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The OTHER $700 Billion

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Making some sense of $700b

By James Carroll

Boston Globe

October 6, 2008

HOW MUCH is 700 billion? The mind registers the number with such imprecision as to make it meaningless. One blogger proposed this way of grasping the figure: As a stack of $100 bills, it would reach 54 miles high. But who can imagine that? On the other hand, someone at the Smithsonian once calculated that counting to one billion, at the rate of one digit per second, would take 30 years. By that scale, counting to 700 billion would take 21,000 years.

Come again? That stretch of time takes us back to the cave painters of Lascaux, the glacial age, the last Neanderthals. The mind is not helped.

By a nice coincidence, though, the financial rescue package of $700 billion duplicates a number that was also in the news last week - the Pentagon budget. In the fiscal year just beginning, the Defense Department will spend $607 billion on normal military costs, and an additional $100 billion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. (As of June 30, 2008, Congress had appropriated $859 billion for the wars; Congressional Budget Office projections assume further costs of $400 billion to $500 billion as the wars wind down). But for the coming year, $700 billion is the Pentagon's nice round number (this includes neither Homeland Security nor intelligence costs).

Step back. All of last week's hand-wringing hoopla over the emergency bailout stands in stark contrast to the utter indifference with which politicians approved an equivalent layout for the military - an approval so routine that it was ignored in the press and by the public.

Barack Obama has no issue with current Defense expenditures. The annual American military budget is at least 10 times larger than the military budgets of Russia and China; it is 20 times larger than the entire budget of the US State Department. But last week's demonstration of anguish over the historic financial rescue figure throws an entirely new light on the nearly identical number that will fund the Pentagon for one measly year.

This is not a matter merely of comparison. Here is the question that no one is asking about America's grave financial crisis: By fueling corporate profits, jobs, and private-sector growth for two generations with massive over-investment in the military, has the United States gutted the real worth of its economy?

One needn't be an economist to know that spending money on war planes, missiles, and exotic weapons systems, not to mention combat operations, creates far less social capital than spending on education, bridges, mass transit, new forms of energy - even the arts.

The genius of this nation's most brilliant minds has been yoked for more than half a century to the invention of ways to kill and destroy. ("I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness." - Allen Ginsberg's "Howl," 1956) What if those minds had been put to work imagining alternative futures - the rescue of the environment, the ending of disease and poverty, the artistic fulfillment of new media, the teaching of children? It's a question as old as Eisenhower ("The cost of one modern heavy bomber," he said in 1953, "is this: a modern brick school in more than 30 cities." Leaving office, he said, "We cannot mortgage the material assets of our grandchildren without risking the loss also of their political and spiritual heritage." That's us.)

The $700 billion bailout aims to rescue the world's economy, but that, too, raises questions about the Pentagon's prior effect there. Because America has put military invention at the heart of its enterprise, the exporting of weapons to countries that do not need them and cannot afford them has become a main mode of this nation's being in the world. (The Arms Control Association reports that in 2007 the Pentagon sent $40 billion worth of arms to two dozen nations; that is double the 2007 appropriation for US foreign aid.) Unneeded weapons spark unnecessary wars.

That the majority of humans are in dire straits and that the planet itself is groaning are issues treated like givens of nature, yet they are results of the ways creativity is channeled and resources are shared. $700 billion for rescue. $700 billion for war. Something is wrong with this picture, and last week that coincidence of numbers told us what.

* James Carroll's column appears regularly in the Boston Globe.*

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700 billion- a drop in the bucket..

according to an article by Ellen Brown, Financial Meltdown: The Greatest Transfer of Wealth in History,;

www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10589

"and derivative exposure for U.S. banks is now estimated at a breathtaking $180 trillion. The sum represents an impossible-to-fill black hole that is three times the gross domestic product of all the countries in the world combined. As one critic said of Paulson’s roundabout bailout plan, "this seems designed to help Hank’s friends offload trash, more than to clear a market blockage.""

the ponzi scheme is folding and they are taking one last grab at our wallets. Printing more money to throw down the rat hole won't fix this one folks,

interesting times ahead

-Doug ©

If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate

deception

10 billion a month to support a war that's a lie. No problem congress says.

700 Billion for banking tycoons who bet the stock market had no ceiling and found out it has a big cliff.

No problem congress says.

New president wants to fix the roads and redevelop our power system it will create jobs and free us of some of the oil we import.

Listen don't ya know the Black guy wants to spread the wealth dirty commi!!!!

O ya the auto industry needs money to get over the hump. What use the tax payers money to save the auto industry.

Ya you know the guys we been taxing the shit out of for a hundred years and their employees.

Why would we save them congress asks?

The news announcer says hey the price of a barrel oil is falling how horrible its dragging the stock market down.

THEN LATER SITTING IN THE BAR PEOPLE ARE COMPLAINING THE STOCK MARKETS CRASHING BECAUSE THE OIL PRICES ARE FALLING HOW HORRIBLE.

They haven't even noticed the cost for a tank of gas is half what it was last week.

And yet the economy struggles, moneys tight, so as a people we need to forget about using our tax dollars for education we don't need a bunch of smart educated people we just need the economy to fix its self.

This is a list of the current headlines with a little thought tacked on, for the last week or so.

My question is there one ounce of thought or sanity running the good ole USA.?

I do agree some interesting things are about to break.