With no real enemies, US poised to spend $1.8 trillion for national security in 2025
With no real enemies, US poised to spend $1.8 trillion
for national security in 2025
Not one of the other 194 countries poses the slightest
threat to the US Homeland. Yet the US foolishly provokes confrontation with Russia
and China, the first and third most nuclear armed states.
With no enemies lurking near our borders, the US
plans to spend $1.8 trillion next year to promote not defense, but US
adventurism abroad.
750 bases in 80 countries overseas billeting 160,000
soldiers does not come cheap. Additionally, the US has squandered upwards of
$200 billion to destroy Ukraine in our proxy war against Russia, and obliterate
Gaza by our Middle East aircraft carrier Israel.
That helps explain why Congress is about to pass an
$895.2 billion National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) to fund discretionary activities
of our Defense Department. Adding in mandatory defense spending of $25.8
billion swells the Pentagon’s budget to a cool $921 billion.
But don’t forget nuclear weapons programs, Homeland
Security, cost to treat vets from America’s forever wars and miscellaneous foreign
adventures. These add another $796.8 billion, making a national security grand
total for 2025 a staggering $1,776,800,000. A far distant second in defense
spending is China at less than a quarter trillion.
How can this be in the hyped ‘greatest democracy on
Earth’? Simple. The administration, Congress, presidential candidates, the media
offer not one word of discussion, much less protest about this monstrous squandering
of US treasure to get millions killed, injured, starved, sick and homeless in
countries America has no business meddling in.
America’s national security budget may
as well be planned and passed on Mars, far from the radar of America’s 155,000,200
clueless voters having no say in this monstrosity whatsoever.
Of course, with the US war party crossing
Russian red lines like it’s in a demolition derby, nuclear war becomes more
likely than at any time since the Cuban Missile Crisis 62 years ago. If that
happens, any important discussion of our $1.8 trillion national security budget
will be moot.
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