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Military Industrial Complex

9-11
63-69
7-9
53-58
31-46
56-62
59-65
39-47
41-48
Nov 2003Last year in which a quarterly rise in U.S. military spending was greater than the one last spring: 1951
Source:

Bureau of Economic Analysis (Washington)

Nov 2003Total U.S. military spending the Bush Administration projects it will have spent by the end of 2008: $3,200,000,000,000
Source:

Office of Management and Budget (Washington)

Nov 2003Total U.S. military spending between 1941 and 1948: $3,100,000,000,000
Source:

Office of Management and Budget (Washington)

Jan 2001Percentage of the G-8 countries' combined military budgets it would take to halve the world's TB cases by 2010: 0.4
Source:

World Health Organization (Washington)/ Harper's research

Sep 2000Ratio of Lockheed Martin's 1999 sales to the $13 million fine it will pay for giving secret technology to China: 1,962:1
Source:

Lockheed Martin Corporation (Bethesda, Md.)/U.S. Department of State

Jul 1999Minimum amount that six defense contractors each paid last April to “sponsor” NATO's 50th anniversary summit: $250,000
Source:

NATO Summit Host Committee (Washington)

Feb 1999Average amount the U.S. military spent last year on recruiting, per soldier enlisted: $7,187
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

Feb 1999Average amount the U.S. military spent last year on recruiting, per soldier enlisted in 1989: $5,460
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

April 22, 2004General Electric and Siemens, two large contractors in Iraq, suspended most of their operations in the country.
Source:

New York Times

January 23, 2004Vice President Dick Cheney defended Halliburton, which continues to pay him a salary, from what he said were "desperate attacks" by opponents of the Bush Administration. "They're rendering great service," he said. "They do it because they're good at it, because they won the contract to do it. And frankly the company takes a certain amount of pride in rendering this kind of service to U.S. military forces."
Source:

CNN

January 11, 2004 Lockheed Martin and Boeing were said to be enthusiastic about the President's Mars plan.
Source:

New York Times

January 8, 2004The Department of Homeland Security handed out three $2 million contracts to build a missile-defense system to prevent civilian aircraft from being shot down by surface-to-air missiles.
Source:

New Scientist

January 7, 2004The head of the Army Corps of Engineers waived federal contracting requirements for Halliburton's operations in Iraq that would have required the company to submit cost and pricing information on its gasoline imports even though Halliburton was recently accused of overcharging the government $61 million for gasoline.
Source:

New York Times

November 30, 2003The Bush Administration approved a research project to develop low-yield bunker-busting nuclear weapons, or "mini-nukes."
Source:

The Observer

October 23, 2003The Pentagon was planning to spend $335 million on high-tech solutions to the guerrilla war; the measures include electronic jamming devices, tethered blimps with digital cameras, and other "rapid-reaction/new solution" technologies.
Source:

New York Times

July 17, 2003Defense contractor Lockheed Martin filed suit against antiwar demonstrators for $41,000 in security costs the company incurred preparing for a protest.
Source:

Veteransforcommonsense.org

June 5, 2003The General Accounting Office warned that government is using "immature technology" in its missile defense shield, which is scheduled to be deployed by 2004.
Source:

Reuters

June 4, 2003 Tom DeLay, the House Majority Leader, killed a Democratic attempt to extend a new tax credit to 6.5 million low-income families who were left out of President Bush's latest tax cut. "There are a lot of things that are more important than that," DeLay said. "To me, it's a little difficult to give tax relief to people that don't pay income tax."
Source:

New York Times

JANUARY 2009

THE $10 TRILLION HANGOVER
Paying the Price for Eight Years of Bush
By Joseph E. Stiglitz and Linda J. Bilmes

GO FORTH AND FALSIFY
Katherine Anne Porter and the lies of art
By William H. Gass

THE SANTOSBRAZZI KILLER
A story by Heidi Julavits

Also: Paul West and Siddhartha Deb