Before the US House of Representatives, March 13, 2008
Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to address the House tonight
about the budget because there has been a lot of concern expressed
here today on both sides of the aisle about the kind of financial
trouble we're in. And there's no doubt about that. But sometimes
I think we go back and forth spending more time blaming each
other rather than dealing with the real problem.
One of the contentions I've had about the budget is that
we look at it as an accounting problem rather than a philosophy
problem because the spending occurs because of what we accept
as the proper role of government. And right now, it's assumed
by the country as well as the Congress that the proper role
of government is to run our lives, run the economy, run the
welfare state, and police the world. And all of a sudden,
it puts a lot of pressure on the budget.
Today, the national debt is going up almost $600 billion.
And the economy is getting weaker, there's no doubt about
it. We're in a recession, it's going to get much worse, which
means that the deficit is going to get a lot worse. And I'm
predicting within a couple of years, it will not surprise
me one bit to see the national debt, the national obligation
for future generations to rise in 1 year three-quarters of
$1 trillion. And that is a very possible number.
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And like it has been expressed so often today, we need to
do something about it. The question is, what are we going
to do about it? One side says, it seems like, well, if we
just raise taxes, we're going to solve the problem. The other
side says, well, all we have to do is get rid of the earmarks.
Well, that argument, I think, falls short, too, because you
can vote to cut all the earmarks, but it doesn't cut any spending,
it just delivers the authority to spend the money to the executive
branch. I think the job of the Congress is to earmark the
money. It's our obligation to tell people how the money is
spent.
And those who think that we can solve this problem by just
getting rid of earmarks, they never talk about the earmarks
overseas, the hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars
we spend overseas. We earmark them to certain countries, into
building military buildings overseas. What about the earmark
for the embassy in Iraq? It has cost $1 billion. That's an
earmark. But the side that said that we can solve this problem
by cutting earmarks never talks about these earmarks.
Just think of the earmarks in the military budget. I mean,
billions. And what do we do? We finally elect a different
Congress to deal with some of these supplementals and emergency
spending that we don't have the guts to put on the budget,
so we elect a new Congress. And what do we do? We have the
continuation, in all the budgets presented today, we're still
going to finance the war as an off-budget emergency item.
We're not being honest with ourselves. And we pretend that
the problem is there, and that if you talk about it, it's
going to go away.
The way I see it is there's only one way that we're going
to attack this, and that is, decide what our government ought
to be doing. And the Constitution is very clear, the government
ought to preserve our liberties and give us a strong national
defense. It shouldn't run our lives, it shouldn't run the
economy, it shouldn't police the world. We're not supposed
to be the policemen of the world. But everybody talks about
it.
And both sides of the aisle have no hesitation to spend every
cent the executive branch asked for to run a war that was
never declared. We now spend $1 trillion a year going up,
this year it's going to go over $1 trillion to run the operations
overseas. That means all the foreign aid and all the military,
$1 trillion to do things we shouldn't be doing.
They interviewed 3,400 military personnel just recently,
military leaders, and 82 percent of them said our military
is weaker today than it was 5 years ago. So, all of this money
spent and all this policing in the world, and all this deficit.
And financially we're coming down. I mean, just today the
dollar went down 1.2 percent in one day, after this steady
erosion. It comes from the fact of deficits. And why does
that hurt the dollar? Because we don't have enough money.
We don't tax enough. We can't tax anymore. People are overtaxed.
We can't borrow anymore because interest rates will go up.
So, we print the money. And the more money you print, the
further the dollar goes down, and then everything goes up
in price. So it's a cycle that's coming to an end.
The value of the dollar is really telling the whole story.
We've overextended ourselves because we do not challenge the
whole notion of what we ought to be doing here and what our
government ought to be all about because we have drifted so
far from the original intent of the Constitution. There is
no hesitation, there are debates that go on here endlessly.
One side of the aisle says, well, we need more and more money
for the military; we can't cut one single cent on overseas
expenditure. And the other side says, oh, no, we can't cut
the entitlements. And then there's an agreement, we raise
both.
My idea is to have a strong national defense and to get this
budget under control. Reject the notion that we need to run
an empire; we can't afford it, it's going to come down, it
always comes down. It has come down all throughout history
because eventually the currency is destroyed.
We're in 130 countries. We have 700 bases. Our military now
is in worse shape than it was 5 years ago, according to our
military. So it's time we look at the strategic, the philosophic
problems. And I will say, unless we do this, this will end
badly. It's going to end with a major economic crisis. It's
going to be worldwide, and we here at home will suffer, not
only economically but inevitably. Under these conditions the
people lose their liberty, and our liberties are being eroded
every single day that we're here.
So, yes, we take an oath to obey and uphold the Constitution
against foreign and domestic. But we're domestic, and we should
protect our rights and our budget and the greatness of this
country.