Top 20 Fast Facts About the House Democrats’ Trillion Dollar Spending Plan
House Democrats Derail Bipartisan Process, Plow Ahead with Proposals to Fund Digital TV Coupons, Cars for Bureaucrats, and Contraceptives … In a Bill Allegedly About the Economy
Washington, Jan 26 - Earlier this month, when then-President-elect Obama met with Democratic and Republican congressional leaders, he laid out a vision of crafting a bipartisan economic recovery package focused on creating jobs and fast-acting tax relief. However, in the weeks since that meeting, Democratic leaders in Congress have taken that vision and turned it upside down, crafting a plan loaded with hundreds of billions in spending on programs and projects – most of which will not impact our ailing economy for many years, if ever, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
Rather than working with Republicans on a proposal that lets families, small businesses, entrepreneurs, and the self-employed keep more of what they earn to create jobs and help fix our economy, it seems congressional Democrats are prepared to barrel ahead with the same-old, same-old – more and more aimless spending – at a time when the American people expect so much more out of their elected officials in Washington. For a taste of just how badly Capitol Hill Democrats have strayed from the vision of a bipartisan plan to get our economy moving again, take a look at these 20 fast facts about their bloated plan:
1. The $825 billion package slated for a House vote later this week will exceed more than $1.1 trillion when adding in the interest ($300 plus billion) between 2009-2019 to pay for it.
2. The Capitol Hill Democrats’ plan includes funding for contraceptives; regardless of where anyone stands on taxpayer funded contraception, there is no question that it has NOTHING to do with the economy.
3. The legislation could open billions of taxpayer dollars to left-wing groups like the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), which has been accused of voter fraud, is reportedly under federal investigation; and played a key role in the housing meltdown.
4. Here are just a few of the programs and projects that have been included in the House Democrats’ proposal:
· $650 million for digital TV coupons.
· $600 million for new cars for the federal government.
· $6 billion for colleges/universities – many which have billion dollar endowments.
· $50 million in funding for the National Endowment of the Arts.
· $44 million for repairs to U.S. Department of Agriculture headquarters.
· $200 million for the National Mall, including $21 million for sod.
5. The plan establishes at least 32 new government programs at a cost of over $136 billion. That means more than a third of this plan’s spending provisions are dedicated to creating new government programs.
6. The plan provides spending in at least 150 different federal programs, ranging from Amtrak to the Transportation Security Administration. Is this the “targeted” plan Democratic leaders promised?
7. Even though the legislation contains at least 152 separate spending proposals, the authors of the plan can only say that 34 have any chance at keeping or growing jobs.
8. Just one in seven dollars of an $18.5 billion expenditure on “energy efficiency” and “renewable energy programs” would be spent within the next 18 months.
9. The total cost of this one piece of legislation is almost as much as the annual discretionary budget for the entire federal government.
10. The House Democrats’ bill will cost each and every household $6,700 in additional debt, paid for by our children and grandchildren.
11. The bill provides enough spending – $825 billion – to give every man, woman, and child in America $2,700. $825 billion is enough to give every person in Ohio $72,000.
12. $825 billion is enough to give every person living in poverty in the United States $22,000.
13. Although the House Democrats’ proposal has been billed as a transportation and infrastructure investment package, in actuality only $30 billion of the bill – or three percent – is for road and highway spending. A recent study from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that only 25 percent of infrastructure dollars can be spent in the first year, making the one year total less than $7 billion.
14. Much of the funding within the House Democrats’ proposal will go to programs that already have large, unexpended balances. For example, the bill provides $1 billion for Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) – a program that already has $16 billion on hand. States also are sitting on some $9 billion in unused highway funds – funds that Congress is prepared to rescind later this year.
15. All board members of the “Accountability and Transparency Board” created by this legislation are appointees of the President; none will be appointed by Congress.
16. A scant 2.7 percent, or $22.3 billion of the overall package, is dedicated to small business tax relief.
17. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the legislation increases by seven million the number of people who get a check back from the IRS that exceeds what they paid in payroll and income taxes.
18. The “Making Work Pay” tax credit at the center of the plan amounts to $1.37 a day, or about the price of a cup of coffee.
19. Almost one-third of the so-called “tax relief” in the House Democrats’ bill is spending in disguise, meaning that true tax relief makes up only 24 percent of the total package – not the 40 percent that President Obama had requested.
20. $825 billion is just the beginning – many Capitol Hill Democrats want to spend even more taxpayer dollars on their “stimulus” plan. In fact, the Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. David Obey (D-WI), told Roll Call earlier this month, “I would not be surprised to see us go further on some of these programs down the line.”
A Normal, Everyday Summary of the Life of a Modest, Exceptional Volunteer
4:00 P.M.-- Sign in downstairs in the volunteer office. Determine if my shoes reach a semblance of cleanness and whiteness, then head up to ICU on the third floor. Commence candy striper duties.
4:05 P.M.-- Manage to snag a nurse's attention (most likely Linda, Debbie, Cathy, or my mom) and badger her for work. Do menial tasks such as folding laundry (washcloths, isolation gowns, bed materials, etc.), pass water out to the patients, give the nurses coffee or other decadent delights from the lounge, assemble packets, etc. Good stuff doesn't happen until later. Heh heh.
4:45 P.M.-- Have a quick lunch with some of the staff. Despite widespread belief, the hospital cafeteria's white pizza and wedding soup are almost as delicious as Cajun shrimp and fried gator.
5:05 P.M.-- Probably deliver a few reports and files to the other stations (most likely TCU, Medical Records, and 4North) at this point. Someone might also ask me to take bodily fluids to the Lab or retrieve a bag of ripe, thick blood from them. Grab medication from Pharmacy or equipment from Central Sterile.
5:35 P.M-- Taking a quick break to catch up on current events with Debbie, Jo, Trish, or anyone else within earshot. Blowing holes at the theory of evolution or global warming, discussing whether marijuana should be legalized (well, while I was writing a paper in Honors English 11, this topic popped up multiple times), talk about how someone's husband/ex/kid/parent/etc. Is doing, etc.
5:45 P.M.-- Since this is ICU, which contains the greatest number of competent nurses of any station, several of the worst case scenario types of patients are sent here. By now, a nun is screeching at my mom about how Catholics and catheters should not be mixed together. Or a heroin addict is freaking out thanks to the dopamine meant to calm her (instead CC is whipping off her hospital gown and giggling hysterically). Or Bed 8 has ripped out his IV tubing and is gorging himself on his own blood. Or Bed 6, the person the girls in the Emergency Room screwed over, is going into cardiac arrest. I get to sit back and watch the events unfold, mentally documenting them.
6:25 P.M.--Things have slowed down. Help Linda or someone else clean desks and patients' rooms. Take unsanitary, MRSA/Ebola/avian flu-breeding linen to the Dirty Utility room. Do some menial tasks and banter with the nurses.
6:50 P.M.-- Help Cathy (either Cathy One or Cathy Two) with some secretarial type of work, like copy more forms and organize them.
7:00 P.M.-- Give everyone a hug, grab my belongings, and saunter out the door while humming a Jimmy Buffett tune.
Where the nurses keep track of a patient's heart rate and other matters.
The Clean Utility room
Nurse Staci and the man who filled my hours with endless math puzzles
Medical Storage unit
Where the nurses keep personal photos and mementos pinned
Nurses' Lounge
Vacant Patient Room
Medical Storage (we keep the good stuff here)
Storage Room
Hugging an awesome nurse by the secretary's workstation
Debbie rocking out
One of my favorite nurses of all time
U Hospital—the best place for a deathbed conversion
U Hospital
Don't Forget to Type Address
Senior Project Verification
Date: Jan. 6, 2009
Dear Evaluation Committee Members:
(Name) has spent at least 100 hours candy striping located at (place).
Signed: _________
Print Name: ________
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