But Vern, in convoluted government bureaucratic talk, if you plan for a 15% budget increase, and only get a 10% increase they claim that they took a 5% budget cut
The most amazing thing to me is that the major media sources report it that way!!!
I’ll give you a better one than that – there is no accountability in the budget. Our system was designed to be run with a ledger book and a steel-nibbed pen. So real needs are rolled up into categories, line items and so on, so that a clerk with a green eyeshde and sleeve protectors can manage it…
When Congress debates a budget, they wheel and deal, taking a billion out of this “line item” and putting a billion in another “program.” When the budget passes , they have no idea what the money will buy. They know they broke
something, but they don’t know what.
So high level bureaucrats have the power to “manage” the money. Of course, they don’t know what’s broken, either – but something is. So they hold some money back for “emergencies.”
And the bureaucrats below them do the same thing. And the bureaucrats below them.
Then the end of the fiscal year approaches and the system is awash with unspent money, held back for “emergencies” that didn’t occur. But we can’t leave the money unspent! Congress will cut us next year if we do that.
So there’s a wild stampede to spend “year end funds.” And the contracting officers are swamped. They run out of time to announce contracts, to allow prospective bidders the statutory 60 days to respond, to evaluate the bids and allow for bid protests.
So now the system is full of money we can’t spend on contracts – we ran out of time. We have to find a way to spend it
without contracts.
Which explains why some government offices have closets full of outdated computers, still in the original boxes, and others have a thousand year supply of toilet paper. And why a certain military base has gazebos on every available square foot of open ground.
Until we can get people to be individually responsible for their actions there is no way that we can even begin to address eliminating poverty.
I know someone who would debate that hotly – claiming that people who are over their ears in debt need “help.” It isn’t their fault.
We allow abortion, our schools pass out condems, so now free sex has little consequence. Should an unwanted child be conceived to a teenage girl we will feed and care for it, or abort it, all without any social stigma or disgrace. The father is quite often not held responsible, so there is little incentive for him to step up and due his duty. Most poverty is centered around single parent families and often of young unwed mothers.
The system is designed to
create such situations. If you subsidize, say rice, you’ll get so much rice that the fair market value falls below the cost to produce it (as it has.)
If you subsidize out-of-wedlock pregnancies and single-parent families, guess what?
We will certainly always have the mentally retarded and the physically disabled that we should take care of, but as a society we should make a much stronger effort to keep down the rate of “accidental” pregnancies by teaching abstenance, injecting moral standards and supporting traditional families as opposed to accepting alternative living arrangements.
You mean teach
values?
But in order to teach values, you have to teach that some things are
wrong! And if you do that, people who do wrong things will “suffer reduced self-esteem.”
A few more facts about poverty. While single moms tend to be more likely to live in poverty with their kids, those kids also tend to commit more crimes, be more violent, and they also tend to have higher rates of divorce and they tend to spawn more illegitimate children. This is not a race issue, it crosses all races (at least in the US).
Of course!
We subdize the very behavior that creates poverty – and are absolutely
astounded to find that we
get more poverty as a result!