How Much Is Too Much?Our Economy Or War?
Hello,
Today I shall diviate from my usual blogging to express some concerns and I do hope each of you have the same concerns, for the future of this [ Our} country.
As of today, we've spent over $495 billion in Iraq.
1. With the economy in the tank, think about what that money could do here at home: Cover millions of kids who don't have insurance, or help folks who're losing their jobs and homes.
Instead, it's supporting a failed occupation in Iraq.
More and more Americans are making the connection between the billions we've spent over there and the crumbling economy here at home. In fact, a new AP poll shows that most Americans think ending the war is the best way to help the economy.
2. But pundits still talk about the war and the economy as two unrelated things.
We need to make sure that politicians and pundits understand what voters already know: As long as we keep pouring that money down the drain in Iraq, we won't have the money we need to solve our economic woes.
Have you considered writing to your local newspaper editor and express your concerns on what the public needs to know,about how much we're spending in Iraq, while things go south here at home? By speaking out together, we can make sure the cost of war is part of the economic equation. Our tool makes writing a letter easy. Click here to get started:
Letter
If thousands of us write, we can get the media to stop ignoring the connection between the war and the recession. The opinion pages are the most widely read pages in the newspaper, so we can also make sure voters—who are growing increasingly concerned about the economy—know that any candidate who wants to stay in Iraq has no plan for the economy.
The ongoing occupation in Iraq is sucking up the resources we need to make our economy work again. The tradeoffs are stark: Bombs or unemployment insurance for people laid off as the economy slows? Billions for Halliburton and Blackwater, or help for people on the verge of losing their homes because of the subprime meltdown? Consider these key facts:
The recession is going to force states to cut back their budgets. Most likely, the cuts are going to affect the services that working families need and depend on.
3. Meanwhile,the war is costing Americans more than $338 million a day.
4. That money could be spent to help out the folks who're hurting most now. For less than what we're spending on the war, we could pay for affordable housing for hundreds of thousands of families,{The units FEMA provided for Katrina Victims are now known to be unsfafe and taxpayers paid millions for those, have we gone mad.} health care for children, or scholarships to help folks pay for education.
5.Gas prices are close to double what they were before the war began. The cost of oil is still hovering around $100 barrel.Is this what the american people want?
6.We're borrowing $343 million every day to finance the war in Iraq.
7. Our skyrocketing debt will be a bigger and bigger drag on the economy—slowing recovery and burdening future generations.
The truth is that economic forecasts are going to continue to be grim as long as we continue to dump billions into a reckless war that has no end in sight. Please write a letter to the editor of your local paper today:
Letter
A program two nights ago was about the economy and that Americans will need to face the fact that Social Security and Medi-care are a large part of it,If the IOU's Our politicians are ok'ng to be put into the SS fund were stopped we could have what is needed but this borrowing is insane. Our politicians are taking our SS fund and using it now and we only have those IOU's and no money.
Thanks to everyone,
Margie
Being a senior if you want to see what I am trying to earn some more income go here:
Margies
1. "The War in Iraq Costs, National Priorities Project," January 2008
CostofWar
2.
APPoll
3. "State and Local Governments Need Fiscal Relief." AFSCME, January 29, 2008
State/LocalGov
4. The Economy & The War In Iraq, Factsheet from Speaker Pelosi, February 13, 2008
EconomyandWar
5. "Federal Budget Trade-Offs, National Priorities Project," February 2008
FederalBudget
6. "Oil prices continue higher above 91 usd mark as possible Fed rate cut eyed," CNN, January 29, 2008
Oilprices
7. "Hidden Costs to the War in Iraq," Rep. Murtha in Huffington Post, January 28, 2008
Hiddencosts
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