Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2009
I think it’s time we applied the same advertising standards
to Washington’s legislative products that the feds apply to breakfast foods.
The Food and Drug Administration rapped General Mills this week for making
misleading claims about the benefits of Cheerios. The food manufacturer says
the whole-grain O’s are “clinically proven to lower cholesterol.” The FDA
demanded packaging changes to ensure truth-in-labeling.
Well, how about the bogus marketing of the fiscal “stimulus?” President
Obama and the Democrats promoted the trillion-dollar package as job creation
salvation. The White House claims 150,000 jobs have been “created or saved.”
But since February, the nation has lost more than 1.3 million jobs. The
current 8.9 percent unemployment rate in the wake of stimulus passage is worse
than the 8.8 percent unemployment figure Obama’s economists darkly predicted
if Congress didn’t immediately adopt their recovery plan. (See
Innocent Bystanders.)
The “stimulus” was supposed to provide aid to the country’s neediest areas.
It’s not. The
Associated Press reported after reviewing 5,500 planned transportation
projects that “states are planning to spend 50 percent more per person in
areas with the lowest unemployment than in communities with the highest.”
President Obama promised that Americans would be able to track “every dime”
of the “stimulus” at one, handy clearinghouse website. They won’t. The
Recovery.gov site data won’t be fully available until
next spring – halfway through the program.
Washington told us the “stimulus” projects were “shovel-ready” and would
provide immediate relief. They’re not. The New York Times notes that the
program
“has
paid out less than 6 percent of the money, largely in the form of social
service payments to states.”
Democrat leaders baldly claimed that “There are no earmarks” in the bill.
But untold tens of millions of dollars are headed to pet projects such as
skateboard parks, tennis and basketball court renovation, the National Zoo,
the $11 million Bridge to Microsoft, and Pennsylvania King of Pork Rep. John
Murtha’s ghost airport to nowhere.
More falsely-labeled products in the Capitol Hill pantry: How about the
“Toxic Assets Relief Program?” The trillion-dollar-plus banking bailout
morphed from a toxic assets purchase plan to a capital injection plan, back to
a toxic assets purchase plan, to a life insurance company bailout, to an auto
supplier bailout, and may now be used to bail out the state of California.
Supporters of that maneuver argue that TARP should be extended to every
cash-strapped state and local government to guarantee their debts against
default.
How about “Social Security?” There’s nothing secure about it. While Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid scoffed during the Bush years that “the so-called
Security crisis exists in only one place – the minds of the Republicans,” the
insolvency problem festered. Now, the Obama administration reports that both
Social (In)security and Medicare are hurtling toward bankruptcy far sooner
than previously estimated. The “trust funds” exist only in the minds of the
deluded.
And just this week, Congress collaborated with the White House to conjure
up a misleading description of President Obama’s $108 billion bailout of the
International Monetary Fund. They’re advertising the expenditure as a “line of
credit” with the “hope to get the money back,” according to the Wall Street
Journal. “So the White House argued that the budgetary impact should be
calculated at zero.” That’s right. Capitol Hill is officially claiming that
$108 billion = zero.
If Beltway spending plans were breakfast cereals, they’d be yanked from
grocery stores in a heartbeat. Their promises and premises are as full of
holes as a box of persecuted Cheerios.