Our economy is in shambles, millions of Americans remain unemployed and depressed, our national infrastructure is crumbling, and poverty and homelessness are reaching alarming levels. And, yet, in spite of the catastrophic state of our nation, the annual $1 trillion dollar military budget remains sacrosanct, totally untouchable. This is a completely unsustainable condition, a formula for economic disaster and national bankruptcy.

In the face of these stark realities, the subject of potential cutbacks in our massive military spending is off the table, it is off limits, a taboo subject. As I watch discussions on cable TV about how to address our economic woes, reduce spending, and find the funds needed to create jobs, if anyone even dares to bring up the idea of reducing military spending, they are immediately looked upon as some kind of traitorous wacko.

It seems as if the majority of Congress and the American people are totally ignoring the disastrous consequences that will eventually come to pass if we continue to spend $1 trillion dollars for military purposes each and every year; more than all the industrialized nations of the world combined. Have we become so paranoid, so afraid of the "terrorist threat" constantly being trumpeted by our government and our national media that we will watch as the military establishment sucks the lifeblood out of America?

Here is an ominous observation by Chalmers Johnson, a respected author and military analyst: "the U.S. military establishment today is close to being beyond civilian control and that, despite its ability to deliver death and destruction to any target on earth and expect little in the way of retaliation, it demands more and newer equipment while the Pentagon now more or less sets its own agenda and monopolizes the formulation and conduct of American foreign policy."

The Pentagon spends more for military purposes than all U.S. state governments combined spend for the health, education, welfare, and safety of 308 million Americans. Can you believe that? We have now reached the point that the vast Military-Industrial Complex has taken control of our nation; that the promotion of foreign wars has now become this nation's #1 priority, that the sustenance of our society and the welfare of the American people is taking a backseat to this gigantic war machine.

To call the total U.S. military spending a budget is a complete misnomer. While the 2009 Pentagon base budget was $513 billion and the 2010 pending request is for $534 billion, the annual spending for military purposes, including various supplemental appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan, totals nearly $1 trillion.

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