Mythology of cost: Health care v. the war

Let’s do some simple arithmetic: The heathcare reform legislation approved by the House of Representatives last week — H.R. 3962 — is estimated to cost $891 billion over 10 years, while reducing the federal deficit by $109 billion, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. That’s about $90 billion a year.
Compare this with the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which the CBO estimates cost the nation $604 billion during their first six years and have been cost in the neighborhood of $100 billion a year over all.
Basically, we could pay for healthcare — and maybe some other needs — were we to end the disastrous military conflicts and focus our attentions on repairing the cracks in our own foundations, cracks that have been widening with every dollar spent on war.
The discussion of our budget deficit rarely gets framed this way; rather, we talk only about our domestic priorities — heatlh care, infrastructure, the regulatory agencies — as contributing to the ballooning deficit and debt. Money spent on war, however, is a different animal altogether.
This is the point David Sirota makes today in his OpenLeft blog post, commenting on a weekend New York Times story on the costs of an expanded Afghan war:

Kudos, of course, to the Times for even reporting on the unfathomably large costs of intensifying militarism and adventurism. But as you’ll see in the story, there’s no attempt to put the costs into any context – specifically, there’s no mention that an escalation in Afghanistan would mean outlays for the one-year Pentagon budget is approaching the total outlays of the entire 10-year health care bill.

Earlier, in his syndicated column, Sirota sums up a contradiction that blames domestic spending — specifically spending that has a liberal or progressive goal, like eradicating poverty, ameliorating poverty’s impacts or making sure everyone has health coverage — for pushing the federal budget into deficit.

When the House considered a health care expansion proposal that the CBO says will reduce the deficit by $11 billion a year, tea-party protesters and Congress’ self-described “fiscal conservatives” opposed it on cost grounds. At the same time, almost none of them objected when Congress passed a White House-backed bill to spend $636 billion on defense in 2010.

The hypocrisy is stunning — lots of “budget hawk” complaints about health legislation reducing the deficit and few “budget hawk” complaints about defense initiatives that, according to Government Executive magazine, “puts the president on track to spend more on defense, in real dollars, than any other president has in one term of office since World War II.” And that estimate doesn’t even count additional spending on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Sirota blames “skewed reporting” and the lying liars like Sen. Joe Lieberman, who cherry-pick numbers and ignore what might be inconvenient to their argument.
I can but agree, though the failures of the news media are due not to any skewed motivation but rather to a flaw in how journalism is now practiced in Washington and the state capitals. Journalists have become stenographers to power — or boomboxes for the powerful, if you’re talking about broadcast/cable — who do nothing more than regurgitate what they are told by disingenuous politicians.
Add to this the ingrained desire to chase conflict and you have a recipe for lies and distortion becoming accepted wisdom — afterall, to paraphrase a quotation attributed to Vladimir Lenin, tell a lie often enough and it becomes the truth.

Time to get out

The sentiment here is noble, and a shift from a pure war-footing would be important, but I just don’t buy that we’re cranking down the volume on the military effort, let alone extricating ourselves from the Afghan quagmire.

We’ve already boosted the number of troops and have made a commitment to the war, so talking about this shift seems, well, too little, too late.

The key to success, both in Iraq and Afghanistan, is to get out.

Military budget busting

I received a flier this morning from NJ Citizen Action announcing a march and vigil to take place Thursday in New Brunswick calling for the military budget to be cut by 25 percent and for that money to be used to help struggling families.

The march, which is being organized by 30 social justice groups, including NJ Citizen Action and NJ Peace Action, is timed to play off the sixth anniversary of the Iraq War to dramatize the war’s cost and the cost of the American military overall.

The vigils will take place at “seven symbolic locations” to “highlight the need to cut the military budget and increase investment in health care, housing, education, jobs, social services and infrastructure,” the release said.

“With America continuing to struggle from a deep recession, the 6th Anniversary of Iraq is the perfect opportunity to illustrate Washington’s need to shift priorities. American’s know that the security of our families does rest on wasteful military spending nor obsolete Cold War weapons – our security instead depends on Washington making real investments that will Rebuild & Renew America Now,” said Atif Malik, New Jersey Citizen Action.

I’d like to get to the vigils, but I’m kind of stuck at home this week with a couple of recuperating dogs.

Where do these guys come off? Lies, damn lies and the war in Iraq

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I’m not a big fan of Chris Matthews. While I think some of the criticism he takes is overblown — he didn’t support the war in Iraq, for instance — he does tend to be a blowhard who is overly concerned with the game of politics and not the policy.

That said, I was lying in bed last night unable to sleep and uninterested in the overnight sitcoms, so I tuned him in just in time to catch his slapdown of Ari Fleischer and the bizarre exchange between Mother Jones’ David Corn (a great journalist) and Frank Gaffney.

Gaffney, a former defense department official, still lives in the neocon fantasy land and apparently believes that facts are pesky little things that are no different than opinions. His argument — and he made it loud and continuously, rarely leaving more than a second of dead air into which Corn could jump — was essentially that the intelligence supported George W. Bush’s decision to invade Iraq, even though it didn’t. It was strange to see him make his case — and Fleischer making his case — for war six years on and well after the public has turned away from the various lies and half-truths pushed to get things started.

I think that any television executive watching last night who still considers Gaffney a useful guest should find another line of work.

Roaring with anger

Keith Olbermann was nearly spitting, he was so mad during last night’s special comment. The trigger for his outburst was a thoughtless remark from President George W. Bush that fairly sums up the way he has handled the war and treated American soldiers and the rest of the world.

Then came Mr. Bush’s final blow to our nation’s solar plexus, his last reopening of our common wounds, his last remark that makes the rest of us question not merely his leadership or his judgment but his very suitably to remain in office.

“Mr. President,” he was asked, “you haven’t been golfing in recent years. Is that related to Iraq?”

“Yes,” began perhaps the most startling reply of this nightmarish blight on our lives as Americans on our history. “It really is. I don’t want some mom whose son may have recently died to see the Commander in Chief playing golf. I feel I owe it to the families to be as — to be in solidarity as best as I can with them. And I think playing golf during a war just sends the wrong signal.”

Golf, sir? Golf sends the wrong signal to the grieving families of our men and women butchered in Iraq? Do you think these families, Mr. Bush, their lives blighted forever, care about you playing golf? Do you think, sir, they care about you?

You, Mr. Bush, let their sons and daughters be killed. Sir, to show your solidarity with them you gave up golf? Sir, to show your solidarity with them you didn’t give up your pursuit of this insurance-scam, profiteering, morally and financially bankrupting war.

It is worth viewing.

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