Source:
http://www.jimhightower.com/
"No
matter how cynical you get, it's almost impossible to keep up." -- Lily
Tomlin
The Bushites Have Outsourced Our Government
to Their Pals
By
Jim Hightower The Hightower
Lowdown 20 June 2007
The
sprawling $43 billion homeland security department (HSD) is known chiefly for
being the agency in charge of America's color-coded terrorist-threat alarm
system ("Good morning, Americans. Today is Yellow. Be vigilant. Report all
suspicious people.") It's boogeyman nonsense, of course, doing absolutely
nothing to make our country safe. But such falderal helps those in charge
obscure HSD's real mission: to serve as a giant federal cookie jar for
corporate America. Go to HSD's website, and you'll find a prominent section
called "Open For Business." There, on any given day, corporate
shoppers can scroll through the hundreds of contracts and grants available to
them. Just dip in and grab some cookies, each one worth from $50,000 to more
than $80 million. Like the department's color codes, the vast majority of these
projects do nothing to make our country safe. Instead, they are make-work
studies, silly technologies, and useless systems that essentially serve as
mediums for transferring billions of our tax dollars to a few corporate big
shots. Ever helpful to its clients, HSD also maintains a private-sector office,
headed by an assistant secretary who is not a security expert but a former
banker from JP Morgan Chase. This office provides concierge service for cookie
grabbers. For example, it recently held a corporate seminar, entitled "The
Business of Homeland Security," offering "tips, hints, and
directions" on how to grab the latest contracts and grants. Lest you think
that patriotism or even national security might be the motivating force behind
these government-industry confabs, a Sikorksy Helicopters executive who
attended the session bluntly explained why he was there: "To us
contractors, money is always a good thing."
Government by Corporation
A
monumental shift has quietly and quickly been taking place in the way the
public's business is done - and We the People have not even been informed about
it, much less been asked to discuss and okay it. Corporations are taking over
our government. No longer is it just a matter of big business's lobbyists and
campaign donations perverting public policy. Now, politically connected
corporations are also seizing day-to-day governmental operations for their own
profit.
Since
the Carter years, Washington has drifted toward more and more outsourcing of
public functions to private contractors, but Bush Incorporated has turned that
gradual increase into a fullblown, jet-powered rush to privatization. The
shadowy and highly lucrative world of government contracting has boomed under
George W, rising 86% since he's been in office and now totaling nearly $400
billion a year. Get this: There are now more people doing federal jobs under
corporate contracts than there are people employed directly by the government.
In other words, in today's government, corporate servants outnumber civil
servants.
Bush
likes to claim that he has cut the federal bureaucracy. In fact, he's increased
it, but most of the people working in his government wear corporate logos. The
New York Times recently reported that contract employees are in practically
every agency, not merely doing perfunctory chores, but sitting in on policy
sessions and drawing up agency budgets. "Even government's online database
for tracking contracts, the Federal Procurement Data System, has been
outsourced," says the Times.
This
phenomenal change is the product not of managerial rationality, but of
nonsensical anti-government ideology. Like the Iraq invasion, which was on the
international agenda of the rabid neocons from Day One of Bush's tenure,
privatization has long been on the domestic agenda of the laissezfaire
ideologues. A January 10, 2001, report from the right-wing Heritage Foundation
provided the roadmap. Titled "Taking Charge of Federal Personnel," it
showed the Bushites how to storm into office and seize control of every agency.
It stressed that they "must make appointment decisions based on loyalty
first and expertise second," that "the whole governmental apparatus
must be managed from this perspective," and that they should use
"contracting out as a management strategy."
The
official rationale for this privatization surge is that corporations are
inherently more efficient than government and save the taxpayer oodles of
money. Nice theory, but they aren't ... and they haven't. Start with this
ideological assertion's most obvious flaw: By their very nature, corporations
are loyal to their own bottom line, not to the country or to the common good.
Any "efficiency" that they produce is derived from paying workers
less (hardly a morale booster) and by taking shortcuts on the services or
products they deliver. These "savings" are more than eaten up by the
high profits, extravagant executive salaries, and other compensation that corporations demand - costs that are not incurred when
government does the job.
Another
flaw in this privatization push is that Bush & Company are
unabashedly running it as a crony program. An analysis by the Times found that
more than half of their outsourcing contracts are not open to competition. In
essence, the Bushites choose the company and award the money without getting
other bids. Prior to Bush, only 21% of federal contracts were awarded on a
no-bid basis.
Also,
if privatization is so good, why is there no ongoing analysis of the costs and
quality of service being delivered? This is an administration that demands a
cost-benefit analysis of even the smallest government regulation of business,
yet it is throwing trillions of our tax dollars into the coffers of corporate
contractors without monitoring whether the outsourcing is costing us more and
producing less than if the work were done by government employees.
Meanwhile,
as the number of contracts has skyrocketed, the number of contract supervisors
in federal agencies has remained the same, which means that the supposed
overseers can't keep an eye on the performance of the profiteers. Whenever
agencies or members of Congress do try to probe, the corporations simply claim
that their financial and performance records are proprietary. While agencies
are accountable to the public and subject to the Freedom of Information Act,
corporate contractors are not.
Even when it's known in advance that a privatization project will
be a rip-off, ideology has trumped integrity.
Last fall, for example, Congress rubberstamped a Bush initiative requiring the
IRS to outsource the collection of certain taxes to three private debt
collectors. The collection agencies will pocket about 24 cents of every dollar
they recover. But if the IRS were simply allowed to hire more revenue agents,
it could collect these same debts for only 3 cents of every dollar brought in.
Over 10 years, the three companies expect to reap $330 million from this deal.
A Corporatized War: As we've learned
during the last four-plus years, George W's Iraq war is run by a bumbling
triumvirate composed of the White House, the Pentagon, and the Department of
Halliburton.
This
massive military contractor has done awfully well the past few years, thanks to
its old CEO, "Buckshot" Cheney. Since the BushCheney regime took
office, Halliburton's government contracts have increased by a stunning 600%, including more than $10 billion in
Pentagon contracts - many of them awarded without the fuss and muss of
competitive bidding.
In
return, Halliburton has delivered gas-price gouging, contaminated food and
water, and a consistent windfall profit status.- These
are our "savings" from privatization A 2006 federal audit of $1.7
billion in Pentagon purchases found that taxpayers were soaked for excessive
fees from contractors and for tens of millions of dollars in waste. One reason
was "poor contracting practices." Such as? The audit reports that 92% of the contracts
were awarded without verifying that the contractors pro vided accurate cost estimates,
and 96% of the work was inadequately monitored. 2
Hightower Lowdown June 2007 tent pattern of overcharges. It has been
caught hiring Third World laborers to do its grunt work in Iraq, paying them as little as $5 a day, and then
billing Uncle Sam more than $50 a day for each worker. In a February
analysis of $10 billion in waste and overcharges by various contractors in
Iraq, federal investigators found Halliburton responsible for $2.7 billion.
The
corporation's 2006 profits were $2,348,000,000, and its overall profits have
increased over 368% since the Bushites have been in office. Meanwhile, Halliburton has now outsourced
itself, announcing this year that its top executives will move from Houston to
palatial new corporate headquarters in Dubai. But don't worry - the
executives are keeping enough of a corporate presence in the good ol' USA to
qualify for more government contracts.
People
see Halliburton as the face of the privatized war in Iraq, but that's hardly
the whole story. Indeed, there's a dirty little fact that Washington's
warmongers don't tout: Bush has put
almost as many private contractors in the Iraq war as U.S. troops.
Prior
to Bush's "surge," there were about 140,000 American troops in Iraq
and about 100,000 contract employees there. Contrast this to only 9,200
privatized troops sent to the Gulf war by George's daddy in 1991. And the
100,000 number doesn't count subcontractors, which
would add an estimated 20,000 to 40,000 more private troops (no one knows for
sure, since the Pentagon doesn't keep track of them). In addition, while the
surge will put another 22,000 military troops in Iraq, it will also increase
the private forces by an untold number.
Outfits
like Halliburton, DynCorp, Blackwater, L-3, Titan, Custer Battles, Triple
Canopy, and Wackenhut are reaping billions of our tax dollars doing military
work that the Bush-Cheney Pentagon has outsourced. Not coincidentally, nearly
all of these corporations are big-dollar donors to Republicans and/or are run
by executives with tight GOP ties.
In
part, corporate Iraq assignments provide support services - laundry, meals,
delivery of water and gasoline, etc. But a huge part of the military function
itself has been privatized in this war - such things as interrogating prisoners
(including in the infamous Abu Ghraib prison), training the Iraqi army,
guarding the Green Zone and the Baghdad airport, protecting military convoys,
analyzing intelligence, and providing paramilitary security forces.
The
personnel performing these tasks are not soldiers but hired hands, most of whom
lack the training needed to make proper combat judgments, and they operate
independently of the military command. "They shoot people, and someone
else has to deal with the aftermath," says a frustrated U.S. officer.
They
also get shot, bombed, maimed, and killed. Yet the Bushites, wanting to
downplay the negatives, don't count such people in casualty reports. The
official number of 3,400 troops killed in Iraq doesn't include any from Bush's
contract army. How many of them have died? No one knows the real number, but
the Labor Department, which tracks workers compensation claims, has silently
recorded 917 contractor deaths. More than 12,000 have been wounded in battle or
on the job. These casualties are a hidden toll of this awful war, another
measure of its deceit and immorality.
Contractors Galore
Washington
is under assault by hordes of corporations that are eagerly dicing up our
government into digestible segments and then consuming them through either
contracts or outright privatization.
Here
are some examples:
* WALL STREET BANKING conglomerates leer lasciviously at our Social
Security Fund, eager to grab the hundreds of billions of dollars in fees they
could assess for "managing" our accounts in a privatized system.
* BUSH HAS REDUCED
FEMA, a once proud and strong government responder to natural disasters, to a
haven for political hacks hurling billions of dollars in no-bid contracts to
Halliburton and its ilk for the rescue and rehab of New Orleans - only to see
the money disappear and the wreckage remain.
* WHEN THE PENTAGON
DECREED a few years ago that the esteemed Walter Reed Army Medical Center was
to be substantially privatized, the treatment of wounded vets quickly
deteriorated to scandalous levels. The politically connected IAP Worldwide
Services company - run by two former Halliburton executives and boasting of
having Dan Quayle on its board - was handed a $120 million contract to manage
the place (even though IAP had previously botched the delivery of ice to the
Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina - a job that it was contracted to do by
FEMA).
* THE
CURRENT COLLEGE-LOAN scandal is not merely a matter of some financial-aid offices
at universities taking gifts, consulting fees, and stock from big private
lenders. Rather, the entire system is scandalous - it's an artificial,
privatized lending structure that adds nothing of value to students but greatly
increases the cost and complexity of getting student loans that could be made
cheaply, simply, honestly, and directly by the Department of Education.
FEDEX, UPS and the giant corporate mailers are
trying to privatize the U.S. Postal Service piece by piece by
deregulating the entire postal market, outsourcing the most lucrative postal
functions, and abandoning America's principle of universal service for
everyone. [The United States Postal Service first began
moving the mail on July 26, 1775, when the Second Continental Congress named
Benjamin Franklin as the nation's first Postmaster General. In accepting the
position, Franklin dedicated his efforts to fulfilling George Washington's
vision. Washington, who championed a
free flow of information between citizens and their government as a cornerstone
of freedom, often spoke of a nation
bound together by a system of postal roads and post offices.
http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/consumerawareness/a/uspsabout.htm
] See also: Rachel Maddow did a very nice piece on the
U.S. Postal Service on April 5th. You can see it here. Briefly, she cites the
constitutional authority for the Post Office, the efficiency with which it
runs, and its approval rating (way higher than other government services).
Lurita's Lurid Tale
Lurita
Doan, who ran a federal contracting company in Virginia and who has been a
six-figure donor to Bush and the GOP, was chosen by George last year to head
the General Services Administration (GSA). This agency doles out some $56
billion annually in federal contracts and is in charge of policing the contractors.
At her confirmation hearing, Doan said she wanted to prove she can run a federal agency like a business - and she has.
She's run GSA like Enron.
Just two months after taking office, Doan made a
robust attempt to hand a $20,000 no-bid contract to a friend and former
business associate, even going so far as to sign the deal personally.
Ultimately, GSA's general counsel had to step in and nix this obvious
conflict-of interest gaffe.'
But
Doan kept playing loose with the people's money. Last year, when a technology
contract with Sun Microsystems was up for renewal, two
GSA contract officers rejected it on the grounds that the corporation was
overcharging taxpayers. Doan personally intervened, suggesting that one of the
officers was "stressed." She brought in another officer, who promptly
approved the renewal - and got a long-coveted transfer to GSA's Denver office.
Then
Doan got paranoid, apparently feeling that the agency's independent inspector
general (IG) was foiling her enthusiastic efforts to "streamline" the
contract-awarding process and to loosen up audits on corporations getting
contracts. She chided the IG and, according to notes taken in a staff meeting,
compared him and his staff to terrorists! Doan has now proposed cutting $5
million from the IG's audit budget, which is used to detect corporate fraud and
waste, and shifting some of his duties to - are you
ready for this? - private contractors.
Coalition of Greed: Why is this
happening? Paul Light, a New York University professor and expert on public
service, points to a coalition of the greedy fueling the growth of what he
calls "the hidden workforce of
contractors." The contractors, of course, love privatization. Many
corporations have been formed (often by former officials in the military or
government) just to sup at the federal trough and many subsist wholly on
government contracts. Pentagon contractors have grown especially fat on our tax
dollars, with the largest, Lockheed-Martin, now receiving more federal funds than
the Department of Justice.
At
the same time, a huge lobbying force has been built to keep the cash flowing.
Each corporation has its own lobbyists, and the contracting industry as a whole
has an additional lobbying group, the Professional Services Council, which
pushes for still more corporatization of government.
Then
there are the politicos in both parties who're eager to show that they are
reigning in big government. They shove public tasks into corporate hands in
order to create what Light calls "the illusion that [government] is
smaller than it actually is." And,
of course, there are the political ideologues who push
privatization simply as a matter of faith and political correctness, even
though there's no evidence that it is cheaper - much less better.
It's
on this last point that corporatization ultimately founders. For contractors, the concept of
"better" applies strictly to their bottom lines - not to the country.
They are out to get theirs, no matter what happens to the rest of us. This is
why they've kept the size and scope of the corporate takeover hidden from us.
It's also why there's no accountability, no public scrutiny, no analysis of
public benefits built into the privatization push - the contractors know that
corporatization is not better for America. Our government is
not meant to be a marketplace. It is intended as a democratic forum where the
needs and aspirations of ALL the people are addressed. The corporations'
grab-all-you-can, survival-of-the-fattest ethos is about serving their
interest, not the public's. This is why We the People must expose,
challenge, stop, and reverse the corporatization of our public institutions. Not
only are corporations taking over government functions, they are also moving
rapidly to take over our essential public assets - from highways to airports.
In next month's newsletter, we'll give you the lowdown on who's
selling America to whom ... and why.
--------- From "The Hightower
Lowdown," edited by Jim Hightower and Phillip Frazer, June 2007. Jim
Hightower is a national radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author
of "Thieves In High Places: They've Stolen Our Country And It's Time to
Take It Back."