News Link • Military Industrial Complex
Unaudited Power: The U.S. Military Budget Nobody Controls. Ellen Brown
• Daily News from the Art of Liberty FoundationThe U.S. federal debt has now passed $37 trillion and is growing at the rate of $1 trillion every five months. Interest on the debt exceeds $1 trillion annually, second only to Social Security in the federal budget. The military outlay is also close to $1 trillion, consuming nearly half of the discretionary budget.
As a sovereign nation, the United States could avoid debt altogether by simply paying for the budget deficit with Treasury-issued "Greenbacks," as Abraham Lincoln's government did. But I have written on that before (see here and here), so this article will focus on that other elephant in the room, the Department of Defense.
Under the Constitution, the military budget should not be paid at all, because the Pentagon has never passed an audit. Expenditures of public funds without a public accounting violate Article 1, Section 9, Clause 7of the Constitution, which provides:
No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law; and a regular Statement and Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money shall be published from time to time.





1 Comments in Response to Unaudited Power: The U.S. Military Budget Nobody Controls. Ellen Brown
The Constitution does not authorize for the federal government to maintain a Standing Army. Ref; Art. I,Sec. 8, cl. 12. [abrogated in 1947 which has resulted in 500 military offices worldwide]. Officers of the federal military are to be named by the States. Clause 16.