SLIGHTLY OFF THE
MARK
By the time you read this, the world
may have ended. At least, that’s how some are treating the Sequester, which is
apparently Latin for Apocalypse.
The Sequester is an agreement
between the President and Congress, by itself amazing enough. It means that, if
our government can’t agree on a budget by a certain date, draconian spending
cuts kick in and all the oxygen will be sucked out of the country.
“Draconian” is a Greek word meaning
“needed”. There’s not much doubt among anyone with common sense that huge
government spending cuts are needed, since Congress’ addiction to red ink
spending makes meth addicts look like paragons of self-control. Unfortunately,
according to the President, these awful cuts the Congress is forcing on him
will leave our borders unguarded, empty grocery stores in middle class
neighborhoods, and leave the US Navy reduced to three row boats and a Speedo.
Lately no one’s much mentioned the
fact that the whole thing was the President’s idea to begin with.
While spending cuts are obviously
necessary, the panic of the Sequester never was. Preventing it was a matter of
the President submitting and Congress approving a budget, which is kinda their
job. But they don’t want to face the reality of painful cuts, and why should
they? Despite the view that their main job is raising campaign funds, and
despite the general disgust the public feels toward them, they keep getting
elected anyway. So what if they’re driving the country to ruin? They still get
a raise.
While cuts can be painful, it
doesn’t have to be as bad as they’re making it out to be. For instance, while
we hear cries of border crossings and national parks being shut down and
critical defense personnel laid off, how many Congressional and White House
staff members are being pink slipped? How many IRS agents? Indeed, how many
Federal paper-pushers are going to be standing next to factory workers on the
unemployment line?
That’s what I thought.
So the cuts have to be made, but not
where they’re being made. Let’s consider some recent stats:
The government paid the wrong
person, the wrong amount, or for the wrong reason last year, to the tune of
$115.3 billion. I’m not sure if that includes paying Congressmen.
Amtrak, which has never made a
profit from serving food on their trains, lost $85 million doing so last year. That’s
enough to give every poor person in the world five bags of peanuts and a small coffee.
The Department of Agriculture has an
intern program for the Office of the Chief Information Officer. They spent $2
million … and hired one intern.
The government spent $1.7 billion
maintaining buildings. Good idea – a little work now saves a lot later. But
that money went toward maintaining 77,700 unused
buildings.
Homelessness is a real problem in
this country, which should be addressed by a consolidated, united approach.
Instead, we have seven different agencies with almost a dozen different
programs, and apparently none have talked to the agency that doesn’t use 77,700
buildings.
The Government Accountability
Office, which is ignored by all of Washington, found 34 areas in which federal
agencies have overlapping goals or services that duplicate each other. The cost
of that is billions every year, according to the fourteen agencies assigned to
study the matter.
Also important: Teaching. So
important that the Department of Education, Department of Energy, NASA, and the
National Science Foundation run 82 different programs addressing teacher
quality. They flunk math.
Video conferencing is a cheap and
efficient way to get people on the same page without travel and housing costs.
Maybe someday the government will try that. For now, the Department of Justice
alone held 1,832 conferences in one year, to the tune of $121 million. Just
one, in Istanbul, cost $1.18 million.
The Department of Veteran Affairs
spread one conference out for 11 days, at a resort. That was $221,540.
Another, held by the General
Services Administration, cost $2,500 per employee. It was held in Vegas.
There are thirty food safety laws,
overseen by fifteen different federal agencies. And they still can’t explain to
me the attraction of liver.
The Navy bought 450,000 gallons of
biofuel, which is a nice way to cut down on getting oil from countries that
hate us. They paid $27 per gallon.
You might be surprised, considering
the government’s plan to hire more IRS agents, but the IRS already warehouses
some unused furniture. It costs $860,000 annually.
The Department of Energy bought a
half million bucks worth of “green” energy manufacturing equipment. They can’t
find it.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs paid
for a fish hatchery that operated for fourteen years. Unlike government spending
ideas, no fish was ever hatched.
The Departments of Agriculture and
Energy got together to spend $76 million on a grant to turn wood into ethanol.
The new plant closed a year later. Total ethanol produced: Zero.
The feds also handed over a $25,000
grant, which really isn’t a drop in the bucket by their standards – hardly even
a molecule in the bucket. Still, it’s interesting to note that all the money
went to translate a Maldivian love ballad. That’s amore.
That National Institutes of Health
spent $170,000 to research the hookah smoking habits of Jordanians. Our National Institutes of Health.
Maybe that’s not so surprising,
considering the Agriculture Department funded a reality show that advertised
American cotton – in India. Meanwhile, the EPA funded a $141,450 study of swine
manure in China, which already has our bread. We gave the UN $1.2 million to
promote clean fuel, so why didn’t they fund the non-producing ethanol plant?
Then there’s taxpayer money spent on
private business: Over a half billion to Solyndra, $46.5 million to Beacon
Power, $73.1 million to Abound Solar … I should check and see how those
businesses are doing.
So, what does the Sequestration
actually cut?
Army training; military health care,
ammunition, and fuel; FBI agents; nuclear weapons security; diplomatic
security; food inspection; air traffic control; childhood vaccinations.
So, there you go. Making the hard
choices is replaced by automatic cuts to areas that actually make sense to
fund, and our elected officials go on shirking their duties.
How many of them are getting laid
off?
I'd be happy to translate some love ballads into pig latin, on the cheap. $10,000 each sounds fair.
ReplyDeleteYes, and that means I should be able to get my $50,000 for writing a novel! My tax dollars at work.
DeleteOh, I love this. Let me say that they're also not only cutting, but double cutting social security benefits to the disabled and retired. Nothing like working your whole life and getting a paycheck per month smaller than the minimum wage check.
ReplyDeleteSmarter people have been warning about social security for years, but as with so many things in Washington nobody seems to be listening ...
Delete*headdesk*
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure there are words in the English language strong enough to express how profoundly stupid our government is. If there are, someone needs to inform me what they are so that I can begin using them immediately.
Oh, I don't know -- I think I have some words that are sufficient!
DeleteCommon sense is in short supply no matter who's in office.
ReplyDeleteAin't that the truth.
Delete