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- PORK BARREL SPENDING
-
- RECENT EXAMPLES BY OUR CONGRESS
-
- The term "pork barrel" stems back to the early 1800s when the popular
- meat was packed that way, and hungry farm hands reached in for slabs of
- salt pork. In 1879, it was adopted as political slang to mean goodies for
- the local district paid for by the taxpayers at large.
-
- Here are some recent examples of pork barrel spending by the Congress
- of the United States. These examples will be divided into 3 groups: the
- absurd, federal spending for private concerns, and pork for Congress
- itself.
-
-
- THE ABSURD:
-
- ■ $107,000 to study the sex life of the Japanese quail.
-
- ■ $1.2 million to study the breeding habits of the woodchuck.
-
- ■ $150,000 to study the Hatfield-McCoy feud.
-
- ■ $84,000 to find out why people fall in love.
-
- ■ $1 million to study why people don't ride bikes to work.
-
- ■ $19 million to examine gas emissions from cow flatulence.
-
- ■ $144,000 to see if pigeons follow human economic laws.
-
- ■ Funds to study the cause of rudeness on tennis courts and examine
- smiling patterns in bowling alleys.
-
- ■ $219,000 to teach college students how to watch television.
-
- ■ $2 million to construct an ancient Hawaiian canoe.
-
- ■ $20 million for a demonstration project to build wooden bridges.
-
- ■ $160,000 to study if you can hex an opponent by drawing an X on his
- chest.
-
- ■ $800,000 for a restroom on Mt. McKinley.
-
- ■ $100,000 to study how to avoid falling spacecraft.
-
- ■ $16,000 to study the operation of the komungo, a Korean stringed
- instrument.
-
- ■ $1 million to preserve a sewer in Trenton, NJ, as a historic
- monument.
-
- ■ $6,000 for a document on Worcestershire sauce.
-
- ■ $10,000 to study the effect of naval communications on a bull's
- potency.
-
-
- ■ $100,000 to research soybean-based ink.
-
- ■ $1 million for a Seafood Consumer Center.
-
- ■ $57,000 spent by the Executive Branch for gold-embossed playing cards
- on Air Force Two.
-
-
-
- Federal spending for PRIVATE concerns:
-
- ■ $3.1 million to convert a ferry boat into a crab restaurant in
- Baltimore.
-
- ■ $6.4 million for a Bavarian ski resort in Kellogg, Idaho.
-
- ■ $13 million to repair a privately owned dam in South Carolina.
-
- ■ $4.3 million for a privately owned museum in Johnstown,
- Pennsylvania.
-
- ■ $11 million for a private pleasure boat harbor in Cleveland.
-
- ■ $6 million to repair tracks owned by the Soo Railroad Line.
-
- ■ $320,000 to purchase President McKinley's mother-in-law's house.
-
- ■ Funds to rehabilitate the South Carolina mansion of Charles
- Pickney, a Framer of the Constitution, even though the house was built
- after he died.
-
- ■ $2.7 million for a catfish farm in Arkansas.
-
- ■ $3 million for private parking garages in Chicago.
-
- ■ $500,000 to build a replica of the Great Pyramid of Egypt in
- Indiana.
-
- ■ $850,000 for a bicycle path in Macomb County, Michigan.
-
- ■ $10 million for an access ramp in a privately owned stadium in
- Milwaukee.
-
- ■ $1.8 million for an engineering study to convert Biscayne Boulevard in
- Miami into an "Exotic Garden."
-
- ■ $13 million for an industrial theme park in Pennsylvania.
-
- ■ $500,000 for a museum to honor former Secretary of State Cordell Hull.
-
- ■ $33 million to pump sand onto the private beaches of Miami hotels.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Pork for Congress itself:
-
- ■ $6 million to upgrade the two-block long Senate subway.
-
- ■ $350,000 to renovate the House Beauty Salon.
-
- ■ $250,000 to study TV lighting in the Senate meeting rooms.
-
- ■ $130,000 for a Congressional video-conferencing project.
-
-
-
-
- CATEGORY SUB-TOTALS:
-
- 1. Absurd $ 45,980,000
- 2. Private $109,470,000
- 3. Congress $ 6,730,000
-
- GRAND TOTAL: $162,180,000
-
-
-
- These figures have been extracted from the book: "THE GOVERNMENT RACKET:
- Washington Waste From A to Z", by Martin L. Gross, July 1992, and arranged
- into categories by Chris Albritton.
-
-
- WHAT CAN YOU DO ABOUT PORK BARREL SPENDING ?
-
- 1. Send this file to as many electronic bulletin boards as possible.
-
- 2. Distribute this on paper where you work, and pass it out to friends
- and relatives.
-
- 3. Write some letters:
-
- A. Complain to your U.S. Senators and Representatives that there is
- too much pork in Congressional appropriations bills.
-
- B. Urge your U.S. Senators and Representatives to pass the Line Item
- Veto so that the President can cross out the pork in an otherwise
- good appropriation bill. Forty three states give their governors
- the Line Item Veto. Why shouldn't our President have it also?
-
- C. Insist on a Congressional rule that no member of a committee can
- put pork into a bill that benefits his constituency.
-
- D. Send electronic mail directly to the President and Vice-President
-
- ■ PRESIDENT@WHITEHOUSE.GOV
- ■ VICE.PRESIDENT@WHITEHOUSE.GOV
-
- EXAMPLES BY OUR CONGRESS
-
- The term "po