Source: National Priorities Project
As part of the annual must-pass military spending and policy bill (the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, or “NDAA”), progressive lawmakers have put forward a proposal to cut the massive $740 billion Pentagon budget by 10 percent.
With military spending at historically high levels, and with additional increases under President Trump, a ten percent cut is an overdue correction to the bloated Pentagon budget.
While the Pentagon will spend close to $74 billion on our endless wars this year, a 10% cut to the Pentagon ($74 billion), could be reinvested in:
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Ending Homelessness: House every one of the more than half a million homeless people in this country with money to spare. That’s assuming an annual cost of $30,000 per person, in keeping with high-end estimates from the Urban Institute.
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Infrastructure Jobs: Create more than one million good jobs in cities like Flint, Michigan, building desperately needed new infrastructure.
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COVID testing: Conduct 2 billion additional coronavirus tests, compared to the 46 million done so far – that’s 44 times as many tests, or enough to offer six free COVID tests to every person in the United States.
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Racial Equity in Schools: Close the $23 billion funding gap between majority-white and majority non-white school districts.
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Free College: Fund free college educations for more than 2 million low income students, or the poorest ten percent of current college students.
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Clean Energy: Fund enough renewable energy to power almost every household in the US.
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Green Jobs: Create one million well-paying clean energy jobs, enough to transition nearly every worker in the traditional coal, oil, and gas sectors
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Teachers: Hire 900,000 new public elementary school teachers, adding about nine new teachers to every public elementary school in the country.
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COVID unemployment relief: Send a $2,300 check to the more the 32 million unemployed Americans.
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Face Masks: Purchase enough N95 face masks for all of the 55 million essential workers to use one a day for more than a year.
A $74 billion cut is a strong step toward better spending priorities, and could make a tremendous difference in other programs ranging from health care and education to job creation at a time when it is desperately needed.
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