Bill Of Goods
by digby
John Kerry: What kind of message does it send to be sending money to open firehouses in Iraq, but we’re shutting firehouses who are the first-responders here in America…
The president hasn’t put one nickel, not one nickel into the effort to fix some of our tunnels and bridges and most exposed subway systems…
Ninety-five percent of the containers that come into the ports, right here in Florida, are not inspected.
This president thought it was more important to give the wealthiest people in America a tax cut rather than invest in homeland security…
George W Bush: I don’t think we want to get to how he’s going to pay for all these promises. It’s like a huge tax gap…
My administration has tripled the amount of money we’re spending on homeland security to $30bn a year.
John Kerry: The test is not whether you’re spending more money. The test is, are you doing everything possible to make America safe?
We didn’t need that tax cut. America needed to be safe.
George W Bush: Of course we’re doing everything we can to protect America. I wake up every day thinking about how best to protect America.
Where are we supposed to find the money for this so-called “Homeland Security?”
The White House said Thursday that it plans to ask Congress for an additional $70 billion to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, driving the cost of military operations in the two countries to $120 billion this year, the highest ever.
Most of the new money would pay for the war in Iraq, which has cost an estimated $250 billion since the U.S. invasion in March 2003.
The additional spending, along with other war funding the Bush administration will seek separately in its regular budget next week, would push the price tag for combat and nation-building since Sept. 11, 2001, to nearly a half-trillion dollars, approaching the inflation-adjusted cost of the 13-year Vietnam War.
The cost of military operations in 2006 is $35 billion higher than what Congress had estimated a few months ago that the Defense Department would need this year. The higher costs are occurring even as the Pentagon is planning to reduce troop levels in Iraq in coming months, reflecting the continuing wear and damage to military equipment in desert combat, the need to upgrade protection for U.S. troops and the effort to train and equip Iraqi forces.
No large-scale reconstruction projects are included in the spending, officials said.
Currently, the Defense Department says it is spending about $4.5 billion a month on the conflict in Iraq, or about $100,000 per minute.
Oh, and then there’s this:
THE SKEWED BENEFITS OF THE TAX CUTS, 2007-2016: If the Tax Cuts Are Extended, Millionaires Will Receive More than $600 Billion over the Next Decade
Life is full of choices. The American people chose to go into Iraq and give huge tax breaks to millionaires through the year 2016 and are willing to pay the price for those priorities.
Aren’t they?
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