Townhall...
Cut
Someone Else
By Rich Galen
7/20/2011
Well,
let’s see . . .
The
Timothy Geithner-imposed deadline
of August 2 to increase the debt limit is one day closer and the
Republican-controlled House passed a debt reduction bill that (a) the
Senate
won’t pass and, even if it did, (b) the President wouldn’t sign.
If
there are 308 million people in
America, count me among the 307,999,993 who don’t understand why this
is so
hard.
I
assume there are seven people who get
it.
No
one thinks the federal government
is spending too little money. The problem is, most of us think the
government
is spending too much money on programs which benefit someone else.
In
a little under six months I will
turn 65 and will be able to claim the senior discount at Harry Potter
movies;
be able to get in line for the early-bird meat loaf special at almost
every
restaurant in Florida; and, what else? Oh, yes, I will be eligible for
Medicare.
I
have no idea how Medicare works, and
I have private health insurance but I will tell you this: DON’T TOUCH
MY
MEDICARE! Cut someone else!
I
tweeted last week that I was
listening to the all-news station on my way to the office and I was
subjected
to ad after ad from group after group telling me, in the most
heart-wrenching
terms, why the government must not cut funds from its program. Cut
someone
else.
Every
dollar of the $3.7 trillion
dollars that the Federal government is scheduled to spend before
September 30,
2011 has got a patron - someone who believes that dollar is not just a
good and
necessary expenditure; but better and more crucial than any other of
the
dollars the government is scheduled to spend. Cut someone else.
They
all can’t be the most important.
Some of those dollars have to be less important than some of the other
dollars.
Same
as tax benefits. Every line in
the 3.7 trillion page U.S. tax code has a patron - someone who believes
that
every dollar of a tax exemption, tax extension tax credit, tax
deduction, or
tax abatement is not just good and necessary but is better and more
crucial
than any other of the dollars the government is scheduled to collect.
Cut
someone else.
Our
national motto, “In God We Trust”
is done. Finished. Null. And. Void.
The
new national motto is: “Cut
Someone Else.”
Well,
boys and girls, the days of
pretending we can have as much we want and for it we can pay as little
as we
want are over. Finished. Null. And. Void.
We
can’t keep acting like
eight-year-olds on Christmas, checking off the presents under the tree
against
the list we so carefully drew up with no regard to how much they cost
nor how
much money there was to buy them.
I
didn’t get the new baseball mitt I
asked for? Why not? If there wasn’t enough money for all the presents I
wanted
then my parents should have bought one less present for one of my
siblings. Cut
someone else.
Don’t
ask me to come up with a list of
Federal programs which should be cut. I don’t know all the programs we
fund,
what they do, nor who they favor. I don’t think anyone knows that. How
could
they? We’re spending $3.7 trillion this year - about $10.1 billion per
day.
That’s
about seven million dollars per
minute. $117,326.23 per second. Every second of every day.
I
know it’s too much to ask that
someone step up and say their program isn’t necessary any more and can
go out
of business. But, would it be too much to ask for someone to step up
and say
their program maybe doesn’t need to be funded at 100 percent of last
year’s
level?
We
don’t need a Balanced Budget
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
There
are 535 voting members of the
U.S. House and Senate who are supposed to know how much the government
is
scheduled to take in every year and then vote on how much the federal
government should spend.
That’s
their job. That’s what we pay
them for. They don’t need a Deficit Reduction Commission. They need a
Backbone
Enhancement Commission.
If
they won’t do their jobs we should
cut their pay.
There
you go! The pay of the U.S.
Congress is the “someone else” we should cut.
Where
do I apply for the Federal grant
to flesh out this excellent idea?
Read
it at Townhall...
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