Nov. 18, 2010 - "There they go again," said The American Legion's National Commander Jimmie Foster about the recommendations of two debt reduction commissions which would decrease military retirement benefits. "Every time Washington wakes up with a deficit hangover after decades of spending binges, those who study the serious problems of our national debt can't resist the easy but unfair route of trying to balance the budget on the backs of veterans. It is unfair and if these ridiculous proposals are passed into law, it will hurt America's ability to defend itself from our enemies."
One panel, chaired by former Sen. Pete Domenici and Clinton administration Budget Director Alice Rivlin, calls for changing the formula to calculate military retirement pay and delaying payments until the eligible veterans reach age 57. Another panel, chaired by former Sen. Alan Simpson and retired Clinton White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles, recommends that military retirement checks be delayed until age 60.
"Tell it to the Marines!" was Foster response to the proposals. "I want these commissions to look a 22-year-old Marine in the eye and say that if you retire at age 40, after 20 years of service and three, four or even more tours of being shot at in Afghanistan, that you still have not done enough to receive your retirement. I want these commissions to tell the soldiers in Iraq that the benefits they are receiving are too much. America has a huge debt all right. And it is owed to these men and women who protect our freedoms every day. It is a debt that must be repaid." {read rest}
Friday, November 19, 2010
"There they go again"
Once again 'silence', no outrage, wasn't mentioned during campaigns especially by the corporate and political funded tea party, the total opposite is their ideology, from the American Citizens who have no problem sending others to their wars of choice! During the first years, up to 2007, of these still two long running occupations relatively squat was mentioned nor done as they were sending troops into theater over and over, and now Veterans Cuts are put back on the table with little whimper from the tax cut crowd and their leaders and representatives!
'Veterans Paid the Price, Cut Debt Elsewhere,' Says The American Legion
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