JolietJake
Banned
That doesn't prove we've become more socialist, just that government spending has grown.
Since the beginning of the War on Poverty, government has spent $15.9 trillion (in inflation-adjusted 2008 dol$lars) on means-tested welfare. In comparison, the cost of all other wars in U.S. history was $6.4 trillion (in inflation-adjusted 2008 dollars).
Total welfare spending tends to fly under the radar screen because it's spread across so many bureaucracies. There are at least 13 government departments and agencies, 17 budget functions and 71 separate programs involved in the federal welfare state. But the whole thing is huge. Add up all the federal, state and local government spending and you'll find aid to poor and lowincome persons is the third most expensive government activity.
Also interesting. For an apples to apples comparison, we'd have to then also include the 50 state agencies tasked with maintaining a military force. Plus the DoD, including all military research, purchases, salaries, costs of maintaining bases here and overseas, etc. Plus the VA, with their medical care, loan guarantees, college tuition reimbursement, etc. Plus every state program for service members. Plus the state programs for veterans (yes, vets and "active" fall under different bureaucracies). We'd probably have to throw in the city specific support areas as well. I know the city of Houston has a department for Veterans Affairs just at the city level. I guess it would probably be in bad taste to include lost production from dead and wounded soldiers.Total welfare spending tends to fly under the radar screen because it's spread across so many bureaucracies. There are at least 13 government departments and agencies, 17 budget functions and 71 separate programs involved in the federal welfare state. But the whole thing is huge. Add up all the federal, state and local government spending and you'll find aid to poor and lowincome persons is the third most expensive government activity.