alohabunny wrote:Steve, what about when this government funnels that 33% to dictators and puppet CIA operatives to conduct false falg operations and stir up trouble around the world, you are crying about a tiny amount of money given to the poor
Are you insane?
The entitlement programs are by far the largest part of the federal budget, deficit and national debt.
while trillions are squandered on oil and other wars for the profit of the private industry, you seem to be oblivious to that even more costly practice as though you approve.
I don't approve...in fact I think our government is responsible for most of the problems we're facing with Islamic terrorists and our last stint with Saddam. Truly amazing we funded both of them when it suited our political desires.
..........did you know that the US military has been protecting the pipelines in Nigeria for the Chevron oil company for years now?? That is taxpayer's money being used to the benefit of a huge highly profitable comapny that could/should pay for their own security. Your focus is on pennies for the needy when you should be really looking where and to whom the majority of the taxpayer's money is really going.........our shameful warmongering.
I'm right there with ya.....its all crap. btw, it's not "pennies" its trillions upon trillions our liabilities with the welfare programs is estimated at around 50 trillion dollars last estimate by the GAO and Treasury Dept. Let me write that out for you 50,000,000,000,000.00, that's far past the penny mark. Maybe this will help, if you saved one dollar every single second it would take you 1,584,400 years to save up enough to cover our current liabilities.
This number excludes such items as the gap between the present value of future promised and funded Social Security and Medicare benefits, veterans’ health care, and a range of other liabilities (e.g., federal employee and veteran benefits payable), commitments, and contingencies that the federal government has pledged to support. Including these items, the federal government’s fiscal exposures now total more than $46 trillion, up from about $20 trillion in 2000. This translates into a burden of about $156,000 per American or approximately $375,000 per full-time worker, up from $72,000 and $165,000 respectively, in 2000. These amounts do not include future costs resulting from Hurricane Katrina or the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Continuing on this unsustainable path will gradually erode, if not suddenly damage, our economy, our standard of living, and ultimately our national security.
- 2005 Financial Report of the U.S. Government (GAO)