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Stingy? Not with WMD and War
Dec 31, 2004
As the body count from the tsunami rises, America’s international
reputation plummets to new depths, thanks to the Bush administration’s
smugly incompetent response.
While other world leaders immediately put forward action plans and solid
donations, Bush has spent most of the past critical week on holiday at
his Texas “ranch,” riding his mountain bike and avoiding the press.
Predictably, only allegations of stinginess increased the White House’s
initial measly offer of $15 million for the relief effort to a grand
total of $35 million.
But it’s unfair to say the Bush administration is stingy it just has
different priorities. The White House has so far requested roughly $100
billion for the occupation of Iraq in FY 2005, which translates to about
$8.3 billion per month, or over $270 million per day (eighteen times
more than the administration’s first offer of help to tsunami victims).
And that’s only Iraq. The US military budget request for FY 2005 was
420.7 billion dollars double that of China, Russia, the UK, France and
Germany combined
Of course, perpetual war requires a lavish arsenal so the US spends
further billions each year perfecting its weapons of mass destruction.
In 2004 alone, a full $6 billion was earmarked for federal biological
weapons programs, dedicated to destructive pursuits including bringing
back elements of the 1918 Spanish flu (which killed 40 million people)
and producing even deadlier strains of anthrax. Meanwhile, the US budget
for nuclear-weapon activities in fiscal 2004 topped $6 billion, which is
twelve times more than allocated on securing/reducing existing
stockpiles or on non-proliferation efforts. Also factor in the $10
billion Bush requested in FY 2005 for his failed missile “defense”
program, a budget almost double what the Department of Homeland Security
pays for the crucial activities of customs and border patrol.
In other words: it’s not a problem of money. The Bush administration has
ample funding available for war and for coming up with increasingly
barbaric means of killing, just not much left over to help out in global
humanitarian catastrophes.
How ironic that Bush uses Christianity as a cynical PR tool but fails to
grasp the biblical proportions of this tsunami disaster. How glaring
that the administration brags about its superior morality and devotion
to family values, but shows no empathy in the face of overwhelming human
tragedy. And how embarrassing that after the outpour of love and support
the US received with 911, this is all our government can come up with in
return.
Heather Wokusch is the author of "The Progressive
Woman’s Political Primer: 100 Easy Ways to Make a Difference Now," to be released in the
fall. She can be contacted via her web site at www.heatherwokusch.com
"In the face of this approaching disaster, it behooves
men and women not yet overcome by war madness to raise
their voice of protest, to call the attention of the
people to the crime and outrage which are about to be
perpetrated on them."
-- Emma Goldman
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