Democrat sponsors act OK'd by Senate panel
that would cost 0.7% of gross national product
Barak Obam
Sen. Barack Obama, perhaps giving America a preview of priorities he
would pursue if elected president, is rejoicing over the Senate
committee passage of a plan that could end up costing taxpayers
billions of dollars in an attempt to reduce poverty in other nations.
The bill, called the Global Poverty Act, is the type of legislation,
"We can – and must – make … a priority," said Obama, a co-sponsor.
It would demand that the president develop "and implement" a policy to
"cut extreme global poverty in half by 2015 through aid, trade, debt
relief" and other programs.
When word about what appears to be a massive new spending program
started getting out, the reaction was immediate.
"It's not our job to cut global poverty," said one commenter on a Yahoo
news forum. "These people need to learn how to fish themselves. If we
keep throwing them fish, the fish will rot."
Many Americans were alerted to the legislation by a report from Cliff
Kincaid at Accuracy in Media. He published a critique asserting that
while the Global Poverty Act sounds nice, the adoption could "result in
the imposition of a global tax on the United States" and would make
levels "of U.S. foreign aid spending subservient to the dictates of the
United Nations."
He said the legislation, if approved, dedicates 0.7 percent of the U.S.
gross national product to foreign aid, which over 13 years he said
would amount to $845 billion "over and above what the U.S. already
spends."
The plan passed the House in 2007 "because most members didn't realize
what was in it," Kincaid reported. "Congressional sponsors have been
careful not to calculate the amount of foreign aid spending that it
would require."
A statement from Obama's office this week noted the support offered by
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
"With billions of people living on just dollars a day around the world,
global poverty remains one of the greatest challenges and tragedies the
international community faces," Obama said. "It must be a priority of
American foreign policy to commit to eliminating extreme poverty and
ensuring every child has food, shelter, and clean drinking water. As we
strive to rebuild America's standing in the world, this important bill
will demonstrate our promise and commitment to those in the developing
world.
"Our commitment to the global economy must extend beyond trade
agreements that are more about increasing profits than about helping
workers and small farmers everywhere," he continued.
The bill institutes the United Nations Millennium Summit goals as the
benchmarks for U.S. spending.
"It is time the United States makes it a priority of our foreign policy
to meet this goal and help those who are struggling day to day," a
statement issued by supporters, including Obama, said.
Specifically, it would "declare" that the official U.S. policy is to
eliminate global poverty, that the president is "required" to "develop
and implement" a strategy to reach that goal and requires that the U.S.
efforts be "specific and measurable."
Kincaid said that after cutting through all of the honorable-sounding
goals in the plan, the bottom line is that the legislation would
mandate the 0.7 percent of the U.S. GNP as "official development
assistance."
"In addition to seeking to eradicate poverty, that (U.N.) declaration
commits nations to banning 'small arms and light weapons' and ratifying
a series of treaties, including the International Criminal Court
Treaty, the Kyoto Protocol (global warming treaty), the Convention of
Biological Diversity, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women and the Convention of the Rights of the
Child," he said.
Those U.N. protocols would make U.S. law on issues ranging from the 2nd
Amendment to energy usage and parental rights all subservient to United
Nations whims.
Kincaid also reported Jeffrey Sachs, who runs the "Millennium Project,"
confirms a U.N. plan to force the U.S. to pay 0.7 percent of GNP would
add about $65 billion a year to what the U.S. already donates overseas.
And the only way to raise that funding, Sachs confirms, "is through a
global tax, preferably on carbon-emitting fossil fuels," Kincaid writes.
On the forum run by Americans for Legal Immigration PAC, one writer
reported estimates of taxes from 35 cents to $1 dollar a gallon on
gasoline would be needed.
"This is disgusting, sickening and angers me to the depths of my soul,"
the forum author wrote. "Obama wants us to support the world. I wonder
how they intend to eliminate poverty. Most of the money always winds up
in some dictator hands and in the U.N. coffers."
WND calls to Obama's office, as well as the offices of others who
supported the plan, were not successful in obtaining a comment.
Another forum participant said, "Yes, and we should also eliminate
sickness of any kind and get rid of poverty as well. Then, too, we
should make certain that everyone in the world has equal assets, equal
money, a college education, etc… After that, or maybe while we are
solving all of the world's little problems, we can take care of the
polar bears, eliminate the internal combustion engine, and, and, and…
Oh dear, if only we would just go ahead and do all the things the
dreamers want us to do. Let's stop using oil and burning coal while
we're at it. Then we can make it illegal to be overweight and then we
can. ..."
One forum contributor said since the legislation doesn't specifically
demand "taxes," but instead leaves the mandatory "implementation" up to
the president, "maybe the tooth fairy will leave [this new money] under
the president's pillow."Kincaid reported several more budget-minded
senators have put a hold on the legislation "in order to prevent it
from being rushed to the floor for a full Senate vote."
The legislation requires the president to do whatever is required to
fulfill a strategy that would result in "the elimination of extreme
global poverty and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal
of reducing by one-half the proportion of people worldwide … who live
on less than $1 per day."
It further requires the president not only to accomplish that goal but,
"not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this act,"
to submit a report on "the contributions provided by the United States"
toward poverty reduction.
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Obama bill: $845 billion,more for global poverty
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