Friday, August 7, 2009

Your tax dollars in flight!

From HERE:
Last year, lawmakers excoriated the CEOs of the Big Three automakers for traveling to Washington, D.C., by private jet to attend a hearing about a possible bailout of their companies.

But apparently Congress is not philosophically averse to private air travel: At the end of July, the House approved nearly $200 million for the Air Force to buy three elite Gulfstream jets for ferrying top government officials and Members of Congress.

The Air Force had asked for one Gulfstream 550 jet (price tag: about $65 million) as part of an ongoing upgrade of its passenger air service.

But the House Appropriations Committee, at its own initiative, added to the 2010 Defense appropriations bill another $132 million for two more airplanes and specified that they be assigned to the D.C.-area units that carry Members of Congress, military brass and top government officials.

Because the Appropriations Committee viewed the additional aircraft as an expansion of an existing Defense Department program, it did not treat the money for two more planes as an earmark, and the legislation does not disclose which Member had requested the additional money.
I especially liked this part, toward the end where the total reasonableness of it is being explained to the unwashed:
Thompson pointed out that the cost of the plane would be peanuts compared to the cost to the nation if a top official were taken hostage or harmed taking a commercial flight to a dangerous region of the world.
Yeah. Actually it could save us a bundle, if we just arranged for nobody to ask for the bastard back.

1 comment:

The Dog said...

But Joel, you clearly don't understand. Members of Congress are vital to our sacred national interests. While automakers are mere tradespersons. Surely you can't believe that the nation's true aristocrats should suffer under the same limitations applied to their inferiors!

;-)