New York Times' Op-Ed Columnist Bob Herbert has the right idea but the wrong perspective. In his article "The Human Cost of Budget Cutting", he states the U.S. government needs to stop cutting the much needed aid to human services but assumes America will agree that helping people is the right thing to do and doesn't give the alternatives for those cuts. It just so happens that an alternative to those cuts are given in the same paper by the New York times editorial "The Cuts the Pentagon Missed," suggesting the answer lay in cutting down on military spending. Even so, these two media stories combined still only hint at the severity of the corrupt aspects of government. Neither goes far enough to spell out what should be obvious to the casual observer using a small bit of logic combined with some good old common sense.
Bob Herbert goes over the same old song and dance by laying out the sad story of poor, old, and disabled people not being able to get the assistance they need. These cut backs carve out the tragedies of grandmas losing their homes and mothers unable to feed their children. Unfortunately the truth is, even though it might make most people feel sad, the majority of people don't care enough to do anything about it and think it should be someone else's problem. Welfare has been painted as the enemy of a thriving economy by the media. In America the consensus has become if you lend a hand, you create a dependent, helping people is actually hurting people, at their heart these people are lazy and unless by neglecting to provide basic human needs, thereby forcing them to participate in the economy, they will drain the system dry like insatiable leaches.
Somehow, even with all the cut backs with the tragedies that they bring to the bottom rungs of society, the American government still seems to have a bottomless pocket book when it comes to spending on our National Defense. This is only possible by some form of public consent in this republican form of government. By convincing the public through inciting mass fear, through the corporately owned media, this consent has been made possible.
When people are afraid they are easy to manipulate, making those able to direct the media the most powerful people in our nation. Having regular and broken cycles of war have clear benefits to those who wield that power, some being: the justification for those with power to remain in and exercise that power, temporary boosts in the economy to temporary relieve the unbalanced unsustainable consumption of resources, maintaining the illusion of a strong national identity, granting the ease to bend popular will to private interests, and most importantly, large profit and opportunity for these corporations by exploiting the warred upon country, all this at the cost of uncountable lives foreign and domestic. No matter how it is spun, it always seems to add up the same, the benefits of the few at the cost of the many, with all those costs maintaining the exalted position of a minority at the sacrifice of multitude.
Annual spending on military budgets of the top five countries |
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