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The Real Reason the National Debt is So High

People wave signs at a tea party protest. | Reuters Photo

People wave signs at a tea party protest. | Reuters Photo

First, I want to tell everyone that I have been nursing a nerve injury in my left hand. It has caused me to not want to type much as there was no telling which keys my fingers would hit. The numbness is subsiding some and I am able to work the fingers again. I’m back, somewhat.

The tea partiers rant and rave about the national debt, but fail to remember just how it got to where it is today. This is from an article back in July from Politico:

Sixty-one percent of the 697 self-identified tea party supporters surveyed identified the federal debt as one of the “extremely serious threats” to the future well-being of the United States.

They blame Obama, of course, but here’s the real reason our national debt is out of hand:

Re:  The true cost of the Iraq war: $3 trillion and beyond

There is no question that the Iraq war added substantially to the federal debt. This was the first time in American history that the government cut taxes as it went to war. The result: a war completely funded by borrowing. U.S. debt soared from $6.4 trillion in March 2003 to $10 trillion in 2008 (before the financial crisis); at least a quarter of that increase is directly attributable to the war. And that doesn’t include future health care and disability payments for veterans, which will add another half-trillion dollars to the debt.

As a result of two costly wars funded by debt, our fiscal house was in dismal shape even before the financial crisis — and those fiscal woes compounded the downturn.

Where were these pasty old white men with their “big government” rhetoric in 2003?

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Thank The Troops By Bringing Them Home

Re:  Jon Soltz: Thanks… Again And Again And Again, Posted by Jon Soltz, Co-Founder of VoteVets.org, served as a Captain in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Posted: November 26, 2009 08:22 AM

End the wars

Jon was speaking of the many TV commercials Thursday, Thanksgiving day that thanked the troops.

At the same time, I can’t help but think that some young grunt is watching these videos for maybe the fourth or fifth time from a TV that the USO set up in the warzone. And, while he’ll strap on his rifle and go whenever called, part of him is thinking “How many more Thanksgivings am I going to have to watch these videos from over here? If you want to thank me, let me eat some turkey at home. Let me see my girlfriend and parents and friends for more than just short stints at home. Don’t you have someone who can rotate in here for me so I can stop doing these tours for a while?”

This is my point in my previous post, It’s President Obama, Not McCain, or McMorris Rodgers, I stated:

We have been undulated with calls to help military families since Bush led the invasion of Afghanistan back in 2001, and then turned the nation toward a straw bogy-man, illegally, in Iraq. I support helping military families being a veteran myself, an Army retiree, and with a service member in our family who completed a tour in Iraq a short time ago. But, this smacks of wrapping a political agenda inside the flag. She says nothing about the deep scars that may be left for decades to come inside our military and their families due to continual wars that were began by the right-wing and the repetitive rotations in and out of the theater of operations. Yes, let’s support them while they are called up once again and let’s enable them to be called over and over because of that support.

The point is that it is starting to sound more like McCarthyism-type raving and not as sincere as in years past. It is almost like a futuristic movie where “Big Brother” propaganda continually plays on huge TV screens at city street intersections, “Thank the Troops, Thank the Troops”. What is really meant is “Support the War, Support the War”.

This propaganda campaign is very effective at delaying the end and subsequently ensuring more profits for arms manufacturers. The more we support and thank the troops publically, the more we propel the propaganda and enable even more war. There should be commercials on TV during Thanksgiving Day football that states, let’s really help the troops and end the war. Soltz was appreciative of the good wishes for the troops, but added, “But at a certain point, for those there for yet another holiday, the thanks start to ring a bit more hollow.”

We need to hurry and get to an end state that can be an acceptable/tolerable status quo, then leave both Afghanistan and Iraq for good. It is time we get fed up with war.

Get hold of your State’s Congressional delegation and tell them to bring our boys and girls home. Give them some rest and relaxation. Our forces are stretched to the breaking point. If something happened on our mainland, there would not be sufficient forces to deal with that contingency. Let them defend our country from here – a strategic military maneuver.

If you really want to thank the troops, then end the war.

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A Second Look | Defeating the Supplemental is a Pipe Dream

via Jane Hamsher: A Movement to Make Obama Bring an End to War.

In 2007, 82 Democratic members of Congress signed a pledge. They would never again vote to fund the war in Iraq without plans for troop withdrawal.

Republican critics accused them of demagoguing the war. Of using our soldiers as a political pawns, of not meaning what they said.

Those who signed that pledge need to cast their vote against the Supplemental Appropriations Act on Tuesday and prove them wrong.

Pipe dreaming.

via Batbird’s Comment to Jane Hamsher: A Movement to Make Obama Bring an End to War.

Those of you who think that the supplemental war funding will be voted down because of anti-war zeal are living in a fool’s paradise. The Rethugs, and Blue Dog Dems, are upset about the photos and the IMF funding, not the pace of withdrawal. If Pelosi can win back some of those Blue Dogs, which she is fervently pushing, then the far-left anti-war crowd will be stuck out there with Dennis K. once again, limp and irrelevant.

“Stop the war!” has lost its appeal to the center-left, the mildly progressives who used to get worked up but now are just plain tired of it all.

Winding the Iraq war down cautiously and slowly just makes too much sense.

And there is no way in hell that we will let the troops in Afghanistan run out of beans and bullets. There is also no way in hell that they are leaving Afghanistan any time soon.

This is an experiment in semi-sockpuppeting. That’s sockpuppeting without the argument.

I’m Batbird and I approve this message.

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