion for Education. Is the President saying that education is less than one tenth of the priority of defense and war? The Education budget is 8.6% of the combined defense and war budgets. So, despite brave rhetoric from President Bush about the importance of education, in the Bush budget kids don’t count.
How about the poor and seniors? Do they count? President Bush proposes cutting $78 billion for Medicare and Medicaid over the next five years. No, they don’t count either.
With the recently released report on global warming, you would think that the Environmental Protection Agency could count on a boost in funding, right? Guess again. The EPA will actually see its budget reduced. I guess in the world that President Bush occupies, the earth doesn’t count.
It seems that defense contractors and war profiteers are the only ones who can count on George W. Bush. The New York Times reports that spending on government contractors has nearly doubled from $207 billion in 2000 to $400 billion last year.
As President Eisenhower said, "Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed."
Isn’t it time that we have a government we can count on?