Doug Casey on the U.S. Military

Via Casey Research

Nick Giambruno: Doug, I know you’ve been thinking about how the Greater Depression will unfold. It’s no secret the government has created the biggest credit bubble in history through endless money printing—euphemistically called QE—and now “NIRP” (negative interest rates). But I understand you’ve had a different “bubble” on your mind lately…

Doug Casey: Yes. I’ve been thinking about the gigantic bubble in military spending in the U.S. And how it’s one of the worst things that can happen, and at the absolute worst time. The U.S. Government is bankrupt, we’re about to go into the trailing edge of a monumental economic hurricane, and both of the presidential candidates are talking about vastly increasing military spending.

From an economic point of view, money spent on the military is almost totally wasted. It’s worse than money spent to dig holes during the day and then fill them in again at night—at least that does no actual damage. The “product” of the military is killing people and destroying property. And the amount of money the U.S. spends is provocative to other powers, who feel they have to counter with their own spending. Arms races never end well.

I’m going to say some unflattering things about the military, and realize it will probably shock most Americans to hear them. Americans still have a high regard for the military—far too much. They see it as one of the few American institutions that still “works.” They see it as something defending them from evil outside the borders of the “homeland”—which, by the way, is a very recently coined term. But the military is actually just another government bureaucracy, like the Post Office. Albeit much more heavily armed.

Most people are unaware how dangerous the U.S. military has become to both the average American and the concept of America. The minions of the Pentagon aren’t protecting Americans. They’re actively endangering them, and what the country has always stood for. The situation has gotten totally out of control. Most obviously from a financial viewpoint.

The U.S. currently spends more on “defense” than the next seven governments combined… At one point recently, it was more than the rest of the world combined. But who really knows, since Pentagon accounting is so inaccurate and corrupt?

Nick Giambruno: The 2015 budget was $600 billion. More than three times what China spends.

Doug Casey: Well, again, nobody knows how big the Pentagon’s, or China’s, or Russia’s, or whoever’s, budgets really are. That’s just the “official” number, which doesn’t include quasi-military spending outside of the Department of Defense. Here, I’m thinking of Homeland Security, “black ops” slush funds, the Department of Energy where a lot of nuclear spending goes, NASA, CIA, and dozens of other ratholes that disguise the real budget. U.S. military spending could easily be over the $1 trillion mark. It’s clear the Pentagon itself doesn’t know.

In fact, nobody seems to know how much money is being spent or where it goes. I remember Rumsfeld once remarking, years ago, that they couldn’t find $2 trillion—but there was never a scandal, or even an attempt to find it. The news cycle just went on to the Kardashians or whatever. Now, according to the Office of the Inspector General, at least $6.5 trillion can’t be accounted for. And probably never will be. This is a truly unbelievable number. How dysfunctional has the system become that numbers like that can be dropped with impunity? World War 2 was only supposed to have cost $341 billion 1945 dollars…

Even though the law requires annual audits of all federal agencies, the Pentagon never complies. They just tell Congress that the books are such a mess, they can’t give accurate numbers. No matter; nobody is shutting down the Pentagon. The Pentagon—which is to say the military-industrial complex—is at once so sacrosanct, so gigantic, and so corrupt that nobody dares get to the bottom of it.

Nick Giambruno: Wow, it’s hard to imagine how many pockets that $6.5 trillion has lined around the Beltway…

Doug Casey: Indeed. It makes the TARP bailouts, which came in at around $700 billion, seem trivial in comparison. And nobody knows where that money went, either. It’s funny when you think of the saying attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen in the mid-60s: “A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon, you’re talking real money.” We’re up to trillions now. Obama might soon be asking his science officer what comes after a trillion.

And this at a time when interest rates are at record lows, and every segment of society is carrying record high levels of debt. Frankly, something has to give… much higher interest rates, much higher taxes, much higher inflation, or perhaps a collapse of the system itself. Probably all of them together. When interest rates go back up to normal historic levels, that alone will collapse the structure.

It’s bad news all around… all this spending on an organization with the primary mission of blowing things up. The military has become a giant golden hammer looking for a nail. It used to be that Congress actually had to declare a war. Starting with the Korean conflict, however, the president found he could commit the country not to just sport wars, like we’ve always had in Central America, but to a major war. In fact, now the U.S. is in a constant state of undeclared war—Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and a dozen other Third World countries that you rarely hear about. Plus, playing chicken with the Chinese, the Russians, and the Iranians.

Nick Giambruno: What do you say to those who would say you’re anti-military?

Doug Casey: I don’t necessarily blame the average soldier or sailor. Most of them are just refugees from the barrios, ghettos, and trailer parks who are looking to improve themselves with a steady job. But they go through indoctrination that amounts to brainwashing, and come to believe the U.S. is always in the right. I understand how that can happen; I went to a four-year military boarding school. Fortunately, that cured me of wanting to go to West Point. I was still silly enough to have signed up for the Marine’s PLC program during Vietnam—but extraneous events rescued me…

Sure, soldiers learn some good habits, like shining shoes and saying “Yes, sir” and “No, ma’am.” It’s understandable how many young people who join up see it as helpful. But they pick up plenty of bad habits, too. A military environment is necessarily degrading and dehumanizing. They learn to obey orders blindly, and may end up doing things that will haunt them for the rest of their lives. Of course, the same is true of the grunts in absolutely every country in the world. It’s fun to put on a costume and be apotheosized as a hero—even when you’re really just cannon fodder.

I realize people think the military is “us.” But if you know anything about group dynamics, you realize that they’re loyal first to each other. Then to their employer. And last to the citizens.

The real problem, however, lies with the career officers, the Pampered Princes of the Pentagon, as my friend David Hackworth used to call them. They’re looking for conflicts to justify their existence, followed by a cushy job with the defense contractor whose weapons they helped acquire. As the radical writer Randolph Bourne famously said, “War is the health of the State”—and the State is the enemy of every decent person. The military acts to turn average decent human beings into automatons, while its propaganda disguises savagery as heroism. No wonder that they really only want teenagers as recruits; young people are relatively thoughtless and highly malleable.

In a truly civilized society, people interact through persuasion. But as the federal government has grown bigger over the past two centuries, force has become the dominant means of interaction. The thousands of laws, regulations, and outright violence from the police and military are manifestations of it. It’s no accident that people who wear uniforms tend to have an extra Y chromosome.


Editor’s note: As Doug and Nick discussed, the U.S. is clearly headed for trouble.

We think a financial collapse for the record books is coming. It’s going to be much worse, much longer, and very different than what we saw in 2008 and 2009.

That’s exactly why Doug and his team are releasing an urgent training series explaining the steps you need to take to protect you and your family. The goal: to pull back the curtain on Doug’s shocking forecast for America in 2016. AND help you take advantage of one of Doug’s favorite investing approaches – which can let you turn the coming crisis into an absolute fortune.

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4 Comments
John Jaffre
John Jaffre
September 3, 2016 10:46 pm

Doug Casey – KUDOS to you. For too long it’s been characterized as the left being anti-military, anti-government, anti__whatever suits the other side to paint those on the other end of the political spectrum. The “left” has never been against a strong military to defend this country. And Doug Casey crystallized that exact same sentiment. It’s no longer a question of “right” or “left”, it a question of willing to accept a bloated bureacracy. In the past it seemed that the “right” had no problem accepting the bloated bureacracy of the military industrial complex yet wanted to pare down to the bone every other government program especially if it was socially driven. Thank you Doug Casey for willing to break the bounds of the imposed “left’ “right” dichotomy. If we were to give up the idea of an empire [remember Pat Buchanan’s “A Republic, not an Empire”] we could address so many issues that require funding – education, infrastructure, healthcare, growing the economy, etc. and not fall for that BS about “oh, that’s too expensive, that’s not affordable’ Well, without the bloating bureacracy that Doug Casey so eloquently addresses we could as a nation move forward and do for the people what is needed.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
September 4, 2016 5:23 am

Greetings,

As odd as this may sound, I would posit that the ONLY reason we are even granted the illusion of freedom rather than brutal outright slavery is that the parasitic class has to have us as soldiers. The very moment that we are not needed to man the guns then we’ll be no better off than a Siberian slave laborer. Here’s why.

For a damn long time, the ruling class had no need to involve its slaves in its conflicts. Knights and Men at Arms did the fighting and maintained order. Big wars were fought with few men. For example, Edward II invaded France with a whopping 12,000 men.

Gunpowder changes all of this and the only way to make war work was to pack men shoulder to shoulder and march them into an open field and have them blast away at one another. There were just not enough ruling elites to pull this off so these new and very powerful weapons were issued to commoners by the thousands. Now, arming slaves is never a good idea so the rulers had to give up a bit here and there. The aggressiveness of these nation states helped bring an end to absolute monarchy as the people needed to be appeased by shared power arrangements such as constitutional-monarchies and representation. I had a family member explain to me like this: Once they issued us our basic load of ammo and grenades and all us privates had fully automatic weapons, things got a lot more democratic.

Very soon the elites will not need to involve us in the service of their wars. Without the need of popular support, we will revert to our previous status. Current military spending is unsustainable but the only positive in any of it is that they still need commoners to make it work.

rhs jr
rhs jr
September 4, 2016 2:47 pm

Trump will need to fire most senior officers to undo the leftist damage done by Bozo.

yahsure
yahsure
September 4, 2016 5:33 pm

People should serve so they can see their gov. at work. Waste and abuse at it’s finest. Teaches people why the gov. should not be involved with healthcare. I always thought our President should have to be a veteran.