Dodge what? My intial post was in relation to the graph about spending as % of gdp and explained the large increase was due to the creation of an interstate highway system and the necessary increase in military spending.
Your response was that
"You'll note that a curious thing happens after wars: war spending ends and overall outlays fall back towards pre-war norms. Happens with every war budget large enough to be visible on the spending curve. Try again."
I noted that after WWII spending in no way fell back to pre-war norms, even though that budget is obviously large enough to be visible on the curve.
Also to say that "post-war rebuilding that ended a half-century ago has ZERO bearing on our present problems" is also misleading. As my initial point was stating WWII changed the fundamental size and nature of our military and as a resultant fact it's budget. Dwight Eisenhower expressed concern over the development of a "Military Industrial Complex" currently known spending is somewhere on the order of 663 billion dollars for this fiscal year. However when figuring in the DOD's "Black Budget" that number easily exceeds 700 billion dollars. This trend in spending began following WWI and continues to this day. It can be argued that this spending and that spent during the cold war created much of the debt we now hold and inherently the interest incurred.
Furthermore a large percentage of the pensioners and entitlements you speak of are a result of the increase in defense spending. Servicemen, reserves, CIA, FBI, Coast Guard, NSA and other agencies make up over half of government workers in this nation. Now if you want to call servicepeople heroes in times of war and cut their benefits for ensuring your freedom in times of peace you will truly pass the test of being a Republican.