"If military action is worth our troops' blood, it should be worth our treasure, too; not just in the abstract, but in the form of a specific ante by every American." -Andrew Rosenthal 10 Feb. 2013
March 22, 2013 - In the end, white-hot political realities got the best of automatic budget cuts — at least when it came to military education.Congress on Thursday reversed a so-called “sequestration” cut by the Pentagon, restoring most of a tuition-assistance program that provides up to $4,500 a year to active members of the military. The about-face followed a week of outrage and thousands of phone calls and complaints that inundated congressional offices.
But even while the move partially appeased one constituency, it only served to highlight the crisis-driven, piecemeal approach to budget legislating in Capitol Hill’s era of fiscal gridlock and partisan dysfunction.
The directive to the Pentagon to restore military tuition assistance was inserted into a temporary spending measure hastily passed this week, before Congress went on a two-week vacation, to prevent a government shutdown. read more>>>
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