Microsoft Embraces Bitcoins as a Payment Option

When major corporations embrace currency associated with anarchism ... what happens?You can now buy digital content
for a Windows Phone with bitcoins. Nobody has or wants a Windows
Phone, apparently,
but fortunately you can also buy things from Microsoft you may
actually want with bitcoins, too.

Microsoft is now
accepting bitcoins
as a payment option for “apps, games, and
other digital content from Windows, Windows Phone, Xbox Games, Xbox
Music, or Xbox Video stores.” You can’t buy physical products or
services yet, you can only use bitcoins in the United States, and
if you purchase something with bitcoins, they cannot be refunded.
But it’s a start.

Remember how earlier in the year, after prominent bitcoin
exchange Mt. Gox was hacked and collapsed and the value of bitcoins
plunged, people declared the virtual currency dead
or at least doomed? The price has continued to go down—a bitcoin is
now worth about a quarter of what it used to be at the start of the
year ($335 today as opposed to $1,100).  But we’re seeing it
accepted in more and more places.

Engaget notes
that other tech consumer companies, like Dell, have embraced
bitcoins as well, but Amazon is still resistant. Be sure to check
out Reason’s December issue for a
look at the future of money.

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Peter Suderman Reviews Exodus: Gods and Kings

Exodus: Gods and Kings is probably the worst
big-budget movie I’ve seen all year, and I saw the Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles
reboot. 

At first glance, “Exodus: Gods and Kings” might seem to
represent a change of pace at the multiplex: Director Ridley
Scott’s revisionist riff on the Biblical story of the Israelites’
flight from Egypt is a lavish Hollywood blockbuster that is neither
a comic-book movie nor a sequel in some increasingly bloated
big-screen franchise.

And yet in some sense it’s also both — a heroic, effects-driven
take on a Biblical epic that attempts to recast its story to fit
within the box-office-friendly parameters of the director’s
previous work. Either way, however, it’s an epic mess.

Technically, it’s not part of a franchise, but “Exodus” falls
neatly into line as the latest in a series of ever-more-dubious
historical epics from Mr. Scott, the director of the
still-resonant “Gladiator” and the still-muddled “Kingdom of
Heaven.”

“Exodus” calls to mind both, though rarely in a good way: Like
“Gladiator,” it revolves around a clash between a king — in this
case, the Emperor Ramses (Joel Edgerton) — and a member of his
inner circle, Moses (a bored-looking Christian Bale), who leads a
people’s revolt after the elder mentor holding the two at bay
(Emperor Seti, played with campy disinterest by John Turturro)
passes on. But “Exodus” lacks both the gravitas and the searing
violence of that earlier film; it is largely bloodless and, indeed,
often boring.

As in “Kingdom of Heaven,” the story marries historical sweep to
questionable theology and sociopolitical insights. 

Read the
complete review
at The Washington Times.

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H.R. 4681 Passes Congress – Justin Amash Calls It: “One of the Most Egregious Sections of Law I’ve Encountered During My Time as a Representative”

Screen Shot 2014-12-12 at 12.10.06 PMDecency, security, and liberty alike demand that government officials shall be subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means — to declare that the government may commit crimes in order to secure the conviction of a private criminal — would bring terrible retribution. Against that pernicious doctrine this court should resolutely set its face.

–  Louis Brandeis, Supreme Court Justice, in 1928

While most American are busy Christmas shopping and making preparations for trips to see family, Congress remains hard at work doing what it does best. Giving gifts to Wall Street and trampling on citizens’ civil liberties.

I knew the plebs were about to be royally screwed a week ago when I published the post: Wall Street Moves to Put Taxpayers on the Hook for Derivatives Trades. The piece concluded with the following:

continue reading

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Paying Down The Debt Is Now Almost Mathematically Impossible

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

Exactly 199 years ago, in 1815, a “temporary” committee was established in the US Senate called the Committee on Finance and Uniform National Currency.

It was set up to address economic issues and the debt accrued by the US government after the War of 1812.

Of course, because there’s nothing more permanent than a temporary government measure, the committee became a permanent one after just one year.

It soon expanded its role from raising tariffs to having influence over taxation, banking, currency, and appropriations.

In subsequent wars, notably the American Civil War, the Committee was quick to use its powers and introduced the union’s first income tax. They also detached the dollar from gold to help fund the war.

This was all an indication of things to come.

Over the subsequent decades there was a sustained push to finally establish the country’s central bank that will control money and credit, as well as institute a permanent income tax to feed the expanding aspirations of government.

They succeeded in 1913 when the Federal Reserve Act was passed and the 16th Amendment ratified, binding the country in the shackles of central banking and taxation of income.

Over the century that followed, the US has gone from being the biggest creditor in the world to its biggest debtor.

Decades of expanding government programs, waste, endless and costly wars, etc. have racked up such an enormous pile of debt that it has become almost impossible to pay it down.

A lot of folks don’t realize that, since the end of World War II, the US government’s total tax revenue has been almost constant at roughly 17% of GDP.

In other words, even though the actual tax rates themselves rise and fall, the government’s ‘slice’ of the economic pie is almost always the same – 17%.

I’ve worked out a mathematical model which shows that, even with absurd assumptions (7%+ GDP growth for years at a time, low interest rates, etc.), it is simply not feasible for the US government to ‘grow’ its way out.

Default has become the only option. And that could mean a number of things.

They could default on their creditors (other governments like China who loaned money to the US government). But this would spark a global financial and banking crisis.

 

They could default on the Federal Reserve, which owns trillions of dollars of US debt. But this would create an epic currency crisis for the US dollar.

 

They could also default on their obligations to their citizens—primarily to future beneficiaries of Social Security (who collectively own trillions of dollars of US debt).

 

Or they could choose to default on their obligations to every human being alive who holds US dollars… and engineer rampant inflation.

None of these is a good option. And simply put, the US government has reached a point of no return.

I aim to demonstrate this to you in today’s video podcast episode. It’s a very sobering realization.

Join me to see it for yourself:




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The Media Is Focusing On the WRONG Senate Torture Report

The Big Story Torture Everyone Is Missing

While the torture report released by the Senate Intelligence Committee is very important, it doesn’t address the big scoop regarding torture.

Instead, it is the Senate Armed Services Committee’s report that dropped the big bombshell regarding the U.S.  torture program.

Senator Levin, commenting on a Armed Services Committee’s report on torture in 2009, explained:

The techniques are based on tactics used by Chinese Communists against American soldiers during the Korean War for the purpose of eliciting FALSE confessions for propaganda purposes. Techniques used in SERE training include stripping trainees of their clothing, placing them in stress positions, putting hoods over their heads, subjecting them to face and body slaps, depriving them of sleep, throwing them up against a wall, confining them in a small box, treating them like animals, subjecting them to loud music and flashing lights, and exposing them to extreme temperatures [and] waterboarding.

McClatchy filled in important details:

Former senior U.S. intelligence official familiar with the interrogation issue said that Cheney and former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld demanded that the interrogators find evidence of al Qaida-Iraq collaboration

 

For most of 2002 and into 2003, Cheney and Rumsfeld, especially, were also demanding proof of the links between al Qaida and Iraq that (former Iraqi exile leader Ahmed) Chalabi and others had told them were there.”

 

It was during this period that CIA interrogators waterboarded two alleged top al Qaida detainees repeatedly — Abu Zubaydah at least 83 times in August 2002 and Khalid Sheik Muhammed 183 times in March 2003 — according to a newly released Justice Department document…

 

When people kept coming up empty, they were told by Cheney’s and Rumsfeld’s people to push harder,” he continued.”  Cheney’s and Rumsfeld’s people were told repeatedly, by CIA . . . and by others, that there wasn’t any reliable intelligence that pointed to operational ties between bin Laden and Saddam . . .

 

A former U.S. Army psychiatrist, Maj. Charles Burney, told Army investigators in 2006 that interrogators at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detention facility were under “pressure” to produce evidence of ties between al Qaida and Iraq.

 

“While we were there a large part of the time we were focused on trying to establish a link between al Qaida and Iraq and we were not successful in establishing a link between al Qaida and Iraq,” Burney told staff of the Army Inspector General. “The more frustrated people got in not being able to establish that link . . . there was more and more pressure to resort to measures that might produce more immediate results.”

 

“I think it’s obvious that the administration was scrambling then to try to find a connection, a link (between al Qaida and Iraq),” [Senator] Levin said in a conference call with reporters. “They made out links where they didn’t exist.”

 

Levin recalled Cheney’s assertions that a senior Iraqi intelligence officer had met Mohammad Atta, the leader of the 9/11 hijackers, in the Czech Republic capital of Prague just months before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

 

The FBI and CIA found that no such meeting occurred.

The Washington Post reported the same year:

Despite what you’ve seen on TV, torture is really only good at one thing: eliciting false confessions. Indeed, Bush-era torture techniques, we now know, were cold-bloodedly modeled after methods used by Chinese Communists to extract confessions from captured U.S. servicemen that they could then use for propaganda during the Korean War.

 

So as shocking as the latest revelation in a new Senate Armed Services Committee report may be, it actually makes sense — in a nauseating way. The White House started pushing the use of torture not when faced with a “ticking time bomb” scenario from terrorists, but when officials in 2002 were desperately casting about for ways to tie Iraq to the 9/11 attacks — in order to strengthen their public case for invading a country that had nothing to do with 9/11 at all.

 

***

 

Gordon Trowbridge writes for the Detroit News: “Senior Bush administration officials pushed for the use of abusive interrogations of terrorism detainees in part to seek evidence to justify the invasion of Iraq, according to newly declassified information discovered in a congressional probe.

Indeed, one of the two senior instructors from the Air Force team which taught U.S. servicemen how to resist torture by foreign governments when used to extract false confessions has blown the whistle on the true purpose behind the U.S. torture program.

As Truthout reported:

Jessen’s notes were provided to Truthout by retired Air Force Capt. Michael Kearns, a “master” SERE instructor and decorated veteran who has previously held high-ranking positions within the Air Force Headquarters Staff and Department of Defense (DoD).

 

***

 

The Jessen notes clearly state the totality of what was being reverse-engineered – not just ‘enhanced interrogation techniques,’ but an entire program of exploitation of prisoners using torture as a central pillar,” he said. “What I think is important to note, as an ex-SERE Resistance to Interrogation instructor, is the focus of Jessen’s instruction. It is EXPLOITATION, not specifically interrogation. And this is not a picayune issue, because if one were to ‘reverse-engineer’ a course on resistance to exploitation then what one would get is a plan to exploit prisoners, not interrogate them. The CIA/DoD torture program appears to have the same goals as the terrorist organizations or enemy governments for which SV-91 and other SERE courses were created to defend against: the full exploitation of the prisoner in his intelligence, propaganda, or other needs held by the detaining power, such as the recruitment of informers and double agents. Those aspects of the US detainee program have not generally been discussed as part of the torture story in the American press.”

In a subsequent report, Truthout notes:

Air Force Col. Steven Kleinman, a career military intelligence officer recognized as one of the DOD’s most effective interrogators as well a former SERE instructor and director of intelligence for JPRA’s teaching academy, said ….  “This is the guidebook to getting false confessions, a system drawn specifically from the communist interrogation model that was used to generate propaganda rather than intelligence”  …. “If your goal is to obtain useful and reliable information this is not the source book you should be using.”

Interrogators also forced detainees to take drugs … which further impaired their ability to tell the truth.

And one of the two main architects of the torture program admitted this week on camera:

You can get people to say anything to stop harsh interrogations if you apply them in a way that does that.

And false confessions were, in fact, extracted.

For example:

And the 9/11 Commission Report was largely based on a third-hand account of what tortured detainees said, with two of the three parties in the communication being government employees. And the government went to great lengths to obstruct justice and hide unflattering facts from the Commission.

According to NBC News:

  • Much of the 9/11 Commission Report was based upon the testimony of people who were tortured
  • At least four of the people whose interrogation figured in the 9/11 Commission Report have claimed that they told interrogators information as a way to stop being “tortured.”
  • The 9/11 Commission itself doubted the accuracy of the torture confessions, and yet kept their doubts to themselves

Details here.

Today, Raymond McGovern – a 27-year CIA veteran, who chaired National Intelligence Estimates and personally delivered intelligence briefings to Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, their Vice Presidents, Secretaries of State, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and many other senior government officials – writes at former Newsweek and AP reporter Robert Parry’s website:

But if it’s bad intelligence you’re after, torture works like a charm. If, for example, you wish to “prove,” post 9/11, that “evil dictator” Saddam Hussein was in league with al-Qaeda and might arm the terrorists with WMD, bring on the torturers.

 

It is a highly cynical and extremely sad story, but many Bush administration policymakers wanted to invade Iraq before 9/11 and thus were determined to connect Saddam Hussein to those attacks. The PR push began in September 2002 – or as Bush’s chief of staff Andrew Card put it, “From a marketing point of view, you don’t introduce new products in August.”

 

By March 2003 – after months of relentless “marketing” – almost 70 percent of Americans had been persuaded that Saddam Hussein was involved in some way with the attacks of 9/11.

 

The case of Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi, a low-level al-Qaeda operative, is illustrative of how this process worked. Born in Libya in 1963, al-Libi ran an al-Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan from 1995 to 2000. He was detained in Pakistan on Nov. 11, 2001, and then sent to a U.S. detention facility in Kandahar, Afghanistan. He was deemed a prize catch, since it was thought he would know of any Iraqi training of al-Qaeda.

 

The CIA successfully fought off the FBI for first rights to interrogate al-Libi. FBI’s Dan Coleman, who “lost” al-Libi to the CIA (at whose orders, I wonder?), said, “Administration officials were always pushing us to come up with links” between Iraq and al-Qaeda.

 

CIA interrogators elicited some “cooperation” from al-Libi through a combination of rough treatment and threats that he would be turned over to Egyptian intelligence with even greater experience in the torture business.

 

By June 2002, al-Libi had told the CIA that Iraq had “provided” unspecified chemical and biological weapons training for two al-Qaeda operatives, an allegation that soon found its way into other U.S. intelligence reports. Al-Libi’s treatment improved as he expanded on his tales about collaboration between al-Qaeda and Iraq, adding that three al-Qaeda operatives had gone to Iraq “to learn about nuclear weapons.”

 

Al-Libi’s claim was well received at the White House even though the Defense Intelligence Agency was suspicious.

 

“He lacks specific details” about the supposed training, the DIA observed. “It is possible he does not know any further details; it is more likely this individual is intentionally misleading the debriefers. Ibn al-Shaykh has been undergoing debriefs for several weeks and may be describing scenarios to the debriefers that he knows will retain their interest.”

 

Meanwhile, at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, Maj. Paul Burney, a psychiatrist sent there in summer 2002, told the Senate, “A large part of the time we were focused on trying to establish a link between al-Qaeda and Iraq and we were not successful. The more frustrated people got in not being able to establish that link … there was more and more pressure to resort to measures that might produce more immediate results.”

 

***

 

President Bush relied on al-Libi’s false Iraq allegation for a major speech in Cincinnati on Oct. 7, 2002, just a few days before Congress voted on the Iraq War resolution. Bush declared, “We’ve learned that Iraq has trained al-Qaeda members in bomb making and poisons and deadly gases.”

 

And Colin Powell relied on it for his famous speech to the United Nations on Feb. 5, 2003, declaring: “I can trace the story of a senior terrorist operative telling how Iraq provided training in these [chemical and biological] weapons to al-Qaeda. Fortunately, this operative is now detained, and he has told his story.”

 

Al-Libi’s “evidence” helped Powell as he sought support for what he ended up calling a “sinister nexus” between Iraq and al-Qaeda, in the general effort to justify invading Iraq.

 

For a while, al-Libi was practically the poster boy for the success of the Cheney/Bush torture regime; that is, until he publicly recanted and explained that he only told his interrogators what he thought would stop the torture.

 

You see, despite his cooperation, al-Libi was still shipped to Egypt where he underwent more abuse, according to a declassified CIA cable from early 2004 when al-Libi recanted his earlier statements. The cable reported that al-Libi said Egyptian interrogators wanted information about al-Qaeda’s connections with Iraq, a subject “about which [al-Libi] said he knew nothing and had difficulty even coming up with a story.”

 

According to the CIA cable, al-Libi said his interrogators did not like his responses and “placed him in a small box” for about 17 hours. After he was let out of the box, al-Libi was given a last chance to “tell the truth.” When his answers still did not satisfy, al-Libi says he “was knocked over with an arm thrust across his chest and fell on his back” and then was “punched for 15 minutes.”

 

After Al-Libi recanted, the CIA recalled all intelligence reports based on his statements, a fact recorded in a footnote to the report issued by the 9/11 Commission. By then, however, the Bush administration had gotten its way regarding the invasion of Iraq and the disastrous U.S. occupation was well underway.

 

***

 

Intensive investigations into these allegations – after the U.S. military had conquered Iraq – failed to turn up any credible evidence to corroborate these allegations. What we do know is that Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were bitter enemies, with al-Qaeda considering the secular Hussein an apostate to Islam.

 

Al-Libi, who ended up in prison in Libya, reportedly committed suicide shortly after he was discovered there by a human rights organization. Thus, the world never got to hear his own account of the torture that he experienced and the story that he presented and then recanted.

 

Hafed al-Ghwell, a Libyan-American and a prominent critic of Muammar Gaddafi’s regime at the time of al-Libi’s death, explained to Newsweek, “This idea of committing suicide in your prison cell is an old story in Libya.”

Paul Krugman [whatever you think of his economics, he got this one right] eloquently summarized the truth about the torture used:

Let’s say this slowly: the Bush administration wanted to use 9/11 as a pretext to invade Iraq, even though Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11. So it tortured people to make them confess to the nonexistent link.

There’s a word for this: it’s evil.

Torture Program Was Part of a Con Job

As discussed above, in order to “justify” the Iraq war, top Bush administration officials pushed and insisted that interrogators use special torture methods aimed at extracting false confessions to attempt to create a false linkage between between Al Qaida and Iraq. And see this and this.

But this effort started earlier …

5 hours after the 9/11 attacks, Donald Rumsfeld said “my interest is to hit Saddam”.

He also said “Go massive . . . Sweep it all up. Things related and not.”

And at 2:40 p.m. on September 11th, in a memorandum of discussions between top administration officials, several lines below the statement “judge whether good enough [to] hit S.H. [that is, Saddam Hussein] at same time”, is the statement “Hard to get a good case.” In other words, top officials knew that there wasn’t a good case that Hussein was behind 9/11, but they wanted to use the 9/11 attacks as an excuse to justify war with Iraq anyway.

Moreover, “Ten days after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, President Bush was told in a highly classified briefing that the U.S. intelligence community had no evidence linking the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein to the [9/11] attacks and that there was scant credible evidence that Iraq had any significant collaborative ties with Al Qaeda”.

And a Defense Intelligence Terrorism Summary issued in February 2002 by the United States Defense Intelligence Agency cast significant doubt on the possibility of a Saddam Hussein-al-Qaeda conspiracy.

And yet Bush, Cheney and other top administration officials claimed repeatedly for years that Saddam was behind 9/11. See this analysis. Indeed, Bush administration officials apparently swore in a lawsuit that Saddam was behind 9/11.

Moreover, President Bush’s March 18, 2003 letter to Congress authorizing the use of force against Iraq, includes the following paragraph:

(2) acting pursuant to the Constitution and Public Law 107-243 is consistent with the United States and other countries continuing to take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations, or persons who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.

Therefore, the Bush administration expressly justified the Iraq war to Congress by representing that Iraq planned, authorized, committed, or aided the 9/11 attacks.

Indeed, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Ron Suskind reports that the White House ordered the CIA to forge and backdate a document falsely linking Iraq with Muslim terrorists and 9/11 … and that the CIA complied with those instructions and in fact created the forgery, which was then used to justify war against Iraq. And see this.

Suskind also revealed that “Bush administration had information from a top Iraqi intelligence official ‘that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq – intelligence they received in plenty of time to stop an invasion.’ ”

Cheney made the false linkage between Iraq and 9/11 on many occasions.

For example, according to Raw Story, Cheney was still alleging a connection between Iraq and the alleged lead 9/11 hijacker in September 2003 – a year after it had been widely debunked. When NBC’s Tim Russert asked him about a poll showing that 69% of Americans believed Saddam Hussein had been involved in 9/11, Cheney replied:

It’s not surprising that people make that connection.

And even after the 9/11 Commission debunked any connection, Cheney said that the evidence is “overwhelming” that al Qaeda had a relationship with Saddam Hussein’s regime , that Cheney “probably” had information unavailable to the Commission, and that the media was not ‘doing their homework’ in reporting such ties.

Again, the Bush administration expressly justified the Iraq war by representing that Iraq planned, authorized, committed, or aided the 9/11 attacks. See this, this, this.

Even then-CIA director George Tenet said that the White House wanted to invade Iraq long before 9/11, and inserted “crap” in its justifications for invading Iraq.

Former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill – who sat on the National Security Council – also says that Bush planned the Iraq war before 9/11.

Top British officials say that the U.S. discussed Iraq regime change even before Bush took office.

And in 2000, Cheney said a Bush administration might “have to take military action to forcibly remove Saddam from power.” And see this.

The administration’s false claims about Saddam and 9/11 helped convince a large portion of the American public to support the invasion of Iraq. While the focus now may be on false WMD claims, it is important to remember that, at the time, the alleged link between Iraq and 9/11 was at least as important in many people’s mind as a reason to invade Iraq.

So the torture program was really all about “justifying” the ultimate war crime:  launching an unnecessary war of aggression based upon false pretenses.

Postscript:   It is beyond any real dispute that torture does not work to produce any useful, truthful intelligence.  Today, the following question made it to the front page of Reddit:

Why would the CIA torture if torture “doesn’t work”? Wouldn’t they want the most effective tool to gather intelligence?

The Senate Armed Services Committee report gave the answer.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1z1uEuU George Washington

US Oil Rig Count Tumbles Most In 2 Years

We warned just a week ago that the lag between initial price declines in oil and the closure of rigs was between 4 and 6 months and just as we warned of the deja-vu all over again, Banker Hughes reports that the Rig Count this week dropped the most since March 2013 (oil rigs dropped 29 to 1546 – biggest weekly drop in 2 years). The biggest drop was seen in the Permian Basin (down 20 to 548). Of course, it’s being ignored for now, just as it was in 2008…

 

Worst weekly drop in rig count since March 2013…

 

With Oil Rigs down 3rd most in 5 years…

 

And as a reminder, what happened last time…

 

Unequivocally good…

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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The Pentagon Can Have Whatever It Wants. As Long As It’s Not Less Money.

There is a lot of defense spending in your future. 

The proposed defense budget is $554.2 billion, including $64
billion in war spending. The important number is the $490.1 billion
“base budget.” It is $3.3 billion larger than the amount allocated
for fiscal 2014 and $3 billion higher than the Pentagon itself
requested. Yes, that’s right: Congressional leaders are
forcing money on the Pentagon.

According to Politico Pro, that
extra $3 billion is not only packed with “goodies for the
military’s top defense contractors, including aerospace giants
Lockheed Martin and Boeing,” it’s a sign that the
commander-in-chief is already a lame duck.

President Barack Obama is losing some of the control over the
defense budget that his administration clawed away from top
military commanders early in his presidency, with the service
chiefs and Congress once again openly conspiring to undo tough
spending decisions made by the White House and the Pentagon.

The result: an omnibus spending package for this fiscal year
that includes money to buy lots of weapons the Pentagon didn’t
request but top commanders signaled they wanted anyway.

Here are some examples of the stuff Congress added above the
Pentagon’s requested:

The bill would reject some of the Pentagon’s major cost-cutting
efforts and shift money to congressionally popular programs such as
the A-10 close air support aircraft, called the “Warthog;” Boeing’s
radar-jamming EA-18G Growlers; and Raytheon Co.’s Tomahawk missiles
and ships, including the preservation of the aircraft carrier USS
George Washington.

The bill also includes four more F-35 planes than the Pentagon
requested, for a total of 38 planes. The F-35 is already more than a decade
overdue, more than 100 percent over budget, and it currently can’t
fly at night, in clouds, or near lightning.

This sort of profligate spending is consistent with what we saw
during the Bush years. A recent report from the Congressional Budget
Office (CBO) found that inflation-adjusted base funding jumped from
$384 billion in fiscal year 2000 to $502 billion in fiscal year
2014. That’s an increase of 31 percent. 

However, even that fat increase doesn’t do full justice to the
tremendous splurge in defense spending during the Bush years. There
was a 52 percent increase between 2001’s base budget (the lowest of
the decade) and 2010 (its peak level). These numbers exclude the
trillions of dollars spent on wars since 2003. Nor do they account
for all the defense-related spending that goes through other
departments such as the Department of Homeland Security and the
Department of Energy.

Defense contractors have benefited handsomely over the
past 15 years. They were somewhat frustrated by the minimal caps
placed on defense spending via sequestration, but they shouldn’t
have worried. Spending caps, especially when they are tied to
defense, are meant to be broken. Contractors are poised to keep
doing well, despite the ending of most operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan.

 The fastest growing share of the
Defense budget is pay and benefits for military and civilian
Defense Department employees, which has increased 46 percent in
real dollars. And of course, it is worse than it looks since
there are also substantial personnel costs contained within the
operations and maintenance component (O&M) of the budget. That
jumped 34 percent in real dollars between 2000 and 2014.

As with other parts of the federal government, health care
and pe
nsion costs for Defense workers are well on
their way to bankrupting us all. As 
we explained over at Mercatus:

About one-third of this increase was driven by increases
in federal civilian employee pay and benefits, excluding health
insurance. The cost of the Defense Health Benefits program doubled,
which accounted for another third of the increase in O&M. As
the CBO notes, “primary reasons for that growth are the new and
expanded TRICARE benefits that lawmakers authorized, including
expanded benefits for reservists and their families, and the very
low out-of-pocket costs of TRICARE relative to other health care
plans.” The rest of the increase in the O&M component can be
attributed to rising fuel costs, operations support, and
“other.” 

Congress clearly has no intention of refomring these
bloated programs. What’s make it even worse, Pentagon officials—who
understand that more health care spending means fewer tanks and
bombs—tried to include changes that would slow the rate of growth
in benefits in the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act. It
turns out that the military can get anything it wants. As long as
it’s not less money.

In 2012, Reason TV outlined “3 Reasons Conservatives
Should Cut Defense Spending Now!” Watch below:

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DOJ Gives Yellow Light to Pot Shops on Indian Reservations

It’s not
clear that any Indian reservations are clamoring to sell pot along
with cheap smokes and chances to win at blackjack. But if they want
to explore this new revenue option,
that apparently is OK
with the U.S. Justice Department,
provided they follow the same guidelines that states with legal
marijuana are expected to keep in mind.

Yesterday the Justice Department issued a
memo
that extends the logic of its August 2013
guidance
concerning marijuana cases to Indian Country. Should
any reservations decide to allow marijuana cultivation and sales,
the new guidance says, U.S. attorneys should focus on cases that
implicate the “federal law enforcement priorities” listed in that
earlier memo, which include interstate smuggling, sales to minors,
and links to criminal organizations. The implication is that if
reservations establish “robust and effective regulatory systems,”
prosecuting growers and retailers who comply with them would not be
a good use of federal resources.

At the same time, reservations that do not allow marijuana can
still call upon the Justice Department to enforce that ban, even if
they are located in states that have legalized the drug. According
to John Walsh, the U.S. attorney for Colorado, that assurance was
the main goal of the memo.

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Robby Soave Discusses the Rolling Stone Rape Story Debacle on CNN’s Smerconish at 9 am ET Saturday

UVAI will talk
about all the latest news relating to the travesty of journalism
that is Rolling Stone‘s University of Virginia rape
story on CNN’s Smerconish this
Saturday. The program airs at 9 am ET and 6 pm ET.

For more on this subject, go
here
.

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