<<This article does not show that spending is not accounted for by the CBO as you claimed. It just tries to argue that some spending should be classified as military spending based on the opinion of the author.>>
Well, first of all it was based on a little more than "the opinion of the author." The author provided some pretty cogent reasons why some spending should be classified as military spending, and it doesn't seem likely to me that those reasons can easily be contradicted.
Secondly, it seems to me that the case has been adequately made out that those neat little government pie charts showing what percentage of the pie goes to the DOD is substantially misleading to anyone without an accounting degree and a lot more detailed breakdown than the pie charts provide, with respect to how much federal money actually does go to the military and its helpers. As the article itself says,
<< . . . few appreciate that the total amount of all defense-related spending greatly exceeds the amount budgeted for the Department of Defense.
<<. . . other lines identify funding that serves defense purposes just as surely as—sometimes even more surely than—the money allocated to the Department of Defense.
<<On occasion, commentators take note of some of these additional defense-related budget items, such as the Department of Energy’s nuclear-weapons program, but many such items, including some extremely large ones, remain generally unrecognized.>>
It's clear to me that through smoke-and-mirror accounting tricks, the full extent of the military budget is in fact kept from American eyes. Ami may be correct in the sense that a good accountant, with access to detailed budgetary breakdowns of the pie slices that aren't overtly military, and more time on his hands than most of us are able to enjoy, might be able to piece together a more accurate picture of U.S. "defense" spending, but this is hardly what most people understand as a frank and open disclosure by the government. What I said was essentially true, and Ami may or may not be correct in assuming that it's all there, in supplementary bills, etc., for anyone with the time and skill to pull it all together.
The other comment I wanted to make on this whole line of argument is that it's absurd to compare spending on such social welfare programs as SS, food stamps, etc. with military spending. Social benefits spending puts the money right back into the pockets of the most needy Americans and shows immediate benefits in brighter futures for them, so in no way is it wasted. The military spending either goes to the pockets of an army of thugs whose main function is to murder, rape and torture, or it goes into the pockets of the so-called Merchants of Death, giant corporations manufacturing ever more horrible ways to mutilate and kill other human beings. That's what I call wasted money.