Thursday, June 23, 2011
The Case for Military Conversion
In a recent article published in Truthout, Ellen Brown strongly argues the case for conversion of military spending. The heart of her argument is that military spending, our nation's deeply entrenched, primary jobs program, is woefully inefficient. As she states:
A 2007 study by Robert Pollin and Heidi Garrett-Peltier of the University of Massachusetts found that government investment in education creates twice as many jobs as investment in the military. Spending on personal consumption, health care, education, mass transit and construction for home weatherization and infrastructure repair all were found to create more jobs per $1 billon in expenditures than military spending does.
You can access the complete text of Brown's article at: http://www.truth-out.org/military-jobs-program-there-are-more-efficient-ways-stimulate-economy/1308752213
Friday, June 3, 2011
Voices of Clarity and Sanity at the Pentagon
The following materials are from the April 26th edition of "On Point," WBUR'S and NPR's public affairs program hosted by Tom Ashbrook. Please read carefully and then check out the links (that I've posted at the bottom of the page) to the show and to the document, A National Strategic Narrative, which envisions a new national security policy for the United States eclipsing the containment policy that the U.S. has so religiously followed since the close of World War II.
This is the most encouraging set of ideas that I can recall emerging from the U.S. military establishment.
Link to the show:
http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/04/26/pentagon-security
Link to the Report:
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/events/docs/A%20National%20Strategic%20Narrative.pdf
This is the most encouraging set of ideas that I can recall emerging from the U.S. military establishment.
The Pentagon’s ‘Mr. Y’ And National Security
Two Special Assistants to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen say (unofficially) it’s time, strategically, to spend more on education and less on guns. We’ll hear them out.
What if the United States has started a new century stuck in the last one, pouring resources into its military and short-changing what should be the real heart of its strength – that is, strength at home?
A strong economy. A strong society. The point is raised and made powerfully in a new essay from – of all places – the heart of the Pentagon.
Two top U.S. military strategic thinkers under the pen name “Mr. Y” are pushing hard for a new American vision. Less bristling with guns. More spending on education. For real prosperity and security.
This hour: a Pentagon call for change at home.
What if the United States has started a new century stuck in the last one, pouring resources into its military and short-changing what should be the real heart of its strength – that is, strength at home?
A strong economy. A strong society. The point is raised and made powerfully in a new essay from – of all places – the heart of the Pentagon.
Two top U.S. military strategic thinkers under the pen name “Mr. Y” are pushing hard for a new American vision. Less bristling with guns. More spending on education. For real prosperity and security.
This hour: a Pentagon call for change at home.
- Tom Ashbrook
Guests:Captain Wayne Porter, US Navy, and Colonel Mark “Puck” Mykleby, US Marine Corps, both Special Assistants to the Chairman for Strategy to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Adm. Mike Mullen.
Writing under the shared pseudonym “Mr. Y.” they have published a paper called “A National Strategic Narrative” released by theWoodrow Wilson Center. Also described as ‘the Y article,’ it was decribed recently in Foreign Policy.com.
Link to the show:
http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/04/26/pentagon-security
Link to the Report:
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/events/docs/A%20National%20Strategic%20Narrative.pdf
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