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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Romney v. Big Bird
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 9:20 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:It doesn't take a campaign report from Kermit the Frog to figure out Mitt Romney woke up to the equivalent of an Oscar the Grouch style ad from the Obama campaign this morning. Mocking the GOP nominee for threatening to take the axe to federal funding for public broadcasting at last week's presidential debate, the spot's narrator intones breathlessly: "Mitt Romney knows it's not Wall Street you have to worry about, it's Sesame Street." Step aside Big Labor and Big Oil. Is Big Bird this year's October Surprise? Elmo... call your agent. He's not tickled. En route to a stop in Iowa where Romney was to detail his plan for American farmers, senior campaign adviser Kevin Madden was of course asked about poultry, of the large and yellow kind. "I just find it troubling that the president's message, the president's focus, 28 days before Election Day is Big Bird," Madden said. At last week's debate, Romney said he would cut the federal subsidy to the Public Broadcasting Service, which airs Sesame Street, in order to help reduce the country's deficit. Still, Romney has yet to be pressed on how eliminating funding for PBS would have much of an effect on the deficit. "You would need to cut PBS more than 1,000 times to fill the hole in Romney's debate promises," an Obama campaign email pointed out, announcing its new spot. http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2012/10/09/team-romney-word-on-the-street-for-big-bird-tactics-troubling/?hpt=hp_t2
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 9:25 AM
HERO
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 10:30 AM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 10:33 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Hero: If Big Bird is so great why is it afraid of the free market?
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 10:38 AM
AURAPTOR
America loves a winner!
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Romney promises to kill Big Bird.
Quote: I love Big Bird. Actually I like you, too. But I'm not going to -- I'm not going to keep on spending money on things to borrow money from China to pay for [it]."
Quote: Sesame Workshop to Obama: Take Big Bird ad down Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit organization behind Sesame Street, is requesting that the Obama campaign take down a new ad portraying Mitt Romney as more concerned with Big Bird than Wall Street criminals. "Sesame Workshop is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization and we do not endorse candidates or participate in political campaigns," the group said. "We have approved no campaign ads, and as is our general practice, have requested that the ad be taken down."
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 10:50 AM
M52NICKERSON
DALEK!
Quote:Originally posted by Hero: If Big Bird is so great why is it afraid of the free market? H Hero...must be right on all of this. ALL of the rest of us are wrong. Chrisisall, 2012
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 10:57 AM
STORYMARK
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 11:14 AM
Quote:Originally posted by m52nickerson: The majority of PBS funding is from individual donations. Plus PBS funding less than 0.01% of the federal budget. Cutting it in an attempt to balance the budget is like trying to drain a lake with an eye dropper. I do not fear God, I fear the ignorance of man.
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 5:17 PM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: That's what makes this an easy cut in the budget. Anyone who knows about getting out of debt, you do away w/ the unnecessary items first, eliminate the tiny, nagging expenditures, and then tackle the bigger expenses / debt next. PBS and Sesame St. will survive, and we won't have to borrow money from anyone to keep 'em on the air. It's a win / win for everyone. This should have happened years ago, but it's taken 16+ trillion in debt to finally motivate anyone to do what needs to be done.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 3:24 AM
GEEZER
Keep the Shiny side up
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 5:36 AM
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 5:53 AM
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 6:13 AM
CAVETROLL
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 6:25 AM
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 6:39 AM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: So where are Romney's proposed cuts to the defense budget?
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 6:54 AM
KPO
Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.
Quote:Romney wants to cut PBS funding completely, while increasing military spending (borrowing the money from China, as he says) by more than two trillion dollars. Who is it we're planning on fighting, that we need to borrow money from China to build up to fight them?
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 7:12 AM
Quote:The only candidate I would even consider voting for is one who makes a promise to cut programs. I don't care which ones.
Quote:The point isn't that Romney is going to cut PBS funding and stop there. He used it as an example of the type of needless expenditures the government makes.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 7:37 AM
Quote:Originally posted by CaveTroll: The point isn't that Romney is going to cut PBS funding and stop there. He used it as an example of the type of needless expenditures the government makes. ... I certainly expect that the list would be much longer.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 8:12 AM
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: Quote:Romney wants to cut PBS funding completely, while increasing military spending (borrowing the money from China, as he says) by more than two trillion dollars. Who is it we're planning on fighting, that we need to borrow money from China to build up to fight them? Haha good point, the only potential worthy adversary would be China itself... It's not personal. It's just war.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 10:02 AM
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:05 AM
Quote:Originally posted by m52nickerson: Cutting every little program gets you nothing.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:13 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Quote:Originally posted by m52nickerson: Cutting every little program gets you nothing.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:21 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: So you agree that NASA should be defunded, along with most of the Pentagon. GOOD! That's real progress!
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:31 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: So you agree that NASA should be defunded, along with most of the Pentagon. GOOD! That's real progress!
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:32 AM
Quote:The Pentagon, which is facing end-of-year cuts that it says could cripple its ability to fight future wars, may spend billions in coming years on weapons systems and programs it says it doesn’t need but are favored by area members of Congress. The Dayton Daily News analyzed proposed defense budgets for 2013 and identified five programs that Ohio’s congressional delegation is fighting for although Pentagon officials have called them unnecessary and unaffordable. Critics say these big-ticket items are earmarks in disguise, using the Department of Defense budget for economic stimulus. They also point out that the multi-million dollar contracts are awarded to major campaign contributors. Defenders of these programs say the Pentagon isn’t flawless, and sometimes doesn’t budget for things it needs. Some of the projects favored by Ohio politicians that are under scrutiny: - The Global Hawk Block 30 drone program; - The C-27J Spartan cargo aircraft; - Upgrades to the M1 Abrams tank; - Air National Guard funding; - A proposed East Coast missile defense system. Lawmakers fighting for defense projects in their districts is neither rare nor new. But what is new is that the Department of Defense is faced with the threat of a crippling sequestration that could cost it $500 billion over 10 years if Washington can’t balance its budget. “The number one thing the defense budget should do is protect Americans,” said Ben Freeman, national security investigator for the Washington-based watchdog group Project on Government Oversight. “I’m sympathetic to folks that might be losing their jobs as a result of these defense cuts, but the simple fact is, if you want your government to create jobs the Department of Defense is not the most efficient way to do that.” http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/news/congress-pushes-for-weapons-pentagon-didnt-want/nRC7w/
Quote:The Pentagon wants to save $3 billion by freezing refurbishing work on its M1Abrams tanks, but the tank’s manufacturers are donating to Congressional campaigns to bribe members of Congress to lobby for their continued funding. While the M1 tank has survived the Cold War, two conflicts in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan, its value has declined in US efforts abroad. Aside from being vulnerable to improvised bombs, the tanks don’t serve much of a purpose while warfare is limited. Their primary purpose is to destroy other tanks, according to Paul D. Eaton, a retired army general. Their usefulness is therefore limited in modern counterinsurgency warfare. The US Army already has more than 2,300 M1’s deployed and about 3,000 more being stored at a military base in California. If the Pentagon is required to continue funding the tanks, it will refurbish “280 tanks that we simply do not need,” said Army Chief of Staff Ray Odierno in a February hearing. But the Center for Public Integrity has found that General Dynamics, the tank’s manufacturer, has been donating to Congressional campaigns of members who are likely to influence the decision regarding the defense budget. In a two-week period last year, the company sent lawmakers checks for their campaigns that totaled nearly $50,000, coinciding with the defense bill’s final passage last year. The manufacturer has donated an average of $7,000 a week to members of the four key defense committees – the Armed Services committees and defense appropriations subcommittees in the House and Senate. Since 2001, these members received a total of more than $5.3 million in campaign donations from General Dynamics. “We target our PAC money to those folks who support national security and the national defense of our country,”said Kendell Pease, General Dynamics’ vice president for government relations and communications.“Most of them are on the four (key defense) committees.” But instead of being consistent, donations have spiked drastically during key decision-making events regarding the defense budget, which may suggest the company has an agenda. In March 2011, during the Army budget hearings, General Dynamics donated more than $20,000. Two months later, General Dynamics had donated $48,100 to members of the four key committees, and the House Armed Services Committee (which received more than half of the donations) voted 60-1 for a budget bill that continued to fund the M1Abrams through 2013. Donation spikes continued to occur throughout 2011 at times when the budget was being discussed by legislators. The final spike came during the second week of December, when Congress made its final decision on defense spending. Additionally, General Dynamics spent at least $84 million on lobbyists in the past 11 years, pressuring Congress to fund military and nonmilitary programs at the firm. And the donations may have won over lawmakers’ support. Last year’s defense bill included a budget for the M1 tanks. This year, the House of Representatives and Senate Armed Services committees have authorized it again, allotting $181 million in the House and $91 million in the Senate.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:34 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: "There are 1000's of " little " projects that exceed the proper function of govt, that need to be completely done away with."
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:36 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: "There are 1000's of " little " projects that exceed the proper function of govt, that need to be completely done away with."
Quote: @ Niki - Cutting funding for PBS makes FANTASTIC sense. Big Bird and company can and will survive on its own. They don't need our federal $, in the least. Time to cut it free and let it fly away. If it comes back...well, you know the rest.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:42 AM
Quote: So you agree that NASA should be defunded, along with most of the Pentagon. GOOD! That's real progress!
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:55 AM
Quote:Republican Presidential nominee Mitt Romney has stated that he will, if elected President, move to eliminate funding for PBS, National Public Radio, the National Endowment For The Humanities, and the National Endowment For The Arts. He also would eliminate Amtrak. All of this together would save a pittance, just a total of $2 billion, a “drop in the bucket”, with a multiple trillion dollar budget annually. http://www.theprogressiveprofessor.com/?p=19566
Quote:A House subcommittee voted yesterday to sharply reduce the federal government's financial support for public broadcasting, including eliminating taxpayer funds that help underwrite such popular children's educational programs as "Sesame Street," "Reading Rainbow," "Arthur" and "Postcards From Buster." In addition, the subcommittee acted to eliminate within two years all federal money for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting -- which passes federal funds to public broadcasters -- starting with a 25 percent reduction in CPB's budget for next year, from $400 million to $300 million. In all, the cuts would represent the most drastic cutback of public broadcasting since Congress created the nonprofit CPB in 1967. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/09/AR2005060902283.html
Quote:The CPB funds are particularly important for small TV and radio stations and account for about 15 percent of the public broadcasting industry's total revenue. Small public radio stations, particularly those in rural areas and those serving minority audiences, may be the most vulnerable to federal cuts because they currently operate on shoestring budgets. "This could literally put us out of business," said Paul Stankavich, president and general manager of the Alaska Public Radio Network, an alliance of 26 stations in the state that create and share news programming. "Almost all of us are down to the bone right now. If we lost 5 or 10 percent of our budgets in one fell swoop, we could end up being just a repeater service" for national news, with no funds to produce local content. Stankavich, who also runs a public radio and TV station in Anchorage, said public radio is "an important source of news in urban areas, but it's life-critical in rural areas," especially in far-flung parts of Alaska unserved by any other broadcast medium. Expressing alarm, public broadcasters and their supporters in Congress interpreted the move as an escalation of a Republican-led campaign against a perceived liberal bias in their programming. Several denounced the decision by the panel, which has 10 Republicans and seven Democrats, as payback by a Republican-dominated House after years of complaints from conservatives who see liberal bias in programs carried by the Public Broadcasting Service and National Public Radio. Broadcasters noted, for example, that the 25 percent cutback in next year's CPB budget was a rollback of money that Congress had promised in 2004. PBS, in particular, drew harsh criticism in December from the Bush administration for a "Postcards From Buster" episode in which Buster, an animated rabbit, "visited" two families in Vermont headed by lesbians. And programming on both PBS and NPR has come under fire in recent months from Tomlinson, the Republican chairman of the CPB, who has pushed for greater "balance" on the public airwaves. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/09/AR2005060902283.html
Quote:...(switching to private enterprise) would also mean attracting viewers who are willing to support (or at least tolerate) PBS’s perceived liberal bias. The government sponsors media in places like Russia and China (and even in the United Kingdom). Okay, that’s the way they do things over there. But why do we have a government-sponsored media here, in our self-proclaimed republic? It’s the principle of the thing. In the U.S., the media should be entirely private enterprise. Then there is the matter of basic tax fairness. I suspect that NASCAR fans in Concord, North Carolina, aren’t much interested in “Masterpiece Theater.” Using tax dollars to pay for PBS forces that blue-collar crowd to pony up so rich folks can enjoy expensive “high-brow” entertainment. Meanwhile, as anyone who has watched “The News Hour” and other PBS programming must surely realize, government-sponsored media leans left. How could it be otherwise? Conservatives like smaller government and liberals advocate a greater role for government. Can it be a surprise, then, that journalists living on the federal government’s dime support an expansive role for government? So the unfairness goes beyond requiring all taxpayers of all income levels to support a media outlet targeting a “high-brow” audience. Government support of PBS also requires conservative taxpayers to support programming with a liberal bias those taxpayers don’t agree with. Why should conservatives pay for a broadcast network that routinely – by story selection and presentation – argues for their ideological opponents? But don’t taxpayers pay for lots of things they don’t agree with? Aren’t anti-war voters required to pay taxes that fund the military overseas? Of course. The difference is that funding PBS requires conservative taxpayers to support not just something they disagree with, but an organization that, from their point of view, propagandizes against their core beliefs. http://blog.nj.com/njv_george_berkin/2012/10/get_pbs_off_the_dole_take_big.html
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 11:59 AM
Quote:There are 1000's of " little " projects that exceed the proper function of govt, that need to be completely done away with. Do that first, then look at the bigger items.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 12:09 PM
Quote:you guys on the Right are going for the programs YOU hate most (some of which are popular), leaving intact or inflating programs that you like (like the military), and generally paying little attention to where the biggest savings can be made.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 12:18 PM
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 1:05 PM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Quote: So you agree that NASA should be defunded, along with most of the Pentagon. GOOD! That's real progress! I never said that. You want me to give you an interpretation of my views, which isn't the issue here. YOU claimed I agree with something I never stated or intimated. You didn't even ASK the question if maybe I could agree to that, you simply stated it as fact.
Quote: I asked for you to CITE where I said any of that, you failed, and then came back and asked ME to supply YOU with the evidence which supports your bogus claim. Now, admit you can't back up that claim, admit you were wrong, or lied, and move on.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 1:07 PM
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: Quote:There are 1000's of " little " projects that exceed the proper function of govt, that need to be completely done away with. Do that first, then look at the bigger items. It sounds like you're more interested in cutting programs that you have an ideological problem with, than you are in balancing the budget. Just like in the debt ceiling negotiations you guys on the Right are going for the programs YOU hate most (some of which are popular), leaving intact or inflating programs that you like (like the military), and generally paying little attention to where the biggest savings can be made. It's not personal. It's just war.
Thursday, October 11, 2012 1:50 AM
Thursday, October 11, 2012 1:56 AM
Quote: Actually, I stated what you implied with your post - you say there are so many small programs that could easily be cut, so I named a couple because you're too cowardly to do so. You, like Mitt, seem to think that simply cutting funding for PBS will magically balance the budget, and any implication that you'd like to cut any other "small" programs are lies and bogus claims.
Thursday, October 11, 2012 2:02 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Quote: Actually, I stated what you implied with your post - you say there are so many small programs that could easily be cut, so I named a couple because you're too cowardly to do so. You, like Mitt, seem to think that simply cutting funding for PBS will magically balance the budget, and any implication that you'd like to cut any other "small" programs are lies and bogus claims. No, you didn't. I never once implied that NASA was a " little program " , or that Defense wasn't a proper function of govt. You're making shit up, purely because you're too much of a dick weed to admit you're wrong. I named PBS funding, dim bulb, and yet you claim I didn't name any little programs to cut. So, which is it ? Idiot. I've named dozens of others, too,in the past, but you're too much of a liar and a coward to admit that either. " I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend. "
Thursday, October 11, 2012 3:47 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Quote: Actually, I stated what you implied with your post - you say there are so many small programs that could easily be cut, so I named a couple because you're too cowardly to do so. You, like Mitt, seem to think that simply cutting funding for PBS will magically balance the budget, and any implication that you'd like to cut any other "small" programs are lies and bogus claims. No, you didn't. I never once implied that NASA was a " little program " , or that Defense wasn't a proper function of govt. You're making shit up, purely because you're too much of a dick weed to admit you're wrong.
Quote: I named PBS funding, dim bulb, and yet you claim I didn't name any little programs to cut. So, which is it ?
Quote: Idiot. I've named dozens of others, too,in the past...
Quote:...but you're too much of a liar and a coward to admit that either.
Thursday, October 11, 2012 5:57 AM
Quote:In August 2012, I wrote a Solutions column about a disturbing chart that showed defense spending was marching endlessly upward, even though we were winding down two of our longest wars. I didn't think anything would top that chart, but look at this chart above, which was shown on the Rachel Maddow show on October 8 and taken from Foreign Policy's blog. I was shocked, even after investigating the Pentagon budget, in particular, weapons procurement, for over 30 years. The chart shows President Obama's disconcerting defense budget isn't going down after the wars; it shows the potential cuts that Congress put itself under with the sequestration rules if they don't agree on a budget deal (which has caused howls of pending disaster from Republicans and some Democrats); and it shows the post-cold-war-style drawdown, where, historically the defense budget should draw down after ending wars. Even though we have heard that Mitt Romney has taken up with the Bush-era neocons and planned to raise the defense budget $2 trillion above the Pentagon's requested budget over the next nine years, this graph gives a gut-punching visual of the almost straight-up trajectory of the defense budget under a Romney presidency. I lived through Reagan's huge defense budget buildup, but look at it, starting in 1980 on this chart of constant dollars, and you can see that Reagan's efforts were puny compared to what Romney wants to do. Even though Romney claims that we need this massive increase - which will take us to Korean War levels with no planned war - he has not laid out in any detail what he plans to accomplish with this money. He talks about building more ships and three submarines a year and starting up the cancelled F-22 Raptor fighter line, but he fails to put it into a picture of how submarines and cancelled, failed planes are going to make us safer from the insurgency wars that we might face in the future. In the "Mad Men" view of the world, these cold-war-style weapons are suppose to make us safe, but the United States faces a different world and a different threat than it did in that era. And never mind that we already spend more money on our defense than the rest of the world combined. I saw some of those cold war relics when I went to Fleet Week in San Francisco this weekend. It is ironic that, although Fleet Week is still held every year, San Francisco no longer has any military bases nearby, and the city is decidedly anti-war and anti-Pentagon. The sailors who were roaming the streets were warmly welcomed by the city and there were families, mainly sons and fathers, lined up at Coit Tower with me to get a good look at the loud and impressive flying of the Navy's Blue Angels in the F-18 aircraft. But before they got started, there was an airshow of many of the weapons that we claim make us strong as a nation but were designed for a long-gone cold war. The B-2 bomber with its black, bat-like appearance lazily flew circles around the waterfront before departing the area and home to its only Air Force base in Missouri. This bomber was to be the premiere bomber of the cold war, with its black stealth skin and unique design. It certainly looked exotic flying against the bright blue California sky. I remember the Congressional fights over this plane because of its technical problems and its preposterous maintenance, which pushed the price of a single plane to around $1 billion, or $2 billion if you count all the associated program costs. The unsuccessful effort to cancel the plane was bipartisan, with Ohio Republican representative John Kasich joining up with liberal California Democratic representative Ron Dellums, an effort that you will unlikely see in the now politically overheated Congress. The much-vaunted stealth coating on this plane can be defeated by long-wave radar, and it also ensures the planes' maintenance requirements are ridiculously expensive. Each of the 20 planes has to have its own air-conditioned hangar to protect the stealth coating from rain and heat. The maintenance costs $3.4 million a month for each plane, double the maintenance cost of the aging B-52 bombers that are still in use and were first made before I was born. Yet we have only used the B-2 in limited ways in the Kosovo war, a little in Iraq and Afghanistan and a little in the Libyan civil war. The B-52 bomber that had its first mission in 1955 is still in use, with 94 of the original 744 planes currently operational, and the Air Force would like to keep some of these bombers flying until 2040. Another plane on exhibit in the air show was the now-cancelled F-22 Raptor fighter. With its large size and large triangle wing, it looked like a typical cold war weapon, except for its stealth design. It zoomed around the San Francisco Bay, often flying straight up and then spiraling down to the water before pulling itself up. It was loud, flashy and spectacular, and the crowd clapped and cheered when it flew low by us with a deafening sound. But what the crowd did not know is that, although the plane was suppose to be the replacement for the venerable F-16 fighter, the US spent $66.7 billion to build 187 planes before the Raptor was cancelled. It has not seen combat, and its deployment has been very rough, including problems with the electronics and with the oxygen system, which made pilots sick. One pilot died while having problems with the oxygen but the Air Force claimed it was pilot error. The Air Force has had to ground the plane repeatedly for the oxygen problem, and it got egg on its face when two pilots risked their careers to go on the television show "60 Minutes" to say that many of the pilots did not want to fly the plane because it was not safe. In isolation, in this airshow, the plane did look flashy, but I wonder how the crowd would feel if the show had a program that showed how much taxpayers paid for it and listed the technical problems for a plane that has not seen combat and has problems even being deployed. The Air Force cut many of its planes from the airshow circuit this year because of costs but left in the F-22 because, what else is it going to do? Now Romney wants to reopen the production line as part of his $2 trillion defense buildup. I knew that this airshow's goal was to push and sell its gee-whiz planes to the public, and based on the whoops and hollers of the crowd, even in this peace-oriented city, the spectacle had the desired effect. The aerospace organization NYCAviation outlined the Air Force's goal with these airshows, and the concerns about cutting out more of the planes: It is not just the airshow circuit that will lose out as a result of the cuts, though. Indeed, the Air Force itself stands to come out on the losing end of the deal. With less presence in the public eye, the branch will lose a substantial channel by which to connect to the nation it serves. Considered a powerful tool for recruitment, "[the single ship demo teams] make you feel directly connected to those who are fighting tooth and nail for our interests abroad. They create a fire in your gut, a powerful sense of exhilaration and patriotic defiance," says defense blogger Ty Rogoway, owner of AviationIntel.com. Since many of these planes, ships and tanks have proven to be more expensive than, and inferior to, the ones they replaced, the military must glorify these weapons and show them off to the public - but also, most importantly, it must hold regular dog and pony shows for the members of Congress who fund them. As someone who has been on these Congressional junkets, including one to drive and fire the M-1 tank, I can see that impressions win over test results and audits, and these weapons' mystic status must be protected, as anyone who has ever watched the Military Channel can see. So, how is it that, although we are paying more for each generation of weapons, we are getting fewer of them, and they still have a myriad of problems? Two contributors in a book called Pentagon Labyrinth outline the system that allows this madness to continue. Winslow Wheeler, who worked for the Congress for many years overseeing defense, describes how the system works: Understatement of cost does not occur in isolation in the Pentagon; it is accompanied by an overstatement of the performance the program will bring, and the schedule articulated will be unrealistically optimistic. Once the hook is set in the form of an approved program in the Pentagon (based on optimistic numbers) and an annual funding stream for it from Congress (based on local jobs and campaign contributions), the reality of actual cost, schedule and performance will come too late to generate anything but a few pesky newspaper articles. ... Also, the new systems rarely, if ever, bring a performance improvement commensurate with the cost increase. In some cases the new system is even a step backwards. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter is a good example. Among the aircraft it is to replace is the 1970s vintage - but still much used and almost universally praised - A-10 close air support aircraft. Even if the F-35 stays at its 2010 purchase price of over $150 million per aircraft (which it will not), it will cost ten times more than an A-10. For that additional expense, it will have less payload than an A-10; it will not be able to loiter over the battlefield to help troops engaged in combat hour after hour; it will be too fast to be able to find targets independently, and it will be too fragile and sluggish to survive at the low altitude it must operate at to be effective, even against the primitive small arms and machine gun defenses terrorists and insurgents can mount. To make matters worse, the F-35 will lack the extraordinarily effective 30 mm cannon the A-10 carries. Andrew Cockburn, a journalist who has been following the follies of the Pentagon for decades, tells us to follow the money to understand the problem: ... as observed long ago by Ernie Fitzgerald, who battled this culture as an air force official, the contractors are "selling costs," not weapons systems. To the extent that they can improve their "products" by making them more complex and thus more expensive, they prosper. The inevitable corollary has been that the number of items produced for any one program goes down as the costs zoom up. Hence the F-35 fighter, currently under development for the Air Force, Navy and Marines as well as a number of foreign air forces, was originally slated for a production run of 2866 planes at a unit cost per plane of $81 million. Already, well before the plane has completed testing, the unit cost has soared - thus far - to $155 million each, and the total buy has accordingly shrunk to 2457. Further production cuts, as foreign buyers drop out, are inevitable, which will in turn boost the unit cost of the remaining planes on order, leading to further cuts, and so on. Once this disconnect between the official (weapons systems of postulated quality and quantity) and actual products (costs) marketed by the defense industry is clearly grasped, other distressing aspects of the U.S. defense system become easier to understand. Escalation of costs required inefficient management practices, employing twenty people to do, supervise, manage, and administer the work of five, for example. "Inefficiency is national policy," declared the Air Force general managing the vastly over-budget F-111 bomber program in 1967. But inefficient production tended to produce inefficient performance. The great missile gap fraud of the early 1960s led not only to the abandonment of all cost restraints on the crash programs instituted by the Kennedy Administration to "catch up" with the Russians, but also some egregious technical failures. The guidance system for the Minuteman II ICBM, for example, was so unreliable that 40 percent of the missiles in the silos were out of action at any one time. Replacements had to be bought from the original contractor, who thereby made an extra profit thanks to having supplied faulty sets in the first place. As they point out, this problem has been going on for years, but is getting worse as more money is shoved into the Pentagon with no change in this dysfunctional system. We also need to price weapons by how much it costs to build that particular weapon and not price them by historical costs - that is, based on the last failed plane with all the fraud, waste and fat incorporated into the base price of the new plane. If we get the Obama military budget, there will still be big problems and waste unless there is substantial change in how the Pentagon buys its weapons. If we get the Romney military budget, with $2 trillion more to just throw around, the weapons will get more expensive, more prone to problems, and we will buy fewer and fewer of them. With a Romney administration pushing that much more money into this deeply flawed system, we may lose any chance of changing it, cutting the budget and using the money more wisely for another generation. The Pentagon bureaucracy and its contractors will be like kids in a candy store, buying weapons that have little connection to any threat we face. We will be throwing money fuel on an already out-of-control fire. Defense spending will continue and escalate as a test of how strong we can make ourselves look to the rest of the world with air shows and flashy demonstrations that have no real connection to weapons effectiveness in the battlefield. I am wondering: If the F-35 fighter gets into more technical and financial trouble in the next few years, will I see it screeching around the San Francisco Bay in a future Fleet Week? You can count on it - and the United States will be weakened even more with its unchecked military spending while other vital needs in the country go wanting.
Thursday, October 11, 2012 6:03 AM
Thursday, October 11, 2012 6:27 AM
Thursday, October 11, 2012 6:54 AM
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: Quote:The only candidate I would even consider voting for is one who makes a promise to cut programs. I don't care which ones. That's idiotic. So all a candidate has to do to secure your vote is throw out a few token 'cuts' that amount to nothing in the grand scheme of things? And meanwhile promise massive tax cuts and spending increases, and give no substantive specifics about where the money will come from, not to mention filling the already gaping budget hole? Quote:The point isn't that Romney is going to cut PBS funding and stop there. He used it as an example of the type of needless expenditures the government makes. When he gives examples that actually makes a DENT in the deficit, then lets consider that he might be serious. As it is, the only substantive policies he has offered are ones that massively INCREASE the deficit. Promising to cut Big Bird is style, and not substance. And you've fallen for it. It's not personal. It's just war.
Thursday, October 11, 2012 8:13 AM
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