U.S. Defense Spending: Cost/Benefit Analysis.

April 8, 2013, Democratic Perspective’s own Bill Timberman presented a thorough cost/benefit analysis of U.S. military spending. Following are his notes for the program:

68 years ago, the U.S. stood alone in the wreckage of World War II as the only undamaged advanced industrial nation. Our politicians acted on what they saw as their responsibility to put the rest of the free world back on its feet, and to guarantee its future peace and prosperity. By most accounts, the U.S. was successful at both tasks. Germany and Japan were stripped of their military ambitions and restored to economic and political health, becoming staunch allies of the U.S. in the process. The ambitions of the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China to replace the U.S.-sponsored world order with a communist-influenced order more friendly to their own interests were held in check by a containment policy which relied heavily on the American military superiority of the immediate post-war period.

Today the world situation is very different from what it was in 1945, but the U.S. government has been slow to recognize the changes that have taken place since then. Our claims to manage and police the world order that we were largely responsible for creating are now more suspect in the eyes of the rest of the world. Our increasing reliance on military power, and on the increasing budgets necessary to maintain that power are looking more and more like a liability rather than an asset.

In 1945, despite the sheer size of the armies of China and the Soviet Union, the U.S. was both the dominant military and economic power in the world. Today, while our military is still dominant, and our economy is still the single largest economy in the world, we no longer control and in fact, no longer can control the world’s economy. Evidence suggests that the U.S. government is trying its best to ignore this new reality, and to retain its post-war control over world events by substituting military power for the economic power it no longer has.

Democratic Perspective believes that it’s high time we did an honest cost-benefit analysis on our military posture, to see if our role as the world’s policeman is still appropriate, and to try to get a handle on whether or not our current military establishment is worth what we’ve been paying for it.

THE COSTS

Military Budgets for 2011 according to Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI):
USA: $711 billion — 4.7% of GDP — 41% of world budget — $2,141 per person

China: $143 billion — 2.0% of GDP — 8.2% of world budget — $228 per person

World Total: $1 trillion, 738 billion — 2.5% of GDP — $1,562.3 per person

In the U.S. case, this includes only the basic Defense Department budget authorized by Congress — it doesn’t include funding for nuclear weapons, veterans’ affairs, homeland security, or interest on the debt for past wars. If that spending is included, the total budget comes to approximately $1.03-1.42 trillion.

U.S. Overseas Military Bases

No one seems to know precisely how many military bases the U.S. has outside its own borders, but the total number, counting everything from battalion-sized forward staging areas in Afghanistan to giant installations like the U.S. naval facilities in Diego Garcia or Yokosuka, Japan, seems to be well over 1,000, and this doesn’t count installations like secret CIA drone bases. This number is in addition to the 4,999 bases which the Pentagon lists within the borders of the U.S. itself.

The High Cost of High-Tech Weaponry

The principal way that the U.S. maintains its military superiority over the rest of the world is by spending whatever is necessary to maintain its lead in weapons technology. To some extent this makes sense, given the manpower advantage of our potential post-war enemies, China and the Soviet Union. Our intercontinental missiles, nuclear submarines, and our 11 nuclear aircraft carrier strike groups are without equal now, or in the foreseeable future, but the cost has been enormous, and our reliance on high-tech weaponry can, and in some cases has resulted in increased development times, substandard performance and reliability, decreased procurement numbers, and weapons which are ill-suited to defend against threats which have changed since they began their development cycles. To give just a couple of examples:

F-22 Raptor: Entered service 2005. Procurement 187 @ $678 million projected total lifetime cost. Without having flown a single combat sortie, there have been eight crashes. Problems with the oxygen system have never been completely fixed.

F-35 Lightning II: Not yet in service (2015 for F-35B, 2018 for F-35A.) Procurement 2,443 @ $618 million projected total lifetime cost. Poorer aerodynamic performance, weight, thermal and lightning protection, pilot visibility, and stealth capability than design specifications originally called for. After a decade of development, the high tech helmet displays still don’t work.

The Increasing Dominance of the Military Over Foreign Policy

The total discretionary budget for the U.S. State Department in 2010 was $51.7 billion. The actual expenditure was $21.4 billion — approximately 3% of the Defense Department budget for that year, and 2% of its actual expenditures. If this is a valid indicator of the relative importance of traditional diplomacy in the pursuit of U.S. foreign policy objectives, it’s pretty clear that military considerations take precedence. Another interesting indicator: as of 2009, the State Department had a total of 22,000 employees, slightly more than enough people than it would take to crew 3 of our 11 aircraft carriers.

THE CONSEQUENCES

Europe and the NATO Alliance

U.S. attempts to extend NATO eastward, despite promises to the Gorbachev regime not to do so, combined with the U.S. insistence on stationing anti-ballistic defense systems in Eastern Europe, and our support for Georgia’s intervention in Abkhasia and South Ossetia, have arguably poisoned what might have developed into a more open and mutually productive relationship with the Putin government. The second Iraq war, which was opposed by a majority of the citizens of Western Europe, and the unqualified U.S. support for Israel’s policies toward Gaza and its expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, has weakened European support for U.S. foreign policy in general.

Wars

The Vietnam War killed 58,282 Americans, and left behind a Vietnam unified under the very communist government we went to war with at the outset. The two wars in Iraq have killed over 4,480 American soldiers and at least 110,000 Iraqis, destroyed the country’s modern infrastructure, displaced 6 million of its 32 million people, set off a bloody sectarian war, and left behind a majority Shi’ite government closely allied with Iran. The war in Afghanistan has resulted in a country ruled in the South by the Taliban, and in the North by warlords of with unknown allegiances. The U.S. supported government controls only the capital city of Kabul. The fragile political situation in neighboring Pakistan has at least in part been undermined by unilateral U.S. drone attacks in the tribal areas, the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, and the insistence that Pakistan act against its former Islamist allies in Afghanistan.

Nuclear Proliferation

A number of strategists think that the development of nuclear weapons in North Korea, and the potential for developing them in Iran has been encouraged rather than deterred by the open U.S. threats of regime change by military action against both countries. After what happened in Iraq, the governments of both countries have reason to take these threats seriously, especially when it’s clear that the U.S. is much more circumspect about making such threats against countries which do have nuclear weapons.

The Middle East

Unqualified U.S. economic and military patronage of Israel, and its refusal to act against Israel’s repression of Palestinians, or to mediate even-handedly between the two parties, coupled with its support for autocratic regimes in the Arab countries and in Iran prior to the Khomeini revolution, has contributed to the instability in the area. This instability has led directly to the destruction of Lebanon, the upheavals of the Arab Spring, and the resulting chaos in Egypt, Bahrain and Yemen, as well as the civil wars in Syria and Libya.

The Effects on Our Military Veterans

As of February, 2013, a total of 6,648 U.S. service members have died in Iraq and Afghanistan, and more than 50,000 have been wounded. In 2012, suicides of active duty and recently discharged military personnel totaled 325, or slightly less than 1 per day.

The Effects on Our Civil Liberties

Warrantless wiretapping and increased surveillance of U.S. political dissidents, including the operation of the CIA within U.S. borders, which is supposedly forbidden by law, is part of the domestic price we are already paying for the increased militarization of our foreign policy. If this trend is not reversed, it’s likely to have negative consequences for our civil liberties that at present are hard to foresee in detail, but in the future may be even harder to reverse.

CONCLUSION

These are some of the details of current U.S. Defense spending and what we see as some of its unintended consequences. The question we have for our listeners is this: Is this what you thought you were paying for? If not, what should we do about it? In a democracy, after all, that’s supposed to be up to us.

Sources: Stockholm International Peace Research InstituteWikipedia (Military Expenditures); Wikipedia (US Military Budget); Tom Dispatch; Wired.com; Atlantic Sentinel; Wikipedia (F-35); Wikipedia (US State Dept.); Wikipedia (New Carrier); Wikipedia (Russia-Georgia); BBC (EU Against Iraq War); BBC (Europeans Against Iraq War); Wikipedia (Vietnam War); Global Research (NATO); Wikipedia (Iraq War); Washington Post; HuffPost; The Guardian; Wikipedia (HSA); CNet; Wikipedia (Surveillance Act)

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U.S. Defense Spending: Are We Getting What We’ve Paid For? — Podcast April 8, 2012


U.S. Defense Spending: Are We Getting What We’ve Paid For? Democratic Perspective editor Bill Timberman joins co-hosts Mike Cosentino and Steve Williamson to discuss the $711 billion dollar U.S. defense budget, our 1,000-plus overseas military bases, and the distortions our increasing reliance on military power has introduced into the conduct of our foreign policy since the end of World War II.

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Michael Austin Interview — Podcast April 1, 2013


The Second Amendment Doesn’t Mean What the Right Wing Thinks It Does: Professor Michael Austin, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Newman University in Wichita, Kansas, returns to Democratic Perspective to discuss the national controversy surrounding the Second Amendment.

In his book, That’s Not What They Meant About Guns, Dr. Austin explains what the phrase a well-regulated militia meant in post-revolutionary America, and how its eighteenth century meaning conflicts with right-wing assertions about the right to bear arms.

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The Founding Fathers, Revisited.

April 1, 2013, Democratic Perspective once again hosted Michael Austin, Provost, VP for Academic Affairs, Professor at Newman University and author of That’s Not What They Meant! Reclaiming The Founding Fathers from America’s Right Wing.

Austin explains that, far from a being a cohesive body, the framers of our Constitution were a diverse group of men who agreed on very little. “The one thing these men agreed on was that they did not want to be governed by the British,” he said.

After discussing proof texting, the technique used by the right wing to support their ideologies, we asked Austin about the lingering battle over states’ rights versus federal supremacy. Austin described the original debate over this issue as intense. According to Austin, much of the debate revolved around the southern states’ desire to maintain slavery, and the South’s fear that it would be under represented in Congress. As a result, there were a variety of compromises, including the three-fifths clause which counted slaves as three-fifths of a person with regard to representation. But, of course, the slaves were not allowed to vote.

Such compromises held our fledgling nation together and led to the ratification of the Constitution, but the issue eventually led to the Civil War.

We also asked Austin to comment on the Second Amendment which reads, “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.” Austin stated that this amendment was linked to the debate over whether or not the new nation should create a standing army. Some, like George Washington, felt a well-trained standing army was necessary. Others, like Jefferson, were very much opposed to a standing army.

Austin has recently published a supplement to his book, That’s Not What They Meant About Guns, which looks at the issue.

In his supplement, Austin states, “I argue that we should not try to govern our country through historical telepathy.  The Founding Fathers gave us a way to frame our most important questions; they did not give us the answers to those questions. Nowhere is this easier to see than in the current debate over guns and gun control.”

“Even if we wanted to, we could not recapture the social and political contexts that produced the Second Amendment,” he continues.  “To start, we would have to disband the professional military, require all citizens to own guns and to undergo regular military drills in public parks.”

“The militia was not simply all citizens bearing arms; it was all citizens bearing arms and entering into a compact to train together, serve together, and protect each other’s lives and interests. It was perhaps the most important aspect of citizenship in the early republic,” Austin wrote.

“In the beginning, then, bearing arms had something to do with being willing to work for the public good. It still should,” Austin states. “Owning firearms for the public good does not mean trying to wrest every single right one can from the Constitution without ever asking what responsibility one owes to the society that ensures those rights.  It does mean recognizing that, for all of the acknowledged benefits of gun ownership, it brings some problems too, and society has both a right and a responsibility to address those problems.”

As you can see, Austin provides real context for this hotly debated and often misinterpreted amendment.

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The Arizona Legislature: Still Crazy After All These Years.

March 25, 2013, Democratic Perspective hosted Harriet Young, Angela LeFevre and Karen McClelland to discuss the influence of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) on Arizona Politics. It is well worth taking time to listen to the podcast, but following are a few of the highlights.

ALEC is a lobbying organization founded by old-line political operatives from the John Birch Society, who thought Eisenhower was a communist. These ALEC founders, such as Milton Friedman and Paul Weyrich, were determined to counter what they considered growing liberalism and to preserve what they consider “true” democracy. They are for unrestrained free market capitalism and against labor unions. They equate populism with communism.

Having failed to dictate their agenda at the federal level, they chose to focus on taking over state legislatures.

“If you’re a legislative member, you don’t have to think,” said Young. “ALEC will train you, pay for your trips to its meetings and provide you with model legislative bills.” Indeed, ALEC brags that it authors nearly 1,000 such bills a year for state legislatures all across the country. These bills focus on the interests of ALEC’s corporate sponsors and religious interests.

In Arizona, 40 of the 60 representatives are members of ALEC, along with 21 of 30 senators. As a result, much of the proposed legislation is written by ALEC. For example, the anti-immigrant bill, SB 1070, was written by an ALEC attorney in Kansas who worked for Corrections Corporation of America.

“Corporations are taking over our state legislature,” LeFevre stated. “We’re seeing more right wing legislation that seems to provide solutions to problems that don’t exist. We have voter suppression in the name of stopping voter fraud. They’re trying to stop early voting!”

Turning to education, Young mentioned a book written by Milton Friedman in the fifties calling for an end to all public programs, including public education. “The Arizona legislature is all in favor of vouchers for school choice,” McClellan noted. “Yet 90 percent of Arizona kids go to public schools.”

“When did the public stand up and say ‘We want to end public education’,” Young asked. “They didn’t. ALEC did. The legislature does what it’s told to do by ALEC,” Young continued.

The group went on to discuss the effect of ALEC in other areas, including prisons, women’s health, even birth control. LeFevre quoted Rep. Brenda Barton, an ALEC member, “I do not want public funds paying for private decisions.”

To learn more about ALEC, check our ALECWatch.org, Common Cause, and People for the American Way.

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ALEC and the Right-Wing Assault on Arizona — Podcast March 25, 2013


ALEC and the Right-Wing Assault on Arizona. Democratic Perspective co-hosts Mike Cosentino and Steve Williamson discuss the impact of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) on Arizona politics with Harriet Young, Northern Arizona University professor and past First Vice Chairwoman of the Arizona Democratic Party, Angela LeFevre, 2012 Democratic Party candidate for the Arizona State Legislature, and Karen McClelland, Vice President of the Democrats of the Red Rocks, and dedicated advocate for public education. The damage done to public education, immigrants’ rights, women’s health services, and our state correctional system by the Arizona Republican Party’s romance with ALEC has been both severe and long-lasting, but few voters are aware of why or how it was inflicted on us.

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The Future Of Energy And Civilization.

On March 18, 2013, Democratic Perspective discussed the future of energy with one of our board members, Bill Timberman. Following is the report written by Bill as the basis for the program:

In Australia, even non-subsidized wind power is now cheaper than either coal or gas. Is this the future? We thought so, but….

Bloomberg New Energy Finance has done research on Australia which shows that since 2011, the cost of wind generation has fallen by 10% and the cost of solar photovoltaics by 29%. In contrast, the cost of energy from new fossil-fueled plants is high and rising.

The recently published study shows that electricity can be supplied from a new wind farm at a cost of AUD 80/MWh (USD 83), compared to AUD 143/MWh from a new coal plant or AUD 116/MWh from a new baseload gas plant, including the cost of emissions under the Gillard government’s carbon pricing scheme. However even without a carbon price (the most efficient way to reduce economy-wide emissions) wind energy is 14% cheaper than new coal and 18% cheaper than new gas.

“The perception that fossil fuels are cheap and renewables are expensive is now out of date”, said Michael Liebreich, chief executive of Bloomberg New Energy Finance. “The fact that wind power is now cheaper than coal and gas in a country with some of the world’s best fossil fuel resources shows that clean energy is a game changer which promises to turn the economics of power systems on its head,” he said.

The end of easy oil and gas? Not exactly.

As recently as ten years ago, most experts thought that so-called easy oil and gas, recovered by conventional surface drilling, was coming to an end. Continuing to expand oil and gas production was thought to require either drilling in the ocean at previously unheard of depths, or processing marginal deposits of heavier petroleum, like those in the Alberta tar sands. Both these types of recovery were technologically challenging to implement, more expensive and more harmful to the environment than conventional drilling, and more dangerous, as evidenced by BP’s Deepwater Horizon well blowout.

Hydraulic fracturing: the game changer.

The Bakken formation is a 200,000 square mile shale layer, mostly in Western North Dakota, but extending west into Montana, and north into Manitoba and Saskatchewan. It contains, according to estimates, anywhere from 100 to 400 billion barrels of light sweet crude oil, almost all of it now easily recoverable, thanks to the new technology of hydraulic fracturing (fracking). Previously proven reserves of oil in the entire United States amounted to only 23 billion barrels. The new oil from North Dakota is expected to allow the U.S. to surpass Saudia Arabia as the world’s largest oil producer within 10 years.

Currently, there are about 8,000 producing wells in North Dakota. 2,000 will be added this year alone. It is estimated that a fully developed Bakken Formation can support a total of between 35,000 and 45,000 wells.

It should be noted that fracking has already been ramping up in other parts of the country — Texas, Pennsylvania, and New York, for example — where there are other Bakken-like shale deposits. So far, these are largely natural gas producers, and their increased reserves, and increased production, have already helped drive the cost of natural gas in the U.S. down to less than 1/4 of the price Europeans pay.

TransCanada’s Keystone XL Pipeline.

If built, at a currently estimated cost of $5.3 billion, this pipeline will carry 830,000 barrels of oil per day 1,179 miles from Hardisty, Alberta right through North Dakota and the Bakken Formation oil fields to the refineries to Nederland and Houston in South Texas. This could carry not only tar sands oil from Alberta, but oil from the new Bakken fields to the refineries on Texas’ Gulf Coast.

In January of 2012, citing the need for further study of environmental impacts on the Ogallala aquifer and the Sand Hills area of Nebraska, President Obama delayed a decision to authorize the northern half of the Keystone XL pipeline until after the 2012 election. (In March 2012, he gave the go-ahead for the construction of the southern half of the project, from Cushing Oklahoma to the gulf coast.) The president is expected to make a final decision in August. Meanwhile, a bill was introduced in the Senate to transfer the decision from the president to Congress. Its sponsors believe they have enough votes to overturn a potential veto of the bill.

The Politics.

On one side,

1. U.S. and Canadian-based global energy corporations looking in the short and medium term to protect their existing investments in fossil fuel development and to benefit from the bonanza promised by the increased production made possible by the new drilling technologies.

2. Members of both U.S. political parties looking for a quick and relatively inexpensive way to restore U.S. energy independence, provide an immediate boost in employment, and increase U.S. security from the threat posed by instability in the Middle East and global economic and political competition from China.

3. People looking for good-paying jobs in a depressed economy. As one commentator observing the current boom in North Dakota put it: Difficult to imagine the politician who will now stand between these men and their oilfield paychecks.

4. Global warming deniers, and those ideologically opposed to government regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.

On the other side:

1. Climate scientists alarmed at the rapid progression of global warming, which keeps outrunning even the worst-case predictions of a decade ago. Some think that the tipping point, beyond which the effects are irreversible, has already been reached.

2. Environmentalists, who are concerned not only about an increase in global warming, but also about the pollution of drinking water supplies derived from the same shale formations now being injected with thousands of gallons of the toxic chemicals used in the fracking process.

3. Futurists and political mavericks who believe that investing now in renewable energy technologies is the only way to guarantee sustainable economic development in the long run, and to prevent the sort of environmental catastrophes which could destroy altogether the promise of the past 200 years of economic development.

Which of these two sides wins the coming political battle over how to supply future U.S. energy needs will determine much more than how we power our factories, homes, and transportation networks. It’s very likely to determine, at least in part, whether civilization itself, in its current familiar form, can have any hope of surviving into the next century.

Sources:  Harpers MagazineProject SyndicateTransCanadaWikipediaFinancial Post

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The Founderstein Monster: Misusing Quotes Of The Founding Fathers.

For several years, right wing activists have turned to the Founding Fathers to justify their extreme political positions. The most popular is a quote from Thomas Jefferson that has been taken out of context, “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.”

Even Jefferson admitted that he had resorted to hyperbole in penning that statement in a letter to a friend. Jefferson was reacting to the Shays Rebellion which resulted from the fledgling government being unable to pay Revolutionary soldiers.

This is but one example. The right has selectively taken quotes from the framers of the Constitution to support their political positions. In many cases, the left has resorted to the same tactic.

To learn the truth about the Founding Fathers, Democratic Perspective turned to Michael Austin, author of “That’s Not What They Meant! Reclaiming The Founding Fathers From America’s Right Wing.”

Mr. Austin has written numerous other books and is Provost, Vice-President for Academic Affairs, and professor of English at Newman University in Wichita, Kansas. We began by asking him to describe the political atmosphere and debates that led to the creation of the Constitution.

“They agreed on one thing,” said Austin, “that America should not be governed by the British. And that’s about all they agreed on. They disagreed violently on the most important issues of their day. Only about half of them supported the Constitution,” he continued. “They disagreed on whether the states should be more powerful than the federal government. They disagreed on the role of religion…they disagreed on whether we should balance the budget on austerity or increased taxes.”

Austin refers to the use of quotes from the Founders as proof texting. “Proof texting is a term that comes from Biblical criticism…it’s how a lot of people read the Bible,” he said. “It’s finding a quote that justifies your agenda, whether or not the context justifies it.”

“There were 55 different people, all of whom lived a long time and wrote an enormous amount…going through those [writings], you can support just about any proposition. You can prove that they were liberals or that they were conservatives or that they were atheists or that they were evangelical Christians…”

In his book, Austin summarizes attempts to unify the beliefs of the Founders with a term he coined…Founderstein. “It’s where you combine quotations from the works of a half a dozen different people and assert that this is what the Founding Fathers meant with no sensitivity to original context,” said Austin.

Austin stated, “There are two concepts we have to consider when looking at the Constitution. One is original intent and the other is original public meaning. The original public meaning I think is a very legitimate interpretive technique, and that is you try to find out what the words on the page meant in their original context; how somebody reading this document in 1787 would have understood the meaning of the terms. The other is to try to figure out what people were thinking when they wrote it by looking at what they said in other contexts….a sort of telepathy; a historical mind-reading to try to figure out what people were really thinking. Not only is it impossible, it misrepresents almost everything about the Constitutional Convention when you try to do that.”

There is much more to learn from the interview, so please listen to the podcast. Look for Austin’s book at a bookstore near you, or purchase it online here.

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The New Energy Crisis — Podcast March 18, 2013


The New Energy Crisis: How Hydraulic Fracturing Is Undermining the Promise of Renewable Energy. Bill Timberman joins Democratic Perspective co-hosts Mike Cosentino and Steve Williamson to discuss the new oil and gas drilling technique of hydraulic fracturing, and its probable impact on public and private investment in renewable energy development.

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Michael Austin Interview — Podcast March 11, 2013


Separating Myth From History: How the U.S. Constitution Was Really Made: Democratic Perspective co-hosts Steve Williamson and Gary LaMaster talk to Professor Michael Austin, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Newman University in Wichita, Kansas, about his recent book, That’s Not What They Meant: Reclaiming the Founding Fathers from America’s Right Wing.

Dr. Austin explains that the people we think of as our Founding Fathers were in fact united on only one issue, that the American colonies should not be governed by the British. On almost every other issue, they were deeply divided. As a consequence, the U.S. Constitution was born in compromise, and contrary to what many of us believe today, it was intended as a framework for future compromises that the Founders knew would be essential to the successful governance of the country they helped create.

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