The median income family in the United States
paid $4,451 in federal income taxes for 2008.
Here is how that money was spent:
Following the links from the original article I posted leads to a breakdown of where the average family's taxes went:
Military $1,309
Health $948
Non-military Interest on Debt $530
Military Interest on Debt $352
Income Security & Labor $320
Housing & Community $169
VeteransÓ Benefits $169
Food $160
Government $138
Education $134
Environment, Energy & Science $125
International Affairs $53
Transportation $45
The chart indicated that military expenditures were about 29.4% of the 2008 federal budget, but also that "interest" which was almost 20% of the 2008 fed budget could be divided into interest on military debt (about 8%) and interest on non-military debt (about 12%) - - so that in the 2008 budget, simply by adding interest on military debt to the direct military expenditure of 29.4%, you are getting to about 37%. Veterans' benefits were counted separately in the 2008 figures as 3.8%, which would bring military spending to about 40% of total as originally stated in my first post to this thread. If not counted separately in BT's figures, they are probably hidden in some of the other slices of his multicoloured pie chart.
I don't think the 40% is overstated at all. Rather, I am somewhat concerned that the real costs of the war and the militarization of American society are under-counted through various forms of accounting trickery and federal deceit.
Isn't it interesting how NONE of the Tea Party "budget hawks" are at all interested in staunching the biggest leak in the Treasury, the military spending leak? THAT is sacred not only to the hawks but to the "doves" as well - - a curious unanimity among all the "elected" legislators of the "two-party" system, eh?