By Alan
Caruba
The one
thing the “sequester” did was to get people asking why government spending could
not be reduced. Adding to the drama of the automatic cuts was the
sky-is-falling, government-services-will-stop, and comparable lies the President
and his cabinet secretaries told until it became obvious that the public was not
buying it.
What
the President did not talk about was the incredible, obscene waste of taxpayer’s
money that goes on every day in every department and agency of the U.S.
government. Americans are so accustomed to hearing everything described in the
billions and trillions, they have lost sight of what these numbers really mean
and this is particularly true in light of the nation’s huge, growing debt and
deficit.
It’s
not like independent organizations like Citizens
Against Government Waste don’t keep watch and report the waste. It has
gained some fame for its annual “Pig Book”, a list of absurd spending. To its
credit, the Government Accountability Office occasionally issues a report on
waste when some member of Congress requests it.
Even a
casual bit of research turns up item after item that, were Americans not so
apathetic and indifferent to government waste, it would result in huge rallies
in Washington, D.C. calling for change. There is none.
Here
are some examples, a mere handful from the many anyone can discover by simply
Googling “government waste.”
# The
government spends $1.7 billion for maintenance on empty buildings it owns,
although some sources put the figure at closer to $25 billion. The Office of
Management and Budget estimates that 55,000 properties are underutilized or
entirely vacant.
# The
federal government owns approximately one-third of all U.S. land. It does not
need more land and it could be argued that it should not own 80% of Nevada and
Alaska, and more than half of Idaho. That said, it wants to spend $2.3 billion
to purchase more land and the National park Service currently has a backlog of
maintenance tasks totaling $5 billion. These include parks that the Obama
administration was saying would all have to be closed down because of a
sequester reduction of a mere 1.2% of all federal spending.
#
Homeland Security’s Janet Napolitano was issuing statements about the
sequestration cuts to her department, but according to Tom Schatz, president of
Citizens Against Government Waste, the department has $9 billion in unspent
preparedness funds. How much of that will be spent on purchasing more DHS
ammunition? They have already purchased enough to shoot every American five
times.
#
Republican lawmakers in Congress took the sequester fear-mongering as an
opportunity to note, as Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) said, “There are pots of money
sitting in different departments across the federal government, that have been
authorized over either a number of months or years.”
# Rep.
Tom Coburn (R-OK) is a leading budget hawk who identified programs to fund a
space ship to another solar system, funds for advancements in beef jerky from
France, and $6 billion for research to find out what lessons about democracy and
decision-making can be learned—from fish!
# While
you’re trying to figure out how to pay your 2012 taxes, give a thought to the
National Science Foundation $350,000 grant to Perdue University researchers on
how to improve your golf game.
# Not
to be outspent, the National Institutes of Health gave a $940,000 grant to
researchers who found that the production of pheromones in—wait for it—fruit
flies, declines over time. Turns out that male fruit flies were more
attracted to younger female fruit flies. The NIH also paid researchers to find
out why gay men in Argentina engage in risky sexual behavior when they’re drunk
and spent $800,000 in “stimulus funds” to study the impact of a
“genital-washing” program on men in South Africa. You can’t make up this
stuff.
# For
reasons that defy sanity, various elements of the government have spent $3
million for research on video games; $2.6 million to train Chinese prostitutes
to drink responsibly; a whopping $500 million on a program that would, among
other things, try to figure out why five-year-olds “can’t sit still” in a
kindergarten classroom; and grants such as $1.8 million on a “museum of neon
signs” in Las Vegas, Nevada.
#
Sanity does not apply to the $2 billion given annually to U.S. farmers to
not farm their land. Don’t even ask about the Defense Department. It has
long been famous for waste.
While
all this has been going on, in 2010 the Office of Management and Budget
determined that $47.9 billion was spent on fraudulent or improper payments in
Medicare and the problem still hasn’t been fixed, though the cost is now up to
$62 billion. There’s been $2.7 billion in fraud and mismanagement of the
food-stamp program. And on, and on, and on.
And the
President of the United States can only talk about tax breaks for the “rich and
well-connected” while spending most of his time hanging out with the “rich and
well-connected.” The rest of the time is spent campaigning to get higher taxes
on all the rest of us.
If you
just added up the billions cited in this brief look at waste, the federal
government might actually be able to get by without having run up the national
debt to more than $16 trillion and running trillion-plus annual
deficits.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
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