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


To: steve dietrich who wrote (491239)11/12/2003 1:25:19 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
PRESIDENT BAIT AND SWITCH, ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE --

Retired military officers, like Gen. Anthony Zinni —
formerly President Bush's envoy to the Middle East — have started to offer harsh, indeed unprintable,
assessments of administration policies. If this disillusionment spreads to the rank and file, the politics
of 2004 may be very different from what anyone expects.


truthout.org

Support the Troops
By Paul Krugman
New York Times

Tuesday 11 November 2003

Yesterday's absurd conspiracy theory about the Bush administration has a way of turning into
today's conventional wisdom. Remember when people were ridiculed for claiming that Dick Cheney
and Paul Wolfowitz, eager to fight a war, were hyping the threat from Iraq?

Anyway, many analysts now acknowledge that the administration never had any intention of
pursuing a conventionally responsible fiscal policy. Rather, its tax cuts were always intended as a way
of implementing the radical strategy known as "starve the beast," which views budget deficits as a
good thing, a way to squeeze government spending. Did I mention that the administration is planning
another long-run tax cut next year?

Advocates of the starve-the-beast strategy tend to talk abstractly about "big government." But in
fact, squeezing government spending almost always means cutting back or eliminating services
people actually want (though not necessarily programs worth their cost). And since it's Veterans Day,
let's talk about how the big squeeze on spending may be alienating a surprising group: the nation's
soldiers.

One of George W. Bush's major campaign themes in 2000 was his promise to improve the lives of
America's soldiers — and military votes were crucial to his success. But these days some of the
harshest criticisms of the Bush administration come from publications aimed at a military audience.

For example, last week the magazine Army Times ran a story with the headline "An Act of
`Betrayal,' " and the subtitle "In the midst of war, key family benefits face cuts." The article went on to
assert that there has been "a string of actions by the Bush administration to cut or hold down growth
in pay and benefits, including basic pay, combat pay, health-care benefits and the death gratuity paid
to survivors of troops who die on active duty."

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