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Where Is Your Money Going?
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Last
week Congress spent another $82 billion in an “emergency”
supplemental appropriations bill. There is no emergency, however:
Congress simply exceeded its fiscal year budget once again and needs
more money. The 13 standard appropriations bills, which provide
about $2.4 trillion to run the federal government in 2005, are not
enough to satisfy the ravenous spending appetites of Congress and
the administration. Hence the so-called emergency supplemental bill,
which cravenly combines troop funding with useless foreign aid and
domestic pork.
Supplemental
spending bills are particularly galling because “emergency”
funds are not subject to the same congressional budget rules. This
allows Congress to spend billions of dollars completely outside
the stated budget, with little or no public attention. It also underscores
how meaningless government budgets really are – unlike families
and businesses, the political class never has to worry about busting
the budget.
Remember the
optimistic claims about how the Iraq war would pay for itself? The
liberated Iraqis would exploit the country’s oil resources
and gratefully write a check to Uncle Sam, so the story went. Yet
we don’t hear much about repayment from the Iraqis these days.
American taxpayers already have spent over $200 billion in Iraq,
and now Congress is digging us deeper into debt with the supplemental
bill.
Worse yet,
much of the supplemental spending is exceedingly wasteful foreign
aid. Consider some of these expenditures of your tax dollars:
- $656 million
for tsunami relief. As I’ve written before, Americans have
sent hundreds of millions of dollars in private donations to tsunami
victims. Why should we be taxed further? Why is flooding in Sri
Lanka or Thailand more important than flooding in Wharton, Victoria,
or Galveston, Texas?
- $94 million
for Sudan, another candidate for charity rather than government
aid
- $582 million
to build a new American embassy in Iraq, an outrageous sum considering
that entire luxury resorts are built for less than $500 million
- $76 million
to build a new airport in Kuwait, one of the wealthiest countries
on earth
- Over $500
million to address the drug trade in Afghanistan, despite clear
evidence that the production of opium has grown exponentially
since America began pouring billions of tax dollars into that
country in 2001
$200
million in economic aid for the Palestinians;
- $150 million
for Pakistan, which is run by an unelected dictator
- $34 million
for Ukraine, where the U.S. already intervened in last year’s
elections using your tax dollars. Ukraine recently repaid our
generosity by dumping the U.S. dollar and adopting an exchange
rate that includes the Euro.
Finally, the
emergency supplemental bill enables the District of Columbia to
use taxpayer funds to build a new baseball stadium. This is perhaps
the greatest insult of all in a bill that amounts to extortion cloaked
in patriotic “support the troops” rhetoric.
March
22, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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