I am the Afghanistan Blogging Fellow for The Seminal and Brave New Foundation. You can read my work on The Seminal or at Rethink Afghanistan. The views expressed below are my own.
Do you know someone in California? Have they seen this?
California’s economy is in a tailspin. One in 5 Californians is out of work. Over three quarters of a million have lost their homes. Desperately needed social services have been cut to the bone. Yet residents of our state continue to pay for a senseless war in Afghanistan that’s not making us safer – a war that has cost California taxpayers nearly $38 billion already.
OK, hold on a minute. $38 billion for war? Just from California? Take a look at California’s financial situation:
Jaws dropped from coast to coast at the size of [California's] $26.3 billion shortfall, a quarter of the general fund. Even more astounding was state leaders’ difficulty in reaching a budget deal—not just this year, but year after year. With its repeated use of borrowing and IOUs, the Golden State has become the poster child for fiscal irresponsibility.
That’s right, their apocalyptic budget crisis is actually much less than they’re spending on the war in Afghanistan. $26 billion for the budget vs $38 billion for war. And what do they actually get for that money? It’s not like it’s way better to live in California thanks to the war. In fact, it’s actually getting much, much worse.
The depth of the crisis faced by California screams out from the cold hard data. Over one in five Californians are unemployed, underemployed, or have simply given up searching for work. Nearly another one in five lives in poverty. Low-income workers fortunate to have a job have seen their wages decline since 2006 – with middle income worker salaries remaining stagnant. 8.2 million Californians – up from 6.4 million in 2007 – lack health coverage.[...]
Over three-quarters of a million California families were ousted from their homes in 2008 and 2009. The Center for Responsible Lending projects another 2 million foreclosures through 2012 – with nearby homes losing an average of over $50,000 in value. 2.4 million California borrowers – 35 percent of all properties with a mortgage – are currently under water (e.g. owe more on their home than it’s currently worth). By 2011, that number will increase to nearly 70 percent of homeowners.
It’s just dizzying. We’re looking at the vaporization of California’s social fabric, something we supposedly care a lot about it in Afghanistan. And yet all they need is a little over half what they’re spending on crooked dope dealers, murderous robots, and Soviet-style police states. Look at the ridiculous stuff they have to cut thanks to the war:
As Californians depend on core public programs in increasing numbers and need – from the state’s welfare-to-work program (CalWORKS) to In-Home State Services to the Healthy Families Program – the state’s ongoing budget shortfalls have lead to draconian cuts in the very services that have functioned as a lifeline for millions and prevented a more pronounced economic collapse.
Yep, at some point up in Sacramento, the people’s representatives got together and decided, "Sorry guys, we just don’t have room for HEALTHY FAMILIES anymore." If that doesn’t deserve a giant, full-throated WTF, I don’t know what does. Go read the whole thing, I could literally spend this entire post just block-quoting all the crazy programs they had to cut. 35,000 fewer college students? Come on now, is the debate really going to be Healthy Families vs. War?
If you’re having deja vu, that’s because we’ve had the California conversation before about Winograd and Harman. Jane Harman is just one of the California politicians finding themselves on the wrong side of the Healthy Families vs. War debate. And she’s taking a vicious beating from challenger Marcy Winograd on exactly those grounds. Remember what Winograd said in that Politico piece?
“As we approach our state party convention, we are prepared for a floor fight — Winograd vs. Harman. But it’s not just about the two of us. This is a fight to determine: Jobs vs. Wars, Homes vs. Banks, Your Street vs. Wall Street,” Winograd wrote in the appeal.
"Jobs vs Wars." Very clear. And that wasn’t just about the party convention, she’s still saying it:
Winograd pointed out that she shares the ILWU´s historical commitment to ending unnecessary wars and investing resources in strengthening our middle class. "Our district alone has spent almost 3-billion dollars to wage perpetual wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In Congress, I will vote to end the squandering of taxpayer dollars better spent on explicit federal job creation."
Remember, Harman is the one who said a withdrawal would create "grievous risks" for our national security. She’s like The Afghanistan War Candidate, the Representative from ISAF. She voted down H.Con.Res 248, a clear sign that she sees $38 billion for military aggression as better for California than $26 billion for little things like healthy families and jobs. And y’know, it’s stupid that we even have to have this conversation about Harman and all the other Team War politicians. The solution is so mind-numbingly simple:
Today, U.S. Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) and U.S. Representatives Jim McGovern (D-MA) and Walter Jones (R-NC) announced they are introducing legislation requiring the president to develop a flexible timetable to draw down U.S. troops from Afghanistan, in order to enhance our national security and reduce the burden on our armed forces and on taxpayers. The bipartisan, bicameral legislation would require the president to provide a plan for drawing down our forces in Afghanistan. The legislation also increases oversight by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) over work done by private contractors with records of waste, fraud and abuse in order to safeguard U.S. taxpayer dollars.
Set a date and get out. That’s it. We’ll even be "flexible" with it, so that if Godzilla or the conquering Martians appear in Afghanistan, we’ll definitely consider keeping troops there. But as long as we’re there in the middle of an Afghan civil war and blowing all our jobs and families money on Hamid Karzai’s Excellent Adventure, we set a date and get the hell out. Super easy. If Harman could get on board with the people of her state and end this war, all of this awful stuff we’re talking about would just vanish. Harman would be a hero, California’s budget would stabilize, and Winograd would be back organizing voters for Democrats like Harman. But no, Harman and dozens of other politicians in California insist on making Jobs vs. Wars a fight.
Last month, facing tuition and fee hikes of over 30 percent, public university students all over California said enough is enough, organized and went on strike. Now these students have a new message: California is wasting tens of billions of dollars on war even while making public education accessible only to the rich.
We can’t afford to continue a war that does nothing to make us safer.
So, take that video above and forward it to the people you know in California. Let them know that the solution to their budget crisis is ending the war in Afghanistan. Let them know there are candidates out there somewhere who do side with families against the wasteful spending in Washington. All it takes is a little public pressure. And don’t forget to join us on Rethink Afghanistan’s Facebook page. Collaborate with the tens of thousands of others around the country working to bring this war to an end.
Update: David in the comments has pointed out that Harman has signed on to HR 5015. He says, "Maybe she’s feeling the heat from Winograd." As I wrote, just a little public pressure goes a long way. Harman has moved toward the people of California, but there are still others holding out. Not only that, but the pressure on Harman and others has to be maintained in order to see lasting success.



53 Comments

Terrific video and printed text. Very eye opening, giving very specific statements of reality that are an ultimate offense to my values and hopes for Californians and all others. Will pass it on to several folks.
Blessings,
You know, the Soviet Union collapsed largely due to a war in Afghanistan. Hello? Why does anybody think it’s going to turn out any better for us? I think that our survival as a nation is just a little bit more important than a bunch of chickenhawk legislators trying to prove they have testicles by sending other people into a fight they want the rest of us to pay for.
Karma baby.
Less drones, more butter.
Thank you for putting it in a post. I have been trying to sound the alarm about this too.
It is nice to see some solid numbers behind the concept, that makes it much less abstract and easier for the non-wonky people to grasp.
I think it is a huge, growing, problem and perfectly unsustainable.
I think we are there BECAUSE somebody wanted the US to collapse, yes I am calling it a deliberate case of treason.
And the same players don’t see it happening fast enough so there is a push to start yet a third war.
No one seems to understand that we’re not winning, whatever that is, and that we can’t. Such a terrible waste.
I’ve never understood what it is we’re supposed to “win”. Security? Money? Oil? An ancient baggie from the Saran Collection? Other fabulous prizes? What? It seems like as the excuses for war were debunked one after another, they just quit pretending there were any excuses. Now we’re just there and can’t f***ing leave!
Thanks Josh, this is excellent. We’re California natives who just moved back to Oakland (from Arizona; had to get away from the pro-gun, anti-immigration rednecks). I’m going to send this to everyone I know who lives here.
Thank you, Josh, excellent post.
Our state is dying.
Correction: I have no idea why I called Harman a Senator. Changed.
Oh just stfu. The PTB will tell us what we have to do.
There’s a fairly common meme among deficit peacocks that California, Illinois, etc are in worse shape than Greece and should be going to the IMF for bail outs and austerity measures.
Uncle Sam needs to step up soon.
State budget shortfalls, unemployment, and foreclosures are the 3 main signposts to keep an eye on on our way to depression.
What does that mean? A sternly worded statement from O about CA’s responsibilities?
No, it means sending Treasury money to states to keep teachers working.
A new CCC/ WPA would also be nice.
Oh, you must be delusional.
Actually our state is not dying, it just needs an adjustment.
That “adjustment” take POLITICAL WILL. I have to mention again that Pat Brown when he retooled the UC/SU System Californians by RIGHT had access to a low cost higher educations, Regan screwed that up and Jerry didn’t fix it (put the genie back in the bottle), so we’re stuck with the current system.
Its time to have open debates with Jerry, Peter and Laura to see who’s best to right this mighty ship.
Public Financing would solve much of this, but until that day happens, we need to use a CATTLE PROD.
Yeah, I understand that Moonbeam called for debates. Now that’s real proactive program.
I don’t expect it, but I know it is needed.
Generally speaking, all empires collapse because they spend too much energy expanding and defending borders and not enough caring for what’s inside those borders.
As an Angeleno, I’d like to thank you for posting this. We’ve been bombarded with Steve Poizner’s “blame the immigrants for all our money problems” commercials and frankly that argument is sickening.
This is a good diary, although it should be noted that Harman is co-sponsoring the very bill you cite as the solution.
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-5015
Maybe she’s feeling the heat from Winograd. In any case, she seems for some reason to have done the right thing.
The global 1% began draining USA wealth beginning with Ron Reagan.
The pace has quickened under BushCo, and now Obama.
The drain (manifested by the dealings of Wall Street, GS, etc) is near complete.
This was done by the wealthy 1% of Europe for WW1 and WW2, as the 1% consolidated all the wealth upwards into their own hands, and moved their investments into the USA.
I’m not sure what the next target will be, but the USA has pretty much served its purpose.
I wonder where all that wealth is going, besides to resource bearing nation investment (wars) opportunities.
Somewhere in all of this China’s wealth has to be a target.
The USA is on the brink of becoming a post ww2 nation in all ways, without a single bomb being dropped on it, or a single invasion from a foreign country.
LeSigh.
I think you were replying to Teddy@10 but I actually agree with him that our state is dying. I haven’t been back long enough to have a sense of how bad people want to fix it or how they want to go about doing so. I sound like a broken record but my first impulse is always a general strike. But I am often delusional.
It’s about amassing wealth, power and control of resources and their distribution routes.
It’s no longer about country v country for these issues, either.
Although China/Russia are definitely competitors for the same resources and distribution routes as USA is, the 1% global elite are driving the engine now . . . and will side here or there with any particular single national entity depending on the ‘deals’ that can be brought to bear thru the IMF and such.
So far, Russia and China don’t NEED IMF entanglements, as they have wealth of their own.
But in the next ten years, I’d expect to see THAT wealth attacked by the 1% global elite, much as they did to Europe, and now USA.
Conspiracy? Hardly, google reveals, there’s a ton of info about it all available and it’s not tin foil hattery as many try to claim.
Not to mention, our OWN issues with banks and investment houses and ratings agencies (all global in scale ya know) as living proof of the 1% global elite pillaging of USA.
Zackly what OBL predicted, first for the Soviets, then for us, right after 911. It’s about the oil, and it’s a helluva price to pay. I like California a lot and ya know what? Just because the IRS collects it doesn’t mean it belongs to Obamco. Motherfucker Nixon was a motherfucker, but he introduced revenue sharing from fed coffers to state governments. I don’t really mind seeing Alabama and Mississippi get paid if California and the other big electoral vote states cop some much needed bank. Not any more war $$$, bailout $$$ or “faith based ” $$$, just some fucking state money. Geez.
The IMF and its holders are licking their chops like vultures over a dying body in the desert.
You are on it all the way, hoss.
I’m guessing many people have seen this astonishing (yet unsurprising figure):
“More Than 53 Percent of Your Tax Bill Goes to the Military”
http://www.truthout.org/dave-lindorff-more-53-percent-your-tax-bill-goes-military58534
I am one of the first sentence. I fear becoming one of the second sentence.
Great post Josh, and I echo what Teddy P says @10.
It’s ok to want pony’s, and to fight for that want.
It’s only delusional to the corporate fascists.
;-)
Holy crap. This paragraph from that article you cite says it all:
First, gotta repeal the fucking 2/3rds legislature thang left over from Prop 13.
Then, the retooling and healing can begin.
But until that 2/3rd’s thang is done in, we’re going to continue to be phooked more and more.
If CA goes, it drags the nation with it. And we are close to ‘going’.
And our government KNOWS this.
Sounds like something I’d say, by dawg.
History has proven that, over and over and over again and again.
Ma’am, I am all for mass civil disobedience.
Although, I gotta admit, it didn’t stop Gov. Reagan or Pres. Reagan from helping to gut CA and the nation.
I know. This feels like a monumentally dumb question, but how many people in this internet day and age would have to participate in a general strike in order to cause some serious mayhem? I’m thinking not that many . . .
Yeah, insanity. Here’s another good piece that breaks it down –
http://www.torontosun.com/comment/columnists/eric_margolis/2010/02/05/12758511-qmi.html
We are truly down the rabbit hole. The differences between these staggering expenditures and the comparatively tiny amounts of money it would take to make a difference in the lives of American citizens makes this conversation almost impossible to have.
THAT’S a stark reality! Thanks for sharing.
SHOULD be easy to organize, yet I have yet to see ANY major self proclaimed prog org delve into this.
I GUESS MoveOn did some antiwar stuff a few years back, but nothing since, they were assimilated to the veal pen as was OFA, and any other number of self proclaimed prog orgs have been assimilated.
Lesigh.
NONE of them clamboring for mass civil disobedience. But fundraising to and at me for all get out.
Go figger, they been borg’d.
Thanks for your reply. I’m in Sacto. Since ’88, a CA resident since ’62 or so and 4th grade.
How far I’ve watched this Golden State fall.
Hmmm…I hope that’s a compliment. ;-)
(Visions of some kind of sad policy and politics-specific Tourette’s: “forward NOT backward!…biPARtisan!…TERroristS!…reFORM!…hope!!…CHANGE!!!”)
Privatization of education and the testing mandates are corollaries to this endless war. I don’t want to sound fatalistic but the worst people really are full of passionate intent and the best do lack all conviction (Thnx WB Yeats), or seem lost in a wasteland of rotting electronics and appliances counting on the California Lottery to be their pension and savior.
Why are Americans so cowish now, allowing themselves to be sold in to a serfdom by creditors and bankers? Have we really lost all of that American fire? Are we mere gelatinous coagulations of fearful nerves and preconditioned desires?
Let’s start a new round of testing! We’re almost there!
This post is really dishonest, California doesn’t pay a dime for the war in Afghanistan.
California residents pay federal taxes, and the federal government pays for the war in Afghanistan. If we ended the war today, do you really think the feds would return those tax dollars proportionately to the states?
Besides, the government isn’t really paying for Afghanistan, it’s just increasing the deficit. Ending the war in Afghanistan wouldn’t help California at all, the only economic effect would be a lower federal deficit.
Don’t get me wrong, the war is wildly wasteful and should be ended in order to lower federal spending, but stating that California’s educational budget would be in better shape if the Federal government stopped spending 100 billion borrowed dollars is just false.
Thanks very much for the heads up, I’ve updated the post.
The condition you describe is the shadow of fiery rebel. It’s as much a part of the American character as the indomitable revolutionary. (One ought to remember that most of the population of olde America was enslaved.) We could even see that rebelliousness as a reaction against our own gelatinous nature. And we ought to remember that the slaves were freed not by themselves, but by an external force.
So what we’re seeing is not any kind of a change, but merely the natural balancing of the system over time.
It’s not that one part is true and the other not. It’s like the old glass half-full or half-empty conundrum: it’s not one or the other, but both simultaneously.
If we were to be serious about changing things we’d need to start honestly examining our own national preference for not rebelling, and for desperately selling our own souls to anyone who would claim to care for and protect us.
In the context of my previous comment about how empires fall, that helplessness and fear on the inside is the part of our own personal empires we ignore as we focus on the boundaries of revolution. We either recognize it and care for it, or we collapse.
I was born in Modesto — spent my childhood years in Nevada, back in the days when almost everything about California (schools, roads, etc.) was to be envied. Until Reagan.
I don’t know why civil disobedience has fallen out of favor with progressives. I suppose we could frame it as a flashmob, except you just don’t go back to work that day.
Unfortunately, most California Democrats are clueless, brain-dead, NPR-bots. Well, we voted for Obama, Feinstein, Boxer, and here in SF, Pelosi, so we’ve actually voted in the very best awesomest gosh-darned lefties, haven’t we?! The Norcal latte libs think the Fab Four are fighting for progressive causes. The zinfandel zombies calling in to Michael Krasny or Ray Taliaferro think that Obama, Feinstein, Boxer, and Pelosi gave us real health care reform, and are fighting for strong financial reform, for an end to our fun and games in the Mid East, for accountability and transparency, etc.
I can’t listen to Democrats complaining about obstructionist Repukes any more, or how the teabaggers are so vile, or that Repug politicians are a bunch of sleazy pedophiles. Well, der, of course those things are true, but the real problem is that the Democrats now have the most power they’ve had in a generation, and all they’re doing is furthering Bush and Dick’s agenda.
Exactly. I accidentally listened to the Ed Schultz meltdown thing for a minute and nearly melted down myself after hearing him whine, “But President Obama was completely transparent” in the healthcare bill negotiations. Not that I expected much from Ed, but the level of denial is getting pretty scary.
So the 38 Billion for War versus the 26 Billion California State Budget Deficit is a little bit apples and oranges because largely the 38 Billion for War is not being earned and paid, it is being borrowed so it is just funny money. Now the 26 Billion budget deficit is real cold hard no services, no employment, no infrastructure… it’s real like a heart attack.
The people spending the funny money couldn’t care less because it’s not theirs and they’re multi-millionaires who never will feel or understand the pain of the heart attack money. They are, in fact, quite despicable in the effect their policy has on people here at home and then monstrous for the effect their policy has for the people in Afghanistan. Somewhere there must be a reckoning.
Conrad C. Elledge
Maybe it is time for some of the progressive “hollywood” elite to come forward and help “save” their state. Use their “celebrity” to get out the message of “less war”…spend on the people of their state.
Can a state “opt-out” of spending on a war?
I used to have Ed Schultz on in the background on the radio or streaming on the internet… even attended one of his “town halls”. No more. He has become a completely compromised Obama cheerleader. He claims to represent the average American and instead has become a complete sell-out in the same manner as former SEIU President Andy Stern.
USA has 12000 or more nuclear weapons.
China has 80.
I have removed Ed Schultz from my Media Center, I can’t stand it anymore.
California is not doomed. We have things in the background, I didn’t know we tried to pass Universal Single Payer Health Care, TWICE before, only for the Governor to not support it. Now with a chance to removed the moron in charge, we can actually lead this nation AGAIN with another important social issue
There is a movement to remove 2/3rd vote on Budget issues
There’s a movement to legalize Marijuana.
That’s not all the good news -
There’s massive movements to prevent Industry Power Grabs by Mercury Insurance and PG&E.
I honestly don’t think Meg Whitman has gotten much traction, despite her running ads on TV constantly, offering glossy self-promoting magazines to state libraries and generally running a false ads focusing on Brown, believing defeat of Poizner is a forgone conclusion.
Brown despite not running a campaign that hasn’t instilled confidence or excitement in the Democratic base, is polling ahead of Whitman STILL (44% vs 38%).
But I think the public is unsure what Governor Brown will do given his track recored recently (Promoting Charter Schools) but this is even MORE reason to have a debate which he has called for, but we should be forcing say KNBC’s Colan Nolan to host a Debate between all the Left leaning candidates.
I think Laura Wells and others will push the debate to the LEFT, not LEFT of Center, because we don’t need the debate dragged back to the Center.
We can do this, I want to remain here, I still believe this is the best place to live with the least of amount of negatives.
I also don’t see how we can go “broke”, we just have to tweak the tax code, we have a very vibrant tourism industry and if we can figure out the issues around water, we can return to bountiful harvesting in the central part of the state.
The Federal System is broken, really. We can do more locally…