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This week the House is expected to pass an $825 billion economic stimulus
package. In reality, this bill is just an escalation of a government-created
economic mess. As before, a sense of urgency and impending doom is being used
to extract mountains of money from Congress with minimal debate. So much for
change. This is déjà vu. We are again being promised that its
passage will help employment, help homeowners, help the environment, etc. These
promises are worthless. This time around especially, Congress should know better
than to pass anything of this magnitude without first reading the fine print.
There a many red flags that I have found in this bill.
At least $4 billion is allocated to expanding the police state and the war
on drugs through Byrne grants, which even the Bush administration opposed,
and the COPS program, both of which are corrupt and largely ineffective programs.
To help Big Brother keep a better eye on us and our children, $20 billion
would go towards health information technology, which would create a national
system of electronic medical records without adequate privacy protection. These
records would instead be subject to the misnamed federal "medical privacy" rule,
which allows government and state-favored special interests to see medical
records at will. An additional $250 million is allocated for states to nationalize
individual student data, expanding Federal control of education and eroding
privacy.
$79 billion bails out states that haphazardly expanded their budgets during
the bubble years, but refuse to retrench and cut back, as their taxpayers have
had to, during recession years.
$200 million expands Americorps. $100 million goes to "faith-and-community" based
organizations for social services, which will further insinuate the government
into charity and community service. Private charities are much more efficient
and effective because they are directly accountable to donors, while public
programs tend to get rewarded for failure. With its money, the Federal Government
brings its incompetence and its whims, while creating foolish dependence. This
is sad to see.
Of course the bill is rife with central planning projects. $4 billion for
job training, much of which will be used to direct workers into "green jobs".
$200 million to "encourage" electric cars, $2 billion to support US manufacturers
of advanced batteries and battery systems, which is yet another function of
government I can't find in the Constitution. Not to mention $500 million for
energy efficient manufacturing demonstration projects, $70 million for a Technology
Innovation Program for "research in potentially revolutionary technologies" in
which government, not supply and demand, will pick winners and losers. $746
million for afterschool snacks, $6.75 billion for the Department of Commerce,
including $1 billion for a census.
This bill delivers an additional debt burden of $6,700 to every American man,
woman and child.
There is a lot of stimulus and growth in this bill - that is, of government.
Nothing in this bill stimulates the freedom and prosperity of the American
people. Politician-directed spending is never as successful as market-driven
investment. Instead of passing this bill, Congress should get out of the way
by cutting taxes, cutting spending, and reining in the reckless monetary policy
of the Federal Reserve.
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Dr. Ron Paul
Project Freedom
Congressman Ron Paul of Texas enjoys a national reputation
as the premier advocate for liberty in politics today. Dr. Paul is the leading
spokesman in Washington for limited constitutional government, low taxes, free
markets, and a return to sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed
currency. He is known among both his colleagues in Congress and his constituents
for his consistent voting record in the House of Representatives: Dr. Paul
never votes for legislation unless the proposed measure is expressly authorized
by the Constitution. In the words of former Treasury Secretary William Simon,
Dr. Paul is the "one exception to the Gang of 535" on Capitol Hill.
Copyright © 2006-2010 Dr. Ron Paul
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