Home Of The Brave?

This year, the MAGA-controlled Congress is expected to pass a Pentagon budget of $1.15 trillion, an increase of roughly $250 billion from this year’s already bloated budget. To put that in perspective, a trillion is a million millions!!! Or, to look at it another way, it’s the equivalent of the next eight nations’ military budgets combined, of which six are allies.

That doesn’t look like bravery to me. It looks like a whole lot of fear – $1.15 trillion worth.

And that’s not all. Adding to the total is the $190.6 billion budget for the Department of Homeland Security (in other words, defense), a department that didn’t even exist before 9/11. Removing the $26.2 billion of the DHS budget intended for disaster relief, that means taxpayers are paying a grand total of approximately $1,314,400,000,000 for defense.

Why?

I submit it’s less about defending our citizens than it is about defending our global corporate empire. In the 1980s, I asked the Central American bureau chief of a large news organization to explain the fighting in El Salvador and Nicaraugua. “Who are the good guys?” I asked. “There are none,” he replied. He told me that the U.S. doesn’t really care about international justice and human rights. That we simply support those who will support our corporate interests.

Nothing I have seen since then has contradicted that argument.

We didn’t intervene in Israel’s genocide of Palestinians perhaps because we have economic and military ties to Israel. Our intrusion in Venezuela wasn’t about human rights or communism. It was about that nation’s large oil reserves. Likewise, our attacks on Iran are all about oil. Indeed, our history of conflicts with Iran began in 1953 after the democratically elected government of Iran nationalized its oil resources.

Truth is, American taxpayers pay to defend U.S. corporate interests with our treasure and our lives. And how do our multinational corporations repay us? They pay to elect the government they want and demand ever greater tax cuts. Based on the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy’s April 2026 analysis, at least 88 of the largest U.S. corporations paid no federal income tax in 2025, despite earning over $105 billion in U.S. pretax income.

Home of the brave? More like home of the suckers.