Community | February 20, 2011 | 4 comments

Bringing home 150 troops from Afghanistan would fix Wisconsin's budget "crisis"

JanforGore
Wisconsin’s Governor Scott Walker is using phony budget projections to manufacture a staged “fiscal emergency” in his state so that he can whack programs and political opponents, but even his fake “emergency” pales in comparison to the cost of the Afghanistan War to his state. In fact, the U.S. would only have to bring home 151 troops from Afghanistan to save more money than Walker’s ridiculous union-busting plan. Better yet, ending the Afghanistan War altogether would save taxpayers in Wisconsin $1.7 billion this year alone, more than ten times the amount “saved” in Walker’s attack on state employee rights.

One might ask, “Isn’t Walker’s fake budget crisis a state budget issue? How would ending the Afghanistan War pay for that?” We get this question a lot when we talk about the cost of war to a state’s taxpayer. Keep in mind that state budgets are tangled with federal spending. That’s especially true over the past couple of years, as state budgets have relied on federal Recovery Act funds to balance their books during the recession. Spending decisions at the federal level are therefore doubly important, as they not only affect the national budget, but also what funds are available to help preserve state-level public structures.

That brings us to Walker’s slash-and-burn approach to the state budget. 



“Under Walker’s plan, most public workers – excluding police, firefighters and state troopers – would have to pay half of their pension costs and at least 12 percent of their health-care costs. They would lose bargaining rights for anything other than pay. Walker, who took office last month, says the emergency measure would save $300 million over the next two years to help close a $3.6 billion budget gap.”

So on average, Walker’s slash-and-burn attack on the unions in his state would save $150 million per year for two years. But if Wisconsin is truly in a state of fiscal emergency, as Walker claims, why is he not demanding the president withdraw troops from Afghanistan and make the savings available as fiscal aid to states? Every troop deployed in Afghanistan costs the U.S. $1 million per year, so simply bringing home 151 troops would save more money than his plan. And, with fiscal 2011 Afghanistan War spending alone to top $1.7 billion for Wisconsin taxpayers, an end to the war would free up more than ten times his plan’s cash, which the president could use for state fiscal aid.

Of course, the end of the Afghanistan War would mean that people with whom Walker is cozy would lose some important revenue streams. Remember Wackenhut, the war contractors that disgraced us by holding drunken, nude firelight romps in Afghanistan on the State Department’s dime? Walker got them a sweet privatized state security contract in a prior fit of “cost-savings” that failed to add up. But who needs to rein in death, destruction and obscenity when you can take a whack at the unions, right?

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    Community,   Current Tonight,   Afghanistan News
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    War Afghanistan Wisconsin Unions 3 more
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4 comments // Bringing home 150 troops from Afghanistan would fix Wisconsin's budget "crisis" // Video

  • Milieu
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Milieu:

      Yes, well _ them. We need a real anti-war movement in this country not based on politics but morality to get in their ugly faces and stay there. A billion dollars a week spent on this "war" when they go after working Americans whose children are fighting that war? Outrageous.

    • 1 year ago
  • Milieu
    • 0
      Milieu  
    • JanforGore:

      Of course it's outrageous and immoral, but how do you think the, and I use the term loosely, "people" got as rich as they are?

      Why is the 2nd richest person in the world going after the public schools?

      He wants the monies that are pumped into schools and he doesn't care what/who gets destroyed in the process.

      It's quite likely that Gates has a hand in what's happening in WI as well as the Kochs.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
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