By Leo Hohmann
The government of Israel and its war partners in Washington are well aware of just how unpopular their policies are among Americans under age 55 and are preparing for life after the boomers have mostly departed this Earth.
Polls show 70 percent of Americans oppose Washington’s war with Iran, which has led to skyrocketing fuel prices, a draining of the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserves, and growing disdain for America abroad.
President Trump recently admitted in an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity that the Iran war was launched for the benefit of Israel and America’s Gulf state allies, not taxpaying and gasoline-consuming Americans. The war has already cost American taxpayers $50 billion to $100 billion, depending on whose estimates you wish to accept.
While the dwindling baby boomer generation is perfectly content to watch their tax dollars fly off to the Middle East, the younger generations are getting angry and losing patience with every year that goes by leaving them unable to afford the American dream enjoyed by their parents and grandparents.
Knowing that the makeup of Congress is likely to change dramatically in the years ahead, as more young people start to rebel against the policy of sending roughly $4 billion a year to Israel and using the U.S. military to fight Israel’s wars, the Washington Uniparty has come up with a creative plan to make sure the money keeps flowing and the current pro-war policies continue for decades to come.
The plan is to institutionalize their policies and codify them, removing public debate and any semblance of transparency from the process.
They will do this through the NDAA process, which is defined here. NDAA stands for National Defense Authorization Act and it’s how the U.S. military gets its funding. The annual NDAA bills are thousands of pages long, with the finer details well hidden from public view. Most members of Congress don’t fully read these bills before voting on them.
Work on the 2027 NDAA is already underway, and it contains a new provision to codify U.S. technology transfers to Israel through a “fusion” of the two countries’ militaries.
