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The Republican Congress Wastes Billions Overseas
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Before
the US House of Representatives, July 20, 2005
Mr. Speaker, I rise in strong opposition to this foreign
relations authorization bill. Something has gone terribly wrong
with our foreign policy when we feel we must take almost 21 billion
dollars out of the pockets of the American taxpayer and ship it
overseas. Imagine what the Founders of this country would say if
they were among us to see this blatant disregard for the Constitution
and for the founding principles of this country. This bill proceeds
from the view that with enough money we can buy friends and influence
foreign governments. But as history shows us, we cannot. The trillions
of dollars we have shipped overseas as aid, and to influence and
manipulate political affairs in sovereign countries, has not made
life better for American citizens. It has made them much poorer
without much to show for it, however.
Now we have a Republican-controlled Congress and White House, and
foreign spending soars. It was not that long ago when conservatives
looked at such cavalier handling of US tax dollars with consternation.
Now it seems that they are in a race with the Left to see who can
spend more.
What is wrong with this bill? Let me just mention a few of the
most egregious items. In the name of promoting religious liberty
and fighting anti-Semitism this bill will funnel millions
of dollars to the corrupt Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE) and its Office of Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights (ODIHR). This unaccountable international organization is
at the forefront of the manipulation and meddling in the internal
affairs of other sovereign states, and has repeatedly dishonored
itself through politically-biased monitoring of foreign elections.
The OSCE does not deserve a penny from the American taxpayer, but
this bill will make sure that the lavishly paid bureaucrats that
staff the organization will be able to maintain their standard of
living at our expense. With regard to religious liberty, privately
funded voluntary organizations have been shown to be much more effective
in promoting tolerance. This is mainly true because these are true
grassroots organizations with a stake in their countries and communities,
rather than unelected international bureaucrats imposing politically
correct edicts from above.
This bill spends a total of four and a half billion dollars on
various United Nations activities, UN peacekeeping, and US dues
to various international organizations. Forcing the taxpayer to
continue to underwrite these organizations, which do not operate
in our best interests, is unconscionable.
This bill continues to fund organizations such as the National
Endowment for Democracy, which as I have written before has very
little to do with democracy. It is an organization that uses US
tax money to actually subvert democracy, by showering funding on
favored political parties or movements overseas. It underwrites
color-coded peoples revolutions overseas that
look more like pages out of Lenins writings on stealing power
than genuine indigenous democratic movements. The NED used American
taxpayer dollars to attempt to guarantee that certain candidates
overseas are winners and others are losers in the electoral processes
overseas. What kind of message do we think this sends to foreign
states? The National Endowment for Democracy should receive no funding
at all, but this bill continues to funnel tens of millions of dollars
to that unaccountable organization.
I am also very concerned about several of the amendments to this
legislation. First, the extremely misleading UN reform
act was slipped into this bill even though it was already passed
on the floor as a separate bill. As I have written about this terrible
legislation, it will give the United Nations unprecedented
new authority to intervene in sovereign states.
Another amendment will create a chilling Active Response
Corps, to be made up of US government bureaucrats and members
of non-governmental organizations. Its purpose will
be to stabilize countries undergoing democratic
transition. This means that as soon as the NED-funded peoples
revolutionaries are able to seize power in the streets, US
funded teams will be deployed to make sure they retain power. All
in the name of democracy, of course.
Mr.
Speaker, this is a shameful day for the US Congress. We are taking
billions out of the pockets of Americans and sending the money overseas
in violation of the Constitution. These are billions that will not
be available for investment inside the United States: investment
in infrastructure, roads, new businesses, education. These are billions
that will not be available to American families, to take care of
their children or senior relatives, or to give to their churches
or favorite charities. We must not continue to spend money like
there is no tomorrow. We are going broke, and bills like this are
like a lead foot on the accelerator toward bankruptcy.
July
22, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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