Donald Trump Goes All In for the Military-Industrial Complex – The Nation.
Donald Trump used his first Joint Address to the Congress of the United States to engage in an unprecedented flight of fiscal fantasy. Specifically, the president imagined that the United States could cut taxes for wealthy Americans and corporations, rip tens of billions of dollars out of domestic programs (and diplomacy), hand that money over to the military-industrial complex, and somehow remain a functional and genuinely strong nation.
Trump did not articulate this agenda quite so bluntly. His hour-long speech was far more traditional and temperate in character than his ballistic inaugural address. The themes were, for the most part, predictable: construction of a great wall along our southern border, vetting procedures, for every one new regulation, two old regulations must be eliminated, school choice, construction of the Keystone and Dakota Access Pipelines. The rhetoric was, by the standards of this presidency, disciplined. But the specifics were few. Only toward the end did the president get specific, saying, I am sending the Congress a budget that rebuilds the military, eliminates the Defense sequester, and calls for one of the largest increases in national defense spending in American history.
Trump was not at all specific about paying for that increaseaside from mentioning the fact that he had placed a hiring freeze on non-military and non-essential Federal workers. But his administration has been clear about its hope that the money will come from deep cuts to domestic programs.
This argument in favor of austerity for working families and munificence for military contractors (the presidents speech actually talked up Lockheed and the fantastic new F-35 jet fighter) is not exactly new. It has been a conservative mantra since the Grand Old Party purged itself of the Modern Republicans who clung to the vision of former President Dwight Eisenhower and made theirs a party of reaction rather than reason. But even Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush eschewed the budgetary extremism that Trump has embraced with an immediacy and a fervor that arrests any fantasy that a billionaire populist president might steer his adopted party back from the brink.
Dwight Eisenhower warned of a burden of arms draining the wealth and the labor of all peoples.
The Budget Blueprint that Trump took to Congress on Tuesday night did not plot a course to make America great again. It tipped the balance against greatness by making what the first Republican president, Abraham Lincoln, referred to as the last best hope of earth into an ever more heavily militarized state that will not care for its own.
This is not an accidental turn.
This is by design. But it is not a grand design; rather, it is an approach that Trump has adopted as he has moved from the capricious politics of his initial candidacy to the reality of a ever more rigidly right-wing presidency.
Mick Mulvaney, Trumps man at the Office of Management and Budget, said on the eve of the presidents Budget Blueprint speech, The president is doing what he said hed do when he ran. But Trump said a lot of things when he was bidding for the presidency in 2016: He made big promises about jobs and infrastructure, delivering more and better health care, protecting Social Security and Medicare. He portrayed himself as a critic of the war in Iraq, a skeptic about new military adventures, and a critic of the fraud and abuse and everything else in bloated Department of Defense budgets. Im gonna build a military thats gonna be much stronger than it is right now, he announced on NBCs Meet the Press in 2015. Its gonna be so strong, nobodys gonna mess with us, he promised. But you know what? We can do it for a lot less.
That seemed reasonably definitive.
Yes, of course, Trump bounced all over the ideological landscape during the 2016 campaign, and his presidency hasnt exactly been a model of consistency.
Even with that fact in mind, however, it must have surprised at least a few Trump backers to learn from Mulvaney that bloating up the Pentagon budget was such a high priority of the Trump campaign. What you see in this budget, the budget director explained Tuesday, is exactly what the president ran on. He ran on increasing spending on the military
Mulvaney was unsettlingly vague when asked about keeping Trumps promise to guard against Social Security cuts. But he was clear about the general thrust of the administrations approach to budgeting.
We must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influenceby the military-industrial complex. Eisenhower
[We] took $54 billion out of non-defense discretionary spending in order to increase defense spendingentirely consistent with what the president said that he would do, Mulvaney explained. So whats the president done? Hes protected the nation, but not added any additional money to the 2018 deficit. This is a winning argument for my friends in the House and a winning argument for a lot of folks all over the country. The president does what he says but doesnt add to the budget [deficit]. Thats a win.
Mulvaney is wrong. Thats not a win.
That does not protect Americaat least not in the sense that Democratic and Republican presidents have historically understood the preservation of the republic. Budgeting is always a matter of striking balances. And when there is an imbalance, the American experiment is threatened.
Dwight Eisenhower explained this when he appeared barely two months into his presidency before the American Society of Newspaper Editors. The speech was much anticipated. Eisenhower was the first Republican commander in chief in two decades, and he was still placing his imprint on the Oval Office, the country and a world that was in the grips of a Cold War. The new president could have chosen any topic for his first major address to the assembled media luminaries. He chose as his topic the proper balancing of budget priorities.
Eisenhower recognized the threats that existed. He spoke, at length, about difficult relations between the United States and the Soviet Union and he addressed the threat of annihilation posed by the spread of atomic weaponry. But the career military manthe supreme commander of the Allied Expeditionary Forces in Europe during World War II, the chief of staff of the Army during the postwar era when tensions with Moscow rosedid not come to suggest that increased defense spending was a singular priority. In fact, his purpose was the opposite. He spoke of the dread road of constant military escalation and warned about a burden of arms draining the wealth and the labor of all peoples; a wasting of strength that defies the American system or the Soviet system or any system to achieve true abundance and happiness for the peoples of this earth.
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed, said Eisenhower, who explained that
This world in arms is not spending money alone.
It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.
The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this: a modern brick school in more than 30 cities.
It is two electric power plants, each serving a town of 60,000 population.
It is two fine, fully equipped hospitals.
It is some 50 miles of concrete highway.
We pay for a single fighter with a half million bushels of wheat.
We pay for a single destroyer with new homes that could have housed more than 8,000 people.
This, I repeat, is the best way of life to be found on the road the world has been taking.
This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.
Eisenhower did not propose surrender or immediate disarmament. But he did propose diplomacy (We welcome every honest act of peace), and the sincere pursuit of a world with fewer weapons and fewer excuses for war making (This we do know: a world that begins to witness the rebirth of trust among nations can find its way to a peace that is neither partial nor punitive).
The fruit of success in all these tasks would present the world with the greatest task, and the greatest opportunity, of all, explained Eisenhower. It is this: the dedication of the energies, the resources, and the imaginations of all peaceful nations to a new kind of war. This would be a declared total war, not upon any human enemy but upon the brute forces of poverty and need.
The monuments to this new kind of war would be these: roads and schools, hospitals and homes, food and health, the new president concluded. We are ready, in short, to dedicate our strength to serving the needs, rather than the fears, of the world.
These are different times. The world has changed, and so has the United States. But what has changed the most is the understanding that providing for the common defense does not preclude the promotion of the general welfare.
Conservatives like to say there is no free lunch, and that is true enough when it comes to budgeting. It is not possible to move tens of billions of dollars out of domestic programs that have already in many cases been squeezed to austerity levels and into a military budget so vast, the National Priorities Project reports, that U.S. military expenditures are roughly the size of the next seven largest military budgets around the world, combined.
On a planet where Americans account for 4.34 percent of the population, US military spending accounts for 37 percent of the global total. And Trumpwith Mulvaneys assistanceappears to be determined to move the latter percentage upward.
That is a problematic imbalance in itself. But what makes it even more problematic is Mulvaneys signal that, under Trump, the imbalance will be maintained not by collecting new revenues but by redistributing money that could have been spent on health care and housing and education at homeand on the international diplomacy and foreign aid that might actually reduce the need for military expenditures. While Trump claims hes serious about great negotiation, his plan to pillage funds from the State Department and foreign aid to feed the insatiable Pentagon budget says otherwise, notes Peace Action Executive Director Jon Rainwater. Instead of putting Americans first, Trump plans to line the arms industrys pockets by cutting programs like health care that provide real security to American families says otherwise.
This is the realization of the worst fears that Eisenhower addressed, not just in his 1953 Cross of Iron speech but in the final address of his presidency, which warned that we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex.
We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes, said the 34th president. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals so that security and liberty may prosper together.
See more here:
Donald Trump Goes All In for the Military-Industrial Complex - The Nation.
- Donald Trump Supporters Are Waking Up To The Reality Of Their Ballot Choices, And The Stories Are A Loooooot - Yahoo - February 20th, 2025 [February 20th, 2025]
- It took Donald Trump less than a decade to turn the US toward Putins Russia - CNN - February 20th, 2025 [February 20th, 2025]
- Are We Still Friends?: How Donald Trump Is Unraveling the Western Alliance - Vanity Fair - February 20th, 2025 [February 20th, 2025]
- Prediction: President Donald Trump Will Break His Social Security Promise and Propose Cuts -- Just Not in the Way You Might Think - The Motley Fool - February 16th, 2025 [February 16th, 2025]
- It Pays to Be a Friend of Donald Trump - The FP - February 16th, 2025 [February 16th, 2025]
- Donald Trump's 'Drastic' Funding Cuts Face Republican Opposition - Newsweek - February 16th, 2025 [February 16th, 2025]
- President Donald Trump Hangs His Framed Mugshot Outside the Oval Office - E! Online - E! NEWS - February 16th, 2025 [February 16th, 2025]
- Donald Trump wants states and cities to do as they are told - The Economist - February 16th, 2025 [February 16th, 2025]
- Donald Trump Wants Reciprocity in Trade: Heres a Closer Look - Council on Foreign Relations - February 16th, 2025 [February 16th, 2025]
- Interview with President Donald Trump airing ahead of Super Bowl 59: How to watch - USA TODAY - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- Donald Trump set to make history at the Super Bowl. Heres why hell hate kick-off. - MLive.com - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- Donald Trump golfs with Tiger Woods ahead of expected Super Bowl LIX visit - New York Post - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- The Observer view: Vengeful and reckless, Donald Trump must not go unchallenged | Observer editorial - The Guardian - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- Donald Trump will be at Super Bowl LIX, and he is not happy with the rules - PennLive - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- Why Chip Roy is one of Donald Trump's biggest threats - POLITICO - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- What did Donald Trump throw to his inauguration crowd? Find out in the news quiz - NPR - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- We tracked California's lawsuits against Donald Trump. Here's where the state won and lost - CalMatters - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Contempt is a dangerous way to lead a country: here is the sermon that enraged Donald Trump | Mariann Edgar Budde - The Guardian - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Donald Trump finds new ways to flex presidential power after returning to the White House - The Associated Press - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- What to know about President Donald Trump's order targeting the rights of transgender people - The Associated Press - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Donald Trump Jr. arrives in Greenland with a message from his dad: 'Were going to treat you well' - The Associated Press - January 7th, 2025 [January 7th, 2025]
- Donald Trump Jr. arrives in Greenland after his father said the U.S. should own the Arctic territory - ABC News - January 7th, 2025 [January 7th, 2025]
- Live updates: Carter casket arrives at Capitol; Donald Trump comments on Greenland, Gulf of Mexico - The Hill - January 7th, 2025 [January 7th, 2025]
- Donald Trump Jr arrives in Greenland as his father says Denmark give it up - Fox News - January 7th, 2025 [January 7th, 2025]
- Donald Trump fumes over flag flying at half-staff to honor Jimmy Carter during inauguration - Yahoo! Voices - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Donald Trump Will Be Sentenced on 34 Felony Convictions Before Inauguration - PEOPLE - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- How Donald Trump reacted to Mike Johnson winning the House speaker vote - CBS News - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Letters to the Editor: A wokoso on the reasons more Latinos voted for Donald Trump - Los Angeles Times - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Mike Johnson reelected as House speaker with support from President-elect Donald Trump - USA TODAY - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Donald Trump Muddies the Waters in New Orleans - Vanity Fair - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Donald Trump to Be Sentenced Days Before Swearing In as President - Newsweek - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- How anti-woke spin did the business for Donald Trump - The Guardian US - December 2nd, 2024 [December 2nd, 2024]
- Sen. Alex Padilla says Donald Trump has "made it no secret that he has it in for California - CBS News - December 2nd, 2024 [December 2nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump tests the system of checks and balances just weeks after election - USA TODAY - December 2nd, 2024 [December 2nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump threatens BRICS countries that move away from dollar - Semafor - December 2nd, 2024 [December 2nd, 2024]
- 2 Changes Donald Trump Wants to Make to Social Security: Will 2026 Be the Year They Become Reality? - Yahoo Finance - December 2nd, 2024 [December 2nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump reveals exclusively to The Post what he and Biden spoke about at DC meeting - New York Post - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Republicans win 218 US House seats, giving Donald Trump and the party control of government - The Associated Press - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Tells House Republicans He Won't Seek a Third Term Unless They 'Figure' Out a Way to Allow It - PEOPLE - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Tesla is not the only winner under Donald Trump - The Economist - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Jr. Opts Out of White House to Join 1789 Capital - Bloomberg - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Opinion | Americans ordered up Donald Trump. The world will foot the bill. - The Washington Post - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Opinion: Reflections from across The Pond on Donald Trump's re-election - Palm Beach Post - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- How could Donald Trump target the LGBTQ+ community? Project 2025 is a ready blueprint for discrimination - The Conversation - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Donald Trump has sweeping plans for a second administration. Heres what hes proposed - The Associated Press - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- UK minister grilled over tweet branding Donald Trump a self-confessed groper - POLITICO Europe - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- South Korean president practising golf to prepare for future meetings with Donald Trump - The Guardian - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Kamala Harris and Donald Trump hold dueling rallies in swing-state Michigan as it happened - The Guardian US - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- I visited a small, struggling, climate-ravaged town in Louisiana. Why is Donald Trump certain to win here? - The Guardian US - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump, Not at All Worried About Losing the Election, Demands Kamala Harris Be Forced Off the Campaign - Vanity Fair - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Just Insulted Every Autoworker in Michigan - The Nation - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump doesnt sound too excited about asking Nikki Haley for help - Semafor - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Says Hell Ask Rupert Murdoch to Direct Fox News to Halt Negative Ads Against Him - Hollywood Reporter - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Says On Fox & Friends That Hes Meeting With Rupert Murdoch To Tell Him To Pull Negative Ads And Ban Horrible Democratic Critics -... - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Exhausted and Refusing Interviews: Report - The Daily Beast - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Shares Candid Thoughts on Harvey Weinstein: 'He Got Schlonged' - Newsweek - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump says Apple boss Tim Cook called him with EU concerns - BBC.com - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- A failed mic leaves Donald Trump pacing the stage in silence for nearly 20 minutes - Yahoo! Voices - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Why is Donald Trump campaigning in California, a state hes almost certain to lose? - The Associated Press - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Sebastian Stan on Losing Sleep Over Not Resembling Donald Trump, That Scene From The Apprentice and Fing Hard Action Movies: Tom Cruise Is Not a... - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- That Sure Is One Way to Convince Young Men Not to Vote for Donald Trump - Slate - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- The View co-hosts come out swinging at Donald Trump a day after he insulted them - The Associated Press - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Opinion | Yes, this is what Donald Trump really sounds like. No, you cannot ignore it. - The Washington Post - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Bemoans His Team Using Wrong Picture at Rally: 'So Stupid' - Newsweek - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Disaster politics: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are the latest to deal with fallout - USA TODAY - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Donald Trump makes a theatrical return to Butler, scene of assassination attempt - The Guardian US - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Opinion | JD Vance Is Smoother but No Better Than Donald Trump - The New York Times - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Mike Johnson refuses to say Donald Trump lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden - USA TODAY - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Melania Trump says Donald Trump 'knew my position and my beliefs' on abortion 'since the day we met' - NBC News - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- How Donald Trump Jr. Became the Crown Prince of MAGA World - The Wall Street Journal - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Donald Trump in Bulter: Time stood still at site of assassination attempt, he says - BBC.com - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Noticias Univision Townhall with Former President Donald Trump Moved to Wednesday, Oct. 16 Due to Hurricane Milton - Univision Communications - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Donald Trump returns to scene of rally shooting in Butler - BBC.com - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Joe: Vance clearly said he was going to continue the lies of Donald Trump - MSNBC - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- JD Vance again refuses to say Donald Trump lost the 2020 presidential election - The Associated Press - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Claims Kim Jong Un Is Trying to Kill Me, Rants About Water-Free Bathrooms During Incoherent-Even-for-Him Remarks - Vanity Fair - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Mocked Jimmy Carter on the Former President's 100th Birthday - Newsweek - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Make Them Riot: Newly Unsealed Filing Gives New Details Of Federal Election Conspiracy Case Against Donald Trump - Deadline - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Gets October Boost as Flurry of Polls Give Him the Edge - Newsweek - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Opinion | The Dangers of Donald Trump, From Those Who Know Him - The New York Times - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]