In some countries the 'military-industrial complex' is more than a metaphor
THE darkest character in Joseph Heller’s dark novel, “Catch-22”, is Milo Minderbinder, a lowly mess officer who runs a huge business empire, M&M Enterprises, on the side. He flogs “surplus” army supplies, travels the world making deals and accumulating extravagant official titles (such as Caliph of Baghdad and Mayor of Cairo) and, in the spirit of popular capitalism, gives his fellow soldiers nominal shares in his ever-expanding business. M&M Enterprises almost crashes when the caliph-cum-mayor overextends himself by buying all the cotton in Egypt. There is so much of the stuff that he cannot get rid of it even by covering it in chocolate and serving it to the troops. The American government eventually steps in to solve his mounting problems: M&M Enterprises has grown too big to fail.
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