While public ed suffers, private D.C. contractors ask, 'What sequester?'
Life in the Ownership Society
Public education and the public sector in general is being devastated by sequester's budget ax.
But today's WSJ reveals how private sector federal contracting has created a new "gilded age" and a new class of super-rich in and around the nation's capital. Journal writer Elizabeth Williamson describes an incredible mansion built in the suburbs of D.C. by technology billionaire Frank Islam who shrugs at the word sequester.
Public education and the public sector in general is being devastated by sequester's budget ax.
But today's WSJ reveals how private sector federal contracting has created a new "gilded age" and a new class of super-rich in and around the nation's capital. Journal writer Elizabeth Williamson describes an incredible mansion built in the suburbs of D.C. by technology billionaire Frank Islam who shrugs at the word sequester.
The sprawling compound is a product of Washington's Gilded Age—a time of lush business profits initially fueled by government outsourcing and war. Some demographers predicted the boom here would ebb as federal spending shrank amid troop withdrawals from the Middle East and efforts to trim the deficit...The explosion in government outsourcing has shoveled federal dollars from Capitol