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Your Tax Dollars at War:
More Than 53% of Your Tax Bill Goes to the Military
by Dave Lindorff'
Global
Research, July, 10, 2010
Truthout.org
If you’re like me, now that we’re in the week that federal
income taxes are due, you are finally starting to collect your
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records and prepare for the ordeal. Either way,
whether you are a procrastinator like me, or have already finished
and know how much you have paid to the government, it is a good
time to stop and consider how much of your money goes to pay for
our bloated and largely useless and pointless military.
The budget for the 2011 fiscal year, which has to be voted by Congress
by this Oct. 1, looks to be about $3 trillion, not counting the
funds collected for Social Security (since the Vietnam War, the
government has included the Social Security Trust Fund in the budget
as a way to make the cost of America’s imperial military adventures
seem smaller in comparison to the total cost of government). Meanwhile,
the military share of the budget works out to about $1.6 trillion.
That figure includes the Pentagon budget request of $717 billion,
plus an estimated $200 billion in supplemental funding (called “overseas
contingency funding” in euphemistic White House-speak), to
fund the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, some $40 billion or more
in “black box” intelligence agency funding, $94 billion
in non-DOD military spending (that would include stuff like military
activies funded through NASA, military spending by the State Department,
etc., miilitary-related activities within the Dept. of Homeland
Security, etc.), $123 billion in veterans benefits and health care
spending, and $400 billion in interest on debt raised to pay for
prior wars and the standing military during peacetime (whatever
that is!).
The 2011 military budget, by the way, is the largest in history,
not just in actual dollars, but in inflation-adjusted dollars, exceeding
even the spending in World War II, when the nation was on an all-out
war footing.
This military spending in all its myriad forms works out to represent
53% of total US federal spending. READ
FULL STORY
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New study demands
sweeping cuts, privatization for Detroit
wsws.org
By Tom Eley
9 July 2010
A corporate-controlled group, the Citizens Research Council
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| Michigan, has released a study demanding
the city of Detroit enact sweeping cuts to social services
and the jobs, wages, and benefits of municipal employees.
These measures may have to be implemented, the report argues,
through an emergency financial situation such as bankruptcy.
The report, “The Fiscal Condition of the City of Detroit,”
summarizes the precarious financial situation in Detroit due
to the erosion of its tax base and the decline of industry.
The study also quantifies some of the devastating social conditions
that prevail in Detroit, including data related to unemployment
and housing.
Among the report’s major findings:
• In 1947, there were 3,272 manufacturing firms employing
338,400 workers in Detroit. By 1972, there were 1,518 manufacturers
employing 180,400 workers; and in 2008, there were only 30,000
Detroit residents who worked in manufacturing.
• More than half of all manufacturing jobs vanished
from Wayne County between 2000 and the first months of 2009.
The number of jobs in auto and parts plants fell by 53 percent
over the same period, from 31,991 to 14,974.
• Total employment in Detroit declined by 440,000 between
1970 and 2009, and by 50,000 between 2000 and 2009. Detroit
has had the highest unemployment rate of the top 50 largest
US cities each year since 2000.
• In the midst of the current crisis, between 2008 and
2010, the public sector has shed 3,830 jobs in Detroit, 7.3
percent of the total. Municipal employment has fallen from
29,000 workers in 1951 to about 13,000 today.
• Before the recession, 22.2 percent of the housing
stock, 81,754 housing units in all, were vacant. The average
home sale in Detroit was $12,439 in 2009, down from just under
$100,000 in 2003.
• Nearly 24 percent of the adult population lack a high
school diploma, and only 55.3 percent are in the official
labor force.
The purpose of the report is not to call for increased funding
to confront the social crisis in America’s 11th largest
city. Just the opposite. The study demands savage reductions
to social spending, cuts to the jobs and pensions of city
workers, the forced relocation of residents, and a new round
of privatization of city assets. READ
FULL STORY
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Bayer
admits GMO contamination out of control
prisonplanet.com
David Gutierrez
Natural News
Thursday, July, 2010
Drug and chemical giant Bayer AG has admitted that there is no
way to stop the uncontrolled spread of its genetically modified
crops.
“Even the best practices can’t guarantee perfection,”
said Mark Ferguson, the company’s defense lawyer in a recent
trial.
Two Missouri farmers sued Bayer for contaminating their crop with
modified genes from an experimental strain of rice engineered to
be resistant to the company’s Liberty-brand herbicide. The
contamination occurred in 2006, during an open field test of the
new rice, which was not approved for human consumption. According
to the plaintiffs’ lawyer, Don Downing, genetic material from
the unapproved rice contaminated more than 30 percent of all rice
cropland in the United States.
“Bayer was supposed to be careful,” Downing said. “Bayer
was not careful and that rice did escape into our commercial rice
supplies.”
The plaintiffs alleged that in addition to contaminating their
fields, Bayer further harmed them financially by undermining their
export market. When the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced
the widespread rice contamination, important export markets were
closed to U.S. producers. A report from Greenpeace International
estimates the financial damage of the contamination at between $741
million and $1.3 billion.
Bayer claimed that there was no possible way it could have prevented
the contamination, insisting that it followed not only the law but
also the best industry practices. The jury disagreed, finding Bayer
guilty of carelessness in handling the genetically modified crops.
The company was ordered to pay farmers Kenneth Bell and Johnny Hunter
$2 million.
“This is a huge victory, not only for Kenny and me, but for
every farmer in America who was harmed by Bayer’s LibertyLink
rice contamination,” Hunter said.
According to Hunter, the company got “the wake-up call they
deserved.”
Bayer is still being sued by more than 1,000 other farmers from
Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. READ
FULL STORY
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