The
Economy: Another Casualty of War
This week, as the
American economy continued to suffer the effects of big government, the House
attempted to pass two multibillion dollar "emergency" spending bills,
one for continued spending on the war in
Iraq
, and one increasing spending on domestic and international welfare programs. The
plan was to pass these two bills and then send them to the president as one
package. Even though the House failed to pass the war spending bill,
opponents of the war should not be fooled into believing this vote signals a
long term change in policy. At the end of the day, those favoring
continued military occupation of
Iraq
will receive every penny they are requesting and more as long as they agree to
dramatically increase domestic and international welfare spending as well.
The continued War
in
Iraq
and the constant state of emergency has allowed Congress to use these so-called
"emergency" bills as a vehicle to dramatically increase spending
across the board--including spending that does not meet even the most generous
definition of emergency. For example, the spending proposals currently
being considered by Congress provide $210 million to the Census Bureau and $4
million for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. $4.6 billion is
requested for the closing of military bases, but not any of the more than 700
bases overseas – but bases here at home! Another $387 million would go
to various international organizations and $850 million more just in
international food aid - all this when food prices are skyrocketing here and
American families are having a hard time making ends meet. Because this
spending will be part of "emergency" measures, it will not count
against debt ceilings, or any spending limits set by Congressional budget
resolutions, and does not have to be offset in any way.
Explosive growth of
government is just another tragedy of this war. The "bipartisan"
compromises made in
Washington
are at the expense of the taxpayer, not in the interest of fiscal
responsibility, or peace. The taxpayer loses and government grows.
The bottom line is
that our dollar is falling, the economy is in rough shape, and government
spending is wildly out of control. Congress argues over relatively minor
details, instead of dramatically changing our flawed foreign policy. We
need to bring our troops home, not only from
Iraq
and
Afghanistan
, but from
South Korea
,
Germany
, and the other 138 countries where we have troops stationed. Our foreign
policy of interventionism is not only offensive to others, inviting further
terrorist attacks, but it is ruining our economy as we tax, borrow and print the
money to pay the bills of our empire. The economy and ultimately the
American people suffer because
Washington
is refusing to adopt more sensible and constitutional policies.
Squabbling between
those who favor increased welfare and those who favor increased warfare has
giving the American people a temporary reprieve from having to bear the burden
of yet another dramatic increase in government this week. However, as early as
next week a compromise could be reached that expands both government warfare and
welfare. As congressional approval ratings drop to 18% according to a recent
Gallup
poll, the American people are telegraphing that Congress is taking the country
in the wrong direction. Our government must stop bankrupting the country
so that we can get back on track to a peaceful, prosperous future.