there's serious concerns that the sheer expense of maintaining [the US] military is one of the biggest drains on our economy as a whole.
Uh, this statement is ... I can't find a good word.
The expense of maintaining the US military is a major drain on the
US Federal Budget/spending (a bit more than 50% of discretionary spending, 19% of the total). It also comes in at 4.7% of the Nation's GDP.
Discretionary spending makes up 36% of Federal spending. If you cut Discretionary spending
in its entirety, the Federal government would still be deficit spending for the first year and you would have added anyone being paid by that Discretionary spending to the unemployment pool.
Now, the above having been said,
a decade of deficit spending to include
two nation-building projects (going beyond just military spending) puts strain on the economy government spending. Taxes were
decreased during the time period reducing overall government negative impact on the economy, in theory. Less than 1% of the nation's workforce serves in the military thus no real impact on the available workforce.
Then I would look at a
comparison of tax revenue as a percentage of GDP - where plenty of low-military spending as a % of GDP countries are taxing the sum of their GDP much higher than the US.
So, uh ya... I think that argument is flawed for a variety of reasons.
I'll also point out that the number of US active duty personnel includes things like logistics personnel, military police, and other non-frontline combat troops already. The US Department of Defense webpage says they have 450,000 employees, but I don't know how many of those are military and how many are civilian.
Personal in ServiceAnyone employed full-time by the Caldari Navy, Army, or any of the eight corporate forces, are accounted for in this figure.
It does, explicitly, include people like factory workers, administrators, etc.
everyone in the military-industrial complex (which might get you close to that number, I suppose), it doesn't make much sense to call an assembly line worker at a Lockheed plant a "soldier".
The LockMart, Boeing, Northrup Grummann, Raytheon employees or at least their place of business (the plant) is a legal target under the Geneva Convention.