Księgarnia anglojęzyczna poleca książkę:
Jurassic Pork Old Earmarks Have Survived Senator Jeff Flake June 2015 (United States Government Seanator Jeff Flake)
- Tytuł: Jurassic Pork Old Earmarks Have Survived Senator Jeff Flake June 2015
- Autor: United States Government Seanator Jeff Flake
- Wydawca: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
- Data wydania: 2017-07-09
- Oprawa: Paperback
- ISBN: 9781548688158
- Ilość stron: 54
- Wymiary: 216 x 279 x 3mm
- Waga: 150g
OPIS:
Jurassic Pork Old Earmarks Have Survived Senator Jeff Flake June 2015 For many years gigantic and mysterious monstrosities roamed the land. Gigantic in size and number. Mysterious in origin. And monstrous in cost. No these were not the dinosaurs but congressional earmarks. Then in a sudden burst they seemingly ceased to be. Like Tyrannosaurus Rex brontosaurus triceratops and other terrible lizards of the past the infamy of many congressional earmarks lives on to this day. The indoor rainforest in Iowa. A teapot museum in North Carolina. And of course the notorious Bridge to Nowhere in Alaska. Like the cataclysmic event that killed off the dinosaurs Washington politicians declared pork to be extinct five years ago when an earmark moratorium was enacted. But something has survived. By all accounts the earmark ban has been a resounding success. Creating new pork projects as we knew them through the earmarking process is not and has not been permitted. Yet in one form or another legacy spending on earmarks their recipients or the projects they spawned remains. This is an issue that spans any partisan divide. In some cases including thousands of transportation earmarks the original funding amounts reserved for earmarks remain unspent. In other cases such as some national parks and preferences in the tax code earmarks were permanently established by Congress. Still others simply evolved and found new sources of sustenance like grant awards within the federal budget. This report Jurassic Pork examines many of the congressional earmarks and related spending that persist to this day. Fossilized within the federal budget these projects continue to cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. Many have even outlasted the terms of the politicians who created them. While providing a glimpse into the past and the corrupting nature of the earmark favor factory and pork barrel politics that politicians in both parties are seeking to revive Jurassic Pork also offers recommendations for Congress. First and foremost like the age of the dinosaur it would be best if the practice of earmarking remained a thing of the past.