[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 176 (Thursday, November 17, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H7727]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE TROJAN HORSE BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Wisconsin (Ms. Moore) for 5 minutes.
Ms. MOORE. Later on today we will be considering the so-called
balanced budget amendment. And while I join my colleagues in sharing
the view that we need to gain control of our national debt, I rise to
commiserate our loss of a balanced perspective on what we, as elected
Representatives of the people of the United States of America, regard
as assets and liabilities on our American Government balance sheet. I
am appalled, Mr. Speaker, at our loss of perspective on what good
government really means as we balance our policy priorities in this
moral document, our budget.
Mr. Speaker, we have perverted the concept of a healthy balance sheet
as we worship at the feet of a religion that tones that government
should be limited and, perhaps, have no role in the health, welfare,
and safety of the American people.
Balancing the budget sounds so simple, so appealing, but that's not a
truthful description of what this balanced budget amendment would do.
This amendment is nothing more than a Trojan horse hiding the
Republicans' true ambition, which is requiring major cuts to vital
programs, dramatically shrinking the legitimate role of government, and
enshrining this agenda in the United States Constitution.
A balanced budget? A balance sheet contains both assets and
liabilities.
I would submit, Mr. Speaker, that it is a perversion of our American
values to see our children, our future, as mere liabilities; our
students, who need the government to invest in their higher educations,
as mere liabilities; our communities, the economic engines of our
economy who may be subjected to natural disasters such as hurricanes
and other liabilities, who need to rebuild modern transportation
systems, to see these as mere liabilities; and American folks, who need
to breathe clean air and drink clean water, as mere liabilities on the
Federal Government balance sheet.
According to an analysis released this week by the Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities, the amendment we are considering today would
force cuts to all programs by an average of 17.3 percent by 2018. And
if revenues are not raised, which there seems to be an anathema to
doing that, all these programs will be cut by the same percentage.
Social Security cut by $184 billion in 2018 alone; Medicare cut by $117
billion in 2018; Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program
cut by $80 billion in 2018.
We have constructed a balance sheet where our people are not viewed
as assets. Our American universities, our students, the next generation
of inventions and innovators are seen as welfare recipients when we
provide them with Pell Grants. Seniors who have earned retirement
security are now seen as a drain on our system. These seniors who built
our economy through their ingenuity and sweat, Medicare and Social
Security for them is seen as socialism.
Mr. Speaker, we have heard the constant drumbeat demanding that we
severely restrain the benefits and the rights we provide to our seniors
and our people. And what do we regard as our assets on our balance
sheet? Our bloated, cold war-era military buildup.
And what kind of balance sheet, Mr. Speaker, expends trillions of
dollars on tax breaks to millionaires and expatriate corporations and
treats revenue loss needed for the legitimate operation of the
government like assets?
{time} 1110
This is a balance sheet reminiscent of a corporate raider that strips
down all of the assets and leaves the company limping lifeless in the
dust.
What kind of country lauds a balanced budget that achieves this
balance on the backs of children, students, working class families, the
disabled, the hungry, the infirm, the elderly, the environment, victims
of natural disasters, and wounded veterans returning to unemployment
and a jobless economy? Is this a balanced budget, Mr. Speaker, or is
this our unbalanced priorities?
Mr. Speaker, I thank you for your indulgence in listening to me
today.
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