----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Calco" <[email protected]>
To: "'ProFox Email List'" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, January 30, 2009 11:17 AM
Subject: [OT] Conservative Unity



> - - -
> When they manage to unify the entire House Republican caucus with David
> Brooks and Peggy Noonan, you know the Democrats have seriously botched
> something up. And boy, they really have. The more you look at the stimulus
> bill the clearer it becomes that it is the Congressional Democrats, not 
> the
> opponents of this bill, who have failed to see that we are in a genuine 
> and
> exceptional crisis.

The $1.17 trillion stimulus bill passed by House Democrats on Wednesday 
bears little resemblance to the bill originally proposed by President Obama, 
with less than 5 percent of the funds now going to repair America's 
deteriorating infrastructure.

GOP critics point out the bill is loaded with tens of billions for items 
ranging from Amtrak subsidies to sexually transmitted diseases to the 
National Endowment for the Arts -- much of which won't actually flow into 
the economy until long after economists expect the current economic crisis 
to subside.

In late November, Obama promised: "It will be a two-year, nationwide effort 
to jumpstart job creation in America, and lay the foundation for a strong 
and growing economy. We'll put people back to work rebuilding our crumbling 
roads and bridges," modernizing schools and stimulating development of 
alternative forms of energy.

Even some Democrats are now objecting that the measure contains too few 
highway and mass transit projects. Moreover Mark Zandi, chief economist for 
Moody's Economy.com, says most of the infrastructure spending in the plan 
won't occur until 2010 or later.

Provisions of the bill that many legislators are questioning:


a.. $1 billion for Amtrak, which hasn't earned a profit in four decades.


a.. $2 billion to help subsidize child care.


a.. $400 million for research into global warming.


a.. $2.4 billion for projects to demonstrate how carbon greenhouse gas can 
be safely removed from the atmosphere.


a.. $650 million for coupons to help consumers convert their TV sets from 
analog to digital, part of the digital TV conversion.


a.. $600 million to buy a new fleet of cars for federal employees and 
government departments.


a.. $75 million to fund programs to help people quit smoking.


a.. $21 million to re-sod the National Mall, which suffered heavy use during 
the Inauguration.


a.. $2.25 billion for national parks. This item has sparked calls for an 
investigation, because the chief lobbyist of the National Parks Association 
is the son of Rep. David R. Obey, D-Wisc. The $2,25 billion is about equal 
to the National Park Service's entire annual budget. The Washington Times 
reports it is a threefold increase over what was originally proposed for 
parks in the stimulus bill. Obey is chairman of the House Appropriations 
Committee.


a.. $335 million for treatment and prevention of sexually transmitted 
diseases.


a.. $50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts. $4.19 billion to 
stave off foreclosures via the Neighborhood Stabilization Program. The bill 
allows nonprofits to compete with cities and states for $3.44 billion of the 
money, which means a substantial amount of it will be captured by ACORN, the 
controversial activist group currently under federal investigation for vote 
fraud. Another $750 million would be exclusively reserved for nonprofits 
such as ACORN - meaning cities and states are barred from receiving that 
money. Sen. David Vitter, R-La., charges the money could appear to be a 
"payoff" for the partisan political activities community groups in the last 
election cycle.


a.. $44 million to renovate the headquarters building of the Agriculture 
Department.


a.. $32 billion for a "smart electricity grid to minimize waste.


a.. $87 billion of Medicaid funds, to aid states.


a.. $53.4 billion for science facilities, high speed Internet, and 
miscellaneous energy and environmental programs.


a.. $13 billion to repair and weatherize public housing, help the homeless, 
repair foreclosed homes.


a.. $20 billion for quicker depreciation and write-offs for equipment.


a.. $10.3 billion for tax credits to help families defray the cost of 
college tuition.


a.. $20 billion over five years for an expanded food stamp program.

Republican leaders say the stimulus package will add 32 new government 
programs at a cost of $136 billion. They object that many of the programs, 
once established, are likely to continue indefinitely.

Most media outlets are reporting the cost of the package at $819 billion. As 
Newsmax revealed yesterday, however, the Congressional Budget Office 
calculates that the interest on the debt generated by the bill's spending 
will cost another $347.1 billion, making the total cost approximately $1.17 
trillion.

Of course, the measure contains hundreds of billions in tax cuts and 
infrastructure projects that conservatives will find palatable. But as House 
Minority whip Eric Cantor, R-Va., told the media Wednesday, "This was not a 
stimulus bill. It was a spending bill."


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