Here's a radical thought for Congress: Americans, especially the working class, are constantly being advised to do more with less. Come on, you workers out there, pull yourself up by your bootstraps and put your noses to those grindstones!
To so many of our elected representatives (often sheltered in grotesquely gerrymandered districts), less money and fewer benefits for workers are seldom seen as problems, just challenges. Quit your whining, apply some elbow grease, and "git-r-done!"
The U.S. military, still proud of its "can-do" spirit in a warfighting age of can't-do-ism, should have plenty of smarts to draw on. Just consider all those Washington "think tanks" it can call on! Isn't it high time, then, for Congress to challenge the military-industrial complex to focus on how to do so much less (as in less warfighting) with so much less (as in lower budgets for prodigal weaponry and calamitous wars)?
For this and future Pentagon budgets, Congress should send the strongest of messages by cutting at least $50 billion a year for the next seven years. Force the guys (and few gals) wearing the stars to set priorities and emphasize the actual defense of this country and its Constitution, which, believe me, would be a unique experience for us all.
Every year or so, I listen again to Eisenhower's military-industrial complex speech. In those final moments of his presidency, Ike warned Americans of the "grave implications" of the rise of an "immense military establishment" and "a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions," the combination of which would constitute a "disastrous rise of misplaced power." This country is today suffering from just such a rise to levels that have warped the very structure of our society. Ike also spoke then of pursuing disarmament as a continuous imperative and of the vital importance of seeking peace through diplomacy.
In his spirit, we should all call on Congress to stop the madness of ever-mushrooming war budgets and substitute for them the pursuit of peace through wisdom and restraint. This time, we truly can't allow America's numerous smoking guns to turn into so many mushroom clouds above our beleaguered planet.
Copyright 2021 William J. Astore
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