Wayne Luke |
12-31-2004 03:48 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by pseudo class
I am an American, and as citizen I feel the US isn't given it's best to support the crisis. As AN-NET said, the entire funds provided by the US were surpassed by the makers of Viagra, which is absurd IMO. And I'm not one of those Bush haters who blame everything on him, I feel the US as a whole isn't up to par in helping with the crisis.
|
As an American you should also know that the President only has so many funds alloted for discretionary spending and it is against the law for him to pledge more than what is allotted to him. After his discretionary fund is gone, Congress has to allocate more if they think it is worthy. And imagine, his discretionary fund only had $35 million left after his spending on the Florida Hurricanes. The President also has sent 20,000 military personnel and almost 40 Navy ships to the region to help with this tragedy. Seven of the ships have the specific purpose of creating drinkable water through desalinization. Of course the critics of his every move overlook these facts. Each of these Navy ships are packed to the hilt with in-kind donations (food, water, medicine, housing, manpower, and equipment which isn't tallied in monetary donations) and this amounts to further millions of dollars as well as heavy equipment and engineers to help rebuild infrastructure and Marine landing vehicles which can drive right up onto the beach in areas inaccessible by land or air. Of course, we won't look at that because the President doesn't have the authority to spend billions automatically and we would rather criticize this instead of realize it is a matter of law that prevents this.
Now, I am not trying to defend the President here but only pointing out how the system works. He could have requested an emergency meeting of Congress (not that they have to listen to him) and he could have had a press conference at his ranch on Sunday to speak about the tragedy instead of waiting three days to be briefed. Doesn't take a briefing to offer condolences.
Personally, the focus shouldn't be who gives what and how much right now. It should be getting help to the victims regardless of who pays for it. The larger donations to rebuild, re-educate, and place the thousands of orphans in homes will come after the immediate crisis is resolved.
If the US isn't up to helping in the crisis then why has over $150 Million (not counting the $35 million from the government) already been raised to help in the crisis? This includes private donations to aid organizations ($28 million to the Red Cross and $25 Million from the Christian Relief Center are the largest) as well as over $75 million in corporate donations. Plus the thousands of people headed to that region to provide manpower.
|