Podunkfla wrote:Steve... Your absolutely right. War is just "Big Business" these days!We do it for the wrong reasons... and the young guys that suffer and die
are just "collateral damage" to the big bucks war machine...
Kinda makes you sick, huh.

Brick:
In what makes the Katrina debacle seem like so little money ... the
contractors are only in it for the money and the guys and gals in the
outbound areas have to put duck tape on their boots to keep the high temps
from burning their feet as NO boots are getting to them. The protection
they need isn't getting to them cause the contractors are siphoning off big
chunks of money to even the point of choking off armor or night vision equipment.
The book
Betraying Our Troops: Talks of one contractor that gets 1/2 Billion
a month to supply the troops. So they go out and get second hand trucks
and charge for new. They don't put spare tires on the trucks
or any tools cause if they break down ... the trucks
are burnt. You see the
contractors have a deal where the more they spend the more they get from
the Government. So an old truck that just got burnt as a new truck lets
them again buy an old truck and the cycle goes on and on. All the while
padding the obscene billing and obfuscating all numbers and always a
relentless pushing to be paid or they just stop all supplies to the military in
a coercive action, that the military caves into every time.
Now back in the very protected zones ... there is soft serve ice cream and
all manner of services .... but the troops in the field say they would give uP
all that if they could be supplied equipment to carry the war effort on.
Again if the American people knew that the contractors are the ones
responsible for more deaths in Iraq because they refuse to move supplies
to the hostile areas, something would change? This puts men that need
ammo in jeopardy more often than we hear on the news. You see the dirty
secret is that the officer corps don't want to rock the boat ... because their
career is more important to them than the loss of soldier lives.
Thus ... keeping the contractor corruption perpetuated.