Do not panic. In a way, the anemic growth in the United
States GDP is good not bad. It is an indication that the government is preparing
to cut pentagon spending, therefore the economy is reacting—contracting. As a peace-loving liberal, I do not think cuts
in our bloated military spending are bad. It is no different than a big war had
just ended. Don’t you remember reading about the economic storm after WW I and then
WW II. However, the economic turmoil was somewhat muted six years after WW II
because we slipped into the Korea “police action” followed by Vietnam, then Iraq
(twice). Now the Afghanistan war is on the steep slope of winding down. The
point is we have been under the economic drain of the military industrial complex
since the fall of Japan in 1945. In addition too or perhaps because of the political
influence of the neo-cons we have shifted spending money for defense, then for protection
and lately spending money for offence. The war machine has cost us great sums
of money with nothing in return.
There has been a terrific change in governing philosophy. Obama was elected! Finally, we have a president
who looks at the threats we face as a nation in a realistic way. Although he is
a combination of peacenik and warrior, the world has changed. He is president
who is not driven by the tired old cold war arms race logic. He knows we no
longer need horses and bayonets but we do need “submarines that go under the
sea and ships that planes can take off and land”. We do need the CIA and drones
as well as highly trained special operations troop, we do not need a standing
army and thousands of heavily armored tanks led by multiple starred generals to
fight huge imagined armies in front line wars.
So too, the balance sheet has changed. Shrinking of pentagon
spending will is being shifted to paying off the huge debt cause by all the
foolish barrowing to pay for a war—a war we did not need or want. Political rhetoric
about our nation’s debt by those who want to cut entitlement programs has
masked this change in spending. I think
we are in a spending hiatus between wartime and paying off the debt and are preparing
to spend for what we need: school, highways, bridges, and thousands of
other projects; peaceful spending that we have neglected for half a century in
order to feed the war machine. The poor GDP performance is a reflection of all
of this. As an aside, peace is a lot
less expensive than war; therefore, once Obama engineers the shift, taxes
can decrease.
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