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-Caveat Lector-

Mugging the Needy
=================

By BOB HERBERT
New York Times
April 3, 2003

Ihad wanted today's column to be about the events in
Tulia, Tex., where a criminal justice atrocity is at
long last beginning to be corrected.

(For those who don't know, prosecutors are moving to
overturn the convictions of everyone seized in an
outlandish drug sting conducted by a single wacky
undercover officer.)

But there is another issue crying out for immediate
attention. With the eyes of most Americans focused on
the war, the Bush administration and its allies in
Congress are getting close to agreeing on a set of
budget policies that will take an awful toll on the
poor, the young, the elderly, the disabled and others
in need of assistance and support from their
government.

The budget passed by the House is particularly
gruesome. It mugs the poor and the helpless while
giving unstintingly to the rich. This blueprint for
domestic disaster has even moderate Republicans running
for cover.

The House plan offers the well-to-do $1.4 trillion in
tax cuts, while demanding billions of dollars in cuts
from programs that provide food stamps, school lunches,
health care for the poor and the disabled, temporary
assistance to needy families - even veterans' benefits
and student loans.

An analysis of the House budget by the Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities found that its proposed cuts in
child nutrition programs threaten to eliminate school
lunches for 2.4 million low-income children.

Under the House plan, Congress would be required to cut
$265 billion from entitlement programs over 10 years.
About $165 billion would come from programs that assist
low-income Americans.

This assault on society's weakest elements has been
almost totally camouflaged by the war, which has an
iron grip on the nation's attention.

The House budget does not dictate the specific cuts
that Congress would be required to make. In its
analysis, the center assumed (as did the House Budget
Committee) that the various entitlement programs would
be cut by roughly the same percentages. If one program
were to be cut by a somewhat smaller percentage,
another would have to be cut more.

The analysis found that in the year in which the budget
sliced deepest:

¶"The cut in Medicaid, if achieved entirely by reducing
the number of children covered, would lead to the
elimination of health coverage for 13.6 million
children."

¶"The cut in foster care and adoption programs, if
achieved by reducing the number of children eligible
for foster care assistance payments, would lead to the
elimination of benefits for 65,000 abused and neglected
children."

¶"The cut in the food stamp program, if achieved by
lowering the maximum benefit, would lead to a reduction
in the average benefit from an already lean 91 cents
per meal to 84 cents."

When's the last time one of the plutocrats in Congress
waded through a meal that cost 84 cents?

The Senate budget is not as egregious. It calls for a
total of about $900 billion in tax cuts, and there is
no demand for cuts in entitlement programs. But it is
not a reasonable budget. In fact, there's something
obscene about a millionaires' club like the Senate
proposing close to a trillion dollars in tax cuts for
the rich while the country is already cutting social
programs, running up huge budget deficits and fighting
a war in the Middle East.

At least in the House budget the first - if not the
worst - of the cuts are in plain view. In the Senate
plan the inevitable pain of the Bush budget policies
remains concealed.

"There is a significant human toll in the Senate
budget, but it's in the future," said Robert
Greenstein, the center's executive director. "What I
mean is that given the deficits we're already in, you
can't keep doing tax cuts like this - you can't keep
cutting your revenue base - without it inevitably
leading to sharp budget cuts."

House and Senate conferees are now trying to resolve
the differences in the two budget proposals. They will
do all they can to minimize the public relations hit
that is bound to come when you're handing trainloads of
money to the rich while taking food off the tables of
the poor. So you can expect some dismantling of the
House proposal.

But no matter what they do, the day of reckoning is not
far off. The budget cuts are coming. In voodoo
economics, the transfer of wealth is from the poor and
the working classes to the rich. It may not be pretty,
but it's the law.

Copyright 2003 The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/03/opinion/03HERB.html


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<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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