Defense priorities dangerously off-track
August 20, 2010 | By Bethany S. Murphy
With an exploding budget crisis, President Obama is proposing spending cuts, but not where you’d think. Has he decided to stop campaigning on behalf of Democratic Congressional members up for reelection at the taxpayers’ expense to the tune of two million dollars
Iran and North Korea are rapidly developing nuclear weapons capability while the Obama administration relies on more of the same sanctions that not only haven’t worked
The American people do not support this cut in defense spending, with 57 percent in a new NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll
“Defense is not the culprit of our budget woes, and it shouldn’t bear the brunt of the Obama Administration’s efforts to look fiscally responsible. This year, defense accounts for 19 percent of all federal spending, compared with 57 percent for our entitlement programs.”
At such a crucial turning point in America’s history, the first year and a half of President Obama’s administration has been devoted to passing “stimulus” packages that have not spurred the promised economic growth
In the newly published Solutions for America
Other Heritage Work of Note
- On Human EventsHeritage’s Rob Bluey outlines the new Heritage release Solutions for America, proving that conservatives have innovative solutions for getting our country back on the right track.
- Multinationals are faced with the following dilemma: Protect their bottom line and the jobs of their employees (many of whom are poor citizens of the developing world), or acquiesce to the demands of far-left organizations like GreenPeace? On FoxNews.comHeritage Research Fellow James Roberts discusses this issue, asking “How is it socially responsible to deny a livelihood to them and their families?”
- With America pulling out the last of its combat troops from Iraq, Heritage’s James Carafanooutlines America’s victory beyond what most thought was possible three years ago, and offers advice for the future of US operations there.
- The Department of Commerce has been boasting the funding of a $30 million coastal restoration project in the wake of the BP oil spill. There is one problem, as Heritage’s Rob Blueypoints out: the project was approved almost four years ago and the funding approved months before the spill.
- In a piece on Forbes.com The Heritage Foundation’s Derek Scissorstracks down Chinese investments in order to get a more accurate picture of the economic climate there beyond the communist government’s “official” data.
In Other News
- Thanks to the surge strategy recommendations of John McCain (R-AZ) and its implementation by former President George Bush, Iraq is looking like a success story for one of the first times since the 2003 invasion. The last US combat troops have pulled outof the country two weeks ahead of their scheduled departure, and the US is on schedule to withdraw the remaining 50,000 troops by the December 31, 2011.
- Despite the administration’s claims of a recovering economy, jobless claims spikedthis past month with 12,000 more Americans out of work and filing for unemployment benefits.
- On the first anniversary of the release of Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has again condemnedthe Scottish decision to free the convicted mass-murderer.
- The day before Iran opened its first nuclear power plant, it has tested a surface-to-surface missileas officials warn against any possible outside attack.
- Once one of America’s strongest economies, California will likely be forced to pay its state employees, who are the highest paid in the nation, using IOUs.California is one of the nation’s most heavily taxed states, and also has one of the highest rates of unemployment, currently at 12 percent.
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