military spending freeze and a thorough vetting of all contracts and contractors by someone who can do real math, not just the republican kind.I agree with the 10% cut in non-military spending!
military spending freeze and a thorough vetting of all contracts and contractors by someone who can do real math, not just the republican kind.I agree with the 10% cut in non-military spending!
Nope, less than 1/4 of that is salaries.Most of what the US spends on is salary. The US military pays far in excess of what other militaries pay their members.
Don't forget those evil liberals!Magats could never accept that.
They truly believe that everything is wrong in their lives is the fault of brown and black people, migrants and for many, women.
They are very sad people who take no responsibility for themselves.
The military isn't particularly bad or good at contracting by comparison with the rest of government in general. The problem is that what you or I would think of as serious money, most larger defense contractors see as almost a rounding error.military spending freeze and a thorough vetting of all contracts and contractors by someone who can do real math, not just the republican kind.
And?The military isn't particularly bad or good at contracting by comparison with the rest of government in general. The problem is that what you or I would think of as serious money, most larger defense contractors see as almost a rounding error.
For example, let's say GE or Boeing were given a proposal by the government to make something and the amount looks relatively small, a few hundred thousand to a million in costs. Either's contracting department would simply send back a bid of something like, cost + $1 million. That is, whatever it costs to make it plus $1 million in profit on top of that. That took somebody at either company all of five minutes to generate.
From the government perspective, a contract for what might be $2 million total cost is the equivalent of pocket change. The government could very likely get a better deal with smaller businesses that are capable of doing the work and who would be far more careful in making the bid, but those companies are difficult to deal with going both directions because the government's contracting rules are one-size-fits-all.
That's true across the board for the federal government.