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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DavesM who wrote (420781)6/30/2003 12:25:44 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Yes, your statement was wrong.

Really? And which statement was that?



To: DavesM who wrote (420781)6/30/2003 1:16:40 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
The great leader STICKS IT TO THE TROOPS....even the Army PAPER is lambasting the snake
Issue Date: June 30, 2003

Editorial
Nothing but lip service

In recent months, President Bush and the Republican-controlled Congress have
missed no opportunity to heap richly deserved praise on the military. But talk is
cheap — and getting cheaper by the day, judging from the nickel-and-dime
treatment the troops are getting lately.

For example, the White House griped that various pay-and-benefits incentives
added to the 2004 defense budget by Congress are wasteful and unnecessary —
including a modest proposal to double the $6,000 gratuity paid to families of
troops who die on active duty. This comes at a time when Americans continue to
die in Iraq at a rate of about one a day.

Similarly, the administration announced that on Oct. 1 it wants to roll back
recent modest increases in monthly imminent-danger pay (from $225 to $150)
and family-separation allowance (from $250 to $100) for troops getting shot at
in combat zones.

Then there’s military tax relief — or the lack thereof. As Bush and Republican
leaders in Congress preach the mantra of tax cuts, they can’t seem to find time to
make progress on minor tax provisions that would be a boon to military
homeowners, reservists who travel long distances for training and parents
deployed to combat zones, among others.

Incredibly, one of those tax provisions — easing residency rules for service
members to qualify for capital-gains exemptions when selling a home — has been
a homeless orphan in the corridors of power for more than five years now.

The chintz even extends to basic pay. While Bush’s proposed 2004 defense
budget would continue higher targeted raises for some ranks, he also proposed
capping raises for E-1s, E-2s and O-1s at 2 percent, well below the average raise
of 4.1 percent.

The Senate version of the defense bill rejects that idea, and would provide
minimum 3.7 percent raises for all and higher targeted hikes for some. But the
House version of the bill goes along with Bush, making this an issue still to be
hashed out in upcoming negotiations.

All of which brings us to the latest indignity — Bush’s $9.2 billion military
construction request for 2004, which was set a full $1.5 billion below this year’s
budget on the expectation that Congress, as has become tradition in recent years,
would add funding as it drafted the construction appropriations bill.

But Bush’s tax cuts have left little elbow room in the 2004 federal budget that is
taking shape, and the squeeze is on across the board.

The result: Not only has the House Appropriations military construction panel
accepted Bush’s proposed $1.5 billion cut, it voted to reduce construction
spending by an additional $41 million next year.

Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., senior Democrat on the House Appropriations
Committee, took a stab at restoring $1 billion of the $1.5 billion cut in Bush’s
construction budget. He proposed to cover that cost by trimming recent tax cuts
for the roughly 200,000 Americans who earn more than $1 million a year. Instead
of a tax break of $88,300, they would receive $83,500.

The Republican majority on the construction appropriations panel quickly shot
Obey down. And so the outlook for making progress next year in tackling the
huge backlog of work that needs to be done on crumbling military housing and
other facilities is bleak at best.

Taken piecemeal, all these corner-cutting moves might be viewed as mere flesh
wounds. But even flesh wounds are fatal if you suffer enough of them. It adds up
to a troubling pattern that eventually will hurt morale — especially if the current
breakneck operations tempo also rolls on unchecked and the tense situations in
Iraq and Afghanistan do not ease.

Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Texas, who notes that the House passed a resolution in
March pledging “unequivocal support” to service members and their families,
puts it this way: “American military men and women don’t deserve to be saluted
with our words and insulted by our actions.”

Translation: Money talks — and we all know what walks.
armytimes.com
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