I just read that Pork-barrel spending is costing us-the American taxpayer-close to or over $17,000,000,000 a year! That is a LOT of our money. Allow me to give you some examples of Pork-barrel spending; 1) $375,000,000 for an unrequested and unneeded amphibious assault ship in the state of Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.), 2) $700,000 for the Admiral Theater in Bremerton, Washington, the district of House appropriator Norm Dicks (D-Wash.), despite a $4.2 million privately-funded facelift; and; 3) $500,000 for the Olympic Tree Program in the state of Senate appropriator Robert Bennett for the 2002 Winter Olympics. These three examples are for the year 2000. For those of you that are a little fuzzy as to just what Pork-barrel spending is all about, here is a short and accurate explanation; Pork-barrel spending amounts to nothing more than bribe-taking, where politicians use their constituents’ tax dollars to support their reelection. It’s a game of hide-and-seek that harms our representative form of democracy and threatens our fiscal stability. In fiscal 2008, pork-barrel spending ballooned to 11,612 projects costing $17.2 billion and when an amendment to impose a one-year earmark moratorium in the fiscal year 2009 Budget was defeated, this was “heard”; Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) opposed the ban as “unrealistic” and even went so far as to erroneously claim that earmarking “has been going in this country for 230-some-odd years,” and that “The Founding Fathers would be cringing to hear people talking about eliminating earmarks.” For more on this “salty” subject, go to; http://www.cagw.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=11322&news_iv_ctrl=1022
April 3rd was a special day for our families; Emily Rose Harrison was born! All 6 lb. 12 oz. and 17” My daughter Lisa and her man Bern are now Grandparents and you know what that makes me…I’m not old enough for that yet!! Mother Cori and father Brad are doing fine.
My youngest son-in-law came down from Narrowsburg to help the “old” man cut and split some wood I had stored on the hill. I was grateful for the help and didn’t hesitate to thank him for showing up. We cut and split for about a half hour when I decided I needed a “sit-down”. He had the audacity to ask me if I was OK. “Yeah, I’m ok”, I felt like answering, “I just can’t keep up with a robotic machine built like a person”. He took the hint and we sat and talked a bit until I could breathe normal again. Darned youngsters! However, we got a nice lot of wood cut and split.
During our time on the hill working, I allowed my mind to wander back to days gone by, back to the times of my ancestors; my Great grandfather J.W. Hause, my Great Uncle Raymond and my Dad when they hunted the woods or worked the fields. It was comforting in a way to realize that there is hardly one square inch of the hill that J.W. or my uncle or Dad didn’t walk on and that I have been treading on or perhaps in their footsteps, putting my invisible mark there for my children to follow. What a wonderful and comforting feeling.
If you have been anywhere near the Delaware River (and now much closer to home), you have no doubt noticed the signs protesting the proposed power line running along the Del. River to supply not needed power to NY and parts of NJ. The uproar is the 200 foot (or more) clear-cut right-of-way needed for the high voltage line. NOW, PPL is getting into the act by reporting their supposed need of a HV line from Berwick to the Del River running just NE of Scranton. I most sincerely hope the line never gets off the ground unless it’s by an alternate route that won’t impact the environment as severely as the one “they” want. Look into this!!!
Love to get it in the open and off my chest. However, we still have to ……Watch the Ice.
Webb
webbgjr@verizon.net © 2008 Webb Gilpin, Jr.