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| Obama’s Budget: Waste and Giveaways | | Print | |
| Written by Thomas R. Eddlem | ||||||||||
| Friday, 08 May 2009 06:00 | ||||||||||
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The problem is, Obama’s budget reveals he is spending like deficits don’t matter and waste is a vital growth industry. The budget proposes a $1.2 trillion deficit for fiscal 2010 (bailout funds will make 2009 deficit top $2 trillion), and that’s just the deficit he’ll admit to. The actual deficit will be much higher when realistic GDP growth figures — rather than his Pollyannish growth projections — are actualized. Obama’s budget proposal openly calls for $500 billion-plus annual deficits every one of the next 10 years and a deficit that increases over time. The problem with that promise is that Obama’s budget Appendix reveals that a good percentage of the money for our new economic foundation is for other countries. He creates a $323 million Civilian Stabilization Initiative for “reconstruction and stabilization assistance” aimed at stabilizing civilian economies abroad. Quality education? Obama would increase education funds going abroad. The "Educational and Cultural Exchange" programs of the State Department would increase from $522 million to $589 million, a more than 12 percent increase. Through increased foreign assistance funding, the United States will embark on several new initiatives that will give children in the poorest countries access to education ensuring they can participate in the global marketplace; foster global food security through sustainable agriculture; expand goodwill and inspire service by increasing the size of the Peace Corps; and stabilize post-conflict states, creating room for them to plant the seeds of democracy. One problem with this aid is that it is borrowed money that adds directly to the U.S. budget deficit. But Obama doesn’t seem to care that the United States doesn’t have the money to pay for the foreign giveaways. Most foreign-aid giveaway programs increase by more than 10 percent this year alone, including:
The prime U.S. foreign-aid administration agency, the Agency for International Development, would see its base budget nearly double from $1.282 billion to $2.225 billion from 2009 to 2010. Likewise, construction for overseas projects would double from $103 million to $208 million over the same year. Trackback(0)
Comments (5)
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Richard Robinson
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America's President Obama has come to what I have expected. Just another hypocrite. American's have never had a decent president since even before FDR. FDR and after have all been 'Socialists' if not worse. |
lea
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Wars and budgets I have looked at budgets for the last 40 years and it seems no different.Where the funds go and what % go to for defense? Are the increase part of the aid for countries we are tearing down already? I would like to know the good part, as how much is going for this country for infrastructures, for states, for agency building as FDA or financial oversight? I always get skewed info, only part of it and out of contest so it is hard to have an objective response. |
John Beerman
said:
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... Paltry is right. Obama cut 0.4% of his budget. If American families are being forced to cut back, so should Washington. I found this petition on the US Chamber's site where you can voice your opposition to this Administration's failure to keep campaign promises and make a significant dent in spending. I already signed on: http://www.friendsoftheuschamb...cfm?ID=349 |
Flu-Bird
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Slopping the demacratic hawgs Its that aniual time of the year when we slop the demacratihawgs and their golden troughs and full oh cash |
janice chase
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obama's budget:Waste and Giveaways I don't think we should be having foreign giveaways when our country is in debt. I have a checkbook that shows how much I have in the bank. I don't spend what I don't have. Giving money to the Palestinian Authority bugs me the most. |





President Barack Obama revealed new details in his fiscal 2010 budget

