$2.4 Trillion!

A new CBO (Congressional Budget Office) report estimates the projected cost of the Iraq War, assuming we stay till 2017, may reach as high as $2.4 Trillion! That’s a cost of $8,000 per man, women and child living in the United States. Higher than the cost, adjusted for inflation, than the Vietnam War!

Bush is throwing trillions of dollars away on Iraq

So when someone tells you the war doesn’t matter. First tell them to look at this webpage, showing casualties of U.S. soldiers nearing 4,000 and civilians well over 100,000 confirmed, then tell them it will cost them $8,000 for every person in their family. That is the equivalent, by the way, of a $400 a month health insurance plan for 20 years.

Republicans like Bush love to spend money, they just don’t like spending it on the health and prosperity of the nation’s taxpaying citizens. They prefer to spend the money on tanks, bullets and killing the citizens of another nation. If Republicans are so good at business, you’d think they’d know a good investment when they saw one. Spend the money on healthier, happier, harder working citizens, or blow it all on a blood bath gamble in Iraq?

25,000 dead or wounded Americans in Iraq

The choice seems obvious to me, but then again, I seem to have that regard for human life most Americans have, that doesn’t seem to exist anywhere within the Bush Administration. Simply saying you respect life is little consolation to those who gave their lives to make Bush and his buddies a little bit richer.

About Joshua Johnson

For 8 years, Soapblox.com has functioned as the political blog for up and coming writer, Joshua Johnson. While he writes many different styles of writing ranging from science fiction to social commentary, his true love lies in politics and history. With a degree in History from CSUN, his love of history shines through in his perspective. Josh’s articles are focused heavily on telling the truth and cutting through the subjective and relative nature that is prevailing these days. Hailing from the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles, Josh has had a decidedly middle-class upbringing, which has translated into a deeply rooted love of the Progressive movement of the early 20th Century. A self-described “progressive” Josh’s political views are quite mixed though lean left of center.