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Friday, March 01, 2013

Cut The Hysteria

As the President runs around the country fear mongering and stirring up hysteria over the prospect of $85 billion in cuts in THE GROWTH OF a $3.6 trillion budget, here are just a few ways to control the budget growth sensibly. These come from the House Majority Whip’s Office and a few more from Senators Tom Colburn and Rand Paul. Remember that with all the hype, the budget will actually GROW by $15 billion .

As the President runs around the country fear mongering and stirring up hysteria over the prospect of $85 billion in cuts in THE GROWTH OF a $3.6 trillion budget, here are just a few ways to control the budget growth sensibly. These come from the House Majority Whip’s Office and a few more from Senators Tom Colburn and Rand Paul. Remember that with all the hype, the budget will actually GROW by $15 billion .

Reduce Improper Payments: In 2011, by its own estimates, the federal government made $115 billion in improper payments. These are instances where people receive benefits or payments they are not entitled to receive or for which proper documentation hasn't been provided.
Reduce Duplication: According to the non-partisan Government Accountability Office, the federal government administers 94 federal initiatives to foster green building; 15 significant financial literacy programs across 13 agencies; 173 STEM education programs across 13 agencies; and 47 job-training programs. Consolidating these programs would improve their effectiveness and save taxpayers billions of dollars.
Reduce Government Waste: The federal government wastes billions of taxpayer dollars every year, including:
Free Cell Phones: This program cost $2.2 billion in 2013 alone.
ObamaCare Promotion: The federal government spent $51.6 million last year promoting ObamaCare and paying public relations firms.
IRS TV Studio: The IRS has a full-service TV production studio which costs $4 million annually to operate.
Vacation Getaways: The 183 Conferences paid for by federal agencies over the last several years cost taxpayers more per attendee than the infamous October 2010 GSA conference in Las Vegas, NV.
Property Maintenance: The federal government spent $1.7 billion in 2010 to maintain property that is not in use or underutilized.
EPA Grants to Foreign Countries: The EPA has given more than $100 million in grants to foreign countries over the last ten years.
Pay to Play Video Games: The National Science Foundation spent $1.2 million paying seniors to play "World of Warcraft" to study the impact it had on their brain.
Smoke Up! The Department of Veterans Affairs spent $47,000 on a cigarette smoking machine that holds up to 40 cigarettes at a time.

The President would raise your taxes for the second time in eight weeks, rather than consider these bipartisan alternatives:
Reduce Medicaid Loopholes: By reforming the Medicaid provider tax, we could save at least $9.8 billion.
Increase Medicare Means Testing for Upper-Income Earners: By asking the upper-income to pay more for Medicare, we could save approximately $20 billion.
Make Federal Retirement Match the Private Sector: By updating the federal employee retirement system to more closely track with the private sector, we could save approximately$21 billion.
Require the Return of Over payments: By requiring that individuals return over payments for exchange subsidies in ObamaCare, we could save approximately $44 billion.
Eliminate Slush Funds: By eliminating the Public Health Slush Fund in ObamaCare, which Democrats have supported reducing, we could save approximately $10 billion.

Require Food Stamp Eligibility: While ensuring those who need food stamp support get it, we can save approximately $26 billion by simply requiring recipients prove eligibility.

Here is a partial list of items that should be cut from Republican Senator Tom Coburn:

n $91 million in tax loopholes to the NFL, the NHL, the PGA – all are wealthy sports leagues.

n $27 million for Moroccan pottery classes

n $300,000 to promote caviar consumption and production

n $325,000 for robotic squirrels

n $505,000 to promote specialty shampoos for cats and dogs

n $1.3 million in corporate welfare to snack-food producer PepsiCo, Inc.

n $350,000 for a study on imagination techniques for golfers.

n $516,000 for a video game to relive prom night.

And from Rand Paul

*** Reducing federal employee travel by 25%. Every year, the federal government spends $9 billion on federal employee travel. When many Americans are cutting back on their own travel budgets, we can certainly cut back on employee travel;

*** Focusing military research on military needs. Unfortunately, the Pentagon is not immune to waste. They even spent $5.2 million on goldfish studies to see if we could learn about democracy from goldfish;

*** Requiring competitive bidding for federal contracts. By ending laws that force the federal government to pay bloated Davis-Bacon wages and requiring bidding to take place, we can save billions;

*** Cutting taxpayer handouts to foreign countries by 50%. We spend more than $40 billion a year on foreign aid. When we're dealing with a budget crisis here at home, it's only responsible to bring this money home. This provision would eliminate half the foreign aid budget.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

All logical thoughts, however... we, as Americans, have a great need for robotic squirrels, so I'd keep that. (/sarcasm)

Liberals like logic...said no one ever.

Anonymous said...

You have 2 kinds of people out here-the ones who work and strive to do better hoping for a good economy and the ones which it does'nt matter if the economy is tanking or if it's booming,makes no difference to them.

Anonymous said...

The dumocrats are to full of themselves to look at reason and logic. It's their way or not, even if the money is spend foolishly.