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Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Will Congress Choose to Stop Pigging Out?
By Dick Armey
Poll
Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


There are three groups of people who regularly spend other people's money: children, thieves, and politicians. All three of these groups need supervision—a watchful, responsible eye who keeps them in line. For children, that means parents. For thieves, that means police and the courts. For politicians, that means America's many concerned voters.

Supervision is easiest for the first two groups. Children living under the same roof are tough for parents to ignore. Courts and the police are paid to be vigilant regarding the actions of thieves.

Voters, however, have plenty to do in their own lives. Managing homes, jobs, and families takes enough time without having to pay attention to the inner-workings of Washington. In my time as House Majority Leader, I learned that politicians rely on this fact in order to persist in their wasteful ways. Instead of looking for ways to serve their constituents, many in Washington hope the electorate will be too busy to pay attention so that they can continue with their three favorite activities: spending, spending, and more spending.

Nowhere is this clearer than with Congressional earmarks, perhaps the most visible symbol of Congressional waste today. Earmarks are inserts and attachments to spending bills used by politicians to direct money toward pet projects. Thus, instead of federal agencies spending their allotted money on the projects they deem most critical to their goals, they're instructed to spend the money on what are often political priorities intended to benefit narrow special interests.

The most famous example is the Bridge to Nowhere, a $220 million project proposed in 2005 that would've served a mere 50 people living on a remote island. But despite the public protests, the waste hasn't stopped. This year's spending bill included, among other things, $1 million for the so-called “Center for Instrumented Critical Infrastructure” in Pennsylvania. When asked to justify the funding, Rep. John Murtha couldn’t even demonstrate the center exists. Another earmark tagged $2 million toward a college center named after my friend and former colleague Rep. Charlie Rangel—proposed by none other than, you guessed it, Charlie Rangel.

Some say that earmarks are merely a distraction, the total value of which is so small it hardly matters. But $15 billion, the value of Congressional earmarks this year, is hardly peanuts. In fact, it's more than the individual gross domestic product—the entire economic output—of 94 of the world's countries.

Even a passing glance at this year's earmark haul shows just how out of control spending in Washington has become. Congress is called to effectively steward taxpayer money. Instead, they're wasting it.

And what's at least as important as the spending is the corruption that earmarks breed. Earmarks make giving handouts to political allies easy. Want to reward a campaign donor, or an old buddy from local politics? Earmarks give politicians a way to spend taxpayer money on political rewards.

And because most earmarks are buried in lengthy, complicated appropriations report language that's read by few people, it's tough for many ordinary people to find out how their tax dollars are being spent. When it comes to money, Congress is nothing if not sneaky. Continued...

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About The Author
Dick Armey is chairman of FreedomWorks.
Hillary? Obama? McCain?
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The big bad Bear growling down Wall Street isn't going to go into hibernation after November 4th.

Currency inflation (remember to use the word "currency," just as you're reminded to use the full expression "relative humidity" when you're talking about a muggy evening in August) takes a long time to cause problems in the economy.

Currency inflation - which is how the Federal Reserve Corporation "lowers interest rates" - is what the Fed does to enable the U.S. government to borrow money.

This increases the overall U.S. money supply (degrading the dollar in *your* personal pocket with every counterfeit Federal Reserve Note greenback they issue).

Increases in money supply tend to hit the financial markets in much the same way that a dose of crack cocaine hits a junkie's brain.

It causes business people to react as if that increase in money represents a real, honest-to-God increase in demand for goods and services, and so they make decisions to *fulfill* that anticipated increased demand.

And because the increase in money supply is really the result of the Fed counterfeiting dollars, there's no demand.

The business guys' investments are now MALinvestments.

Recessions involve what the economists call "liquidating malinvestments" on a massive, horrible, economy-wide scale.

And this takes some time.

Thus the next few years - 2009 and 2010 for sure - are going to be pretty average horrible.

No matter who is in the White House, he (or she) is going to get the blame for this agony.

I want it to be Hillary.

Failing that, I wouldn't mind if it was Obama.

But I don't want even a *nominal* Republican connected with this misery.

Everybody understand?

--

Creative Destruction
I think it was Milton Friedman who expressed job loss that way. We as a nation have got to experience a catastrophic monetary and economic collapse before things turn around. No one wants to address entitlement programs, (medicare, S.S.) infrastructure needs or other un-glamourous aspects of an ordered civil society. What's needed are representatives of old. Those individuals back when our country was first founded, who had to be almost forced to serve. They felt honor-bound and obligated to try and move the country forward. Some had to literally be dragged back to Washington, from tending farms, or businesses, for critical votes. What we have today are career or "professional" politicians. They attract corruption like white on rice. After one term, we need to vote them out. ONE TERM-WE'VE LEARNED!
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