At the very least, it didn't make you oppose spending for and conducting the war in Iraq.
No, because winning that war was far more important than a few billion dollars.
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But what's curious is that you folks think the same incompetent (corrupt?) organization should take over a 1/6th of the US economy. How many TRILLIONS will never be accounted for then?
Nope--that's not going to happen. Healthcare spending doesn't happen with gunnysacks full of cash being disbursed in wheelbarrows as it was in Iraq. (ETA: At least that won't happen as long as we can keep Halliburton out of the health insurance industry.)
LOL! How can you guarantee that? A penny here, a penny there and before long you've got not just billions down the drain but trillions, much of it unaccounted for. And electronic funds are even easier to manipulate and mismanage than hard cash.
And for the record most of the missing billions in Iraq didn't go to Halliburton but directly to the Iraq government. And because of the poor management system of that government (set up by who else but the US government) they simply couldn't verify where that money actually went).
And do you think Iraq is the only example of unaccounted for funds in the US government? Think again.
In a report to the DoD comptroller, acting Assistant Inspector General for Auditing David Steensma wrote: "We reported that DOD processed $1.1 trillion in unsupported accounting entries to DOD Component financial data used to prepare departmental reports and DOD financial statements for FY2000. For FY2001 we did not attempt to quantify amounts of unsupported accounting entries; however, we did confirm that DOD continued to enter material amounts of unsupported accounting entries to the financial data." Imagine that ... $1.1 TRILLION dollars missing under Bill Clinton. Did you complain about that, Joe?
And the Pentagon and the Defense Department inspector general estimates that nearly half of the military’s weapons budget went unchecked last year. That's the problem with government. It throws money around like it's play money because to them it play money. The private sector doesn't act that way. Money is real to them.
According to Susan Gaffney, HUD Inspector General in 2000, they had accumulated over $59 billion dollars in "unsupported adjustments" for FY 1999 activity ... before they simple gave up on the audit. Now of course it's not Halliburton that's involved with HUD but ACORN. Oh ... so things must be ok.
Look at Social Security. Here's an article (
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-129782416.html ) that points out the law requires employers to accurately identify who contributes what to the system. But the GAO released a report that says "uncredited social security payments have added up to a whopping $462.8 billion since the Social Security program began in 1937,
with $350 billion of that sum entering the system over the last 15 years." So someone got royally cheated.
Look at Medicare. It's currently got fraud of over 60 billion dollar a year. MSNBC even found (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26860289/ ) that someone got away with buying shoes for amputees, wheelchairs from people suffering from deformed noses and sprained wrists, and walkers for paraplegics.
Look at Obama's Stimulus package. What revision are we on now as to where the trillion went? How many non-existent districts did the money go to? How many non-existent projects. And what about that lawn mower that cost $1100 dollars (or thereabouts) and magically created a hundred (or thereabout) jobs?
Don't try to pretend that trillions couldn't slip through the cracks under the guise of "government *managed* health care".
