The majority of the deductions will be from those who serve, and who have actually served in wars for our nation. Benefits and pay cuts for soldiers simply emphasize the fact that they are only appreciated during the wars in which they served. Once they come home, they become unimportant to our government, while many of them became wealthy because of defense industry investments. (Just ask Vietnam veterans.)
I have been campaigning for years to close obsolete bases in dozens of countries. Virtually none of them are critical to our national defense. I featured the fact that we continue to maintain bases in such countries as the United Kingdom, Germany, France, and Japan. Why?
Our military signs off on billions of dollars of waste. I worked for a company in my twenties that was supported entirely by the military and space programs. I remember the cost of many items in our warehouse. It was not uncommon for a single screw to cost 38 dollars each. And that was in 1965. Imagine what our military pays for the same screw today.
Lowering our military budget is the right thing to do. But let’s do it correctly. A complete audit of Pentagon spending would find hundreds if not thousands of areas that could be eliminated, saving hundreds of millions of dollars. Our government should do the right thing at least once.
Forced to retire in 2008, I turned to my passion, writing. I published my first novel, “A Little Murder in the Biggest Little City” in October, 2012.
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