posted on Oct, 12 2007 @ 06:52 PM
We’re hearing a lot about pork and earmarks. I guess those are 2 words that mean the same thing. An appropriation of Federal tax money for a local
non-Federal purpose. Most Federal money is spent through the Executive Branch.
However, the US Constitution, Article 1 grants exclusive power to Congress to appropriate money for. Look here: Section 8. “The Congress shall have
power . . to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States . . To borrow money . . To coin money, regulate
the value thereof, . . To raise and support armies . . To provide and maintain a navy . . To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any
department or officer thereof.”
This pretty much puts Congress in charge of the money! And who is to say what the limits are on “ . . the general welfare . . ?“
My hometown of Louisville got an earmark for$15 million to finish a Gorilla Exhibit at our publicly owned zoo. It cost $20 million, $2.5 m paid by the
local government, $2.5 m. paid by the state, and $15 m. paid by the Feds. Stop in if you get a chance. It’s rated in the top 5 in America.
But for the Heavyweight Title, I nominate this one: The Houston Space Flight Center! By all logic this facility should be located close by the launch
site of our space program. Cape Canaveral and the Kennedy Space Flight Center. But it is not. It is in Houston TX. Mapquest says it is 1,015 miles
from Cape Canaveral to Houston. Can you imagine how many trips each year must be made between those 2 places by technical and managerial personnel?
Delta quotes $675 for a first class round trip.
Can you image how much effort was involved in making certain communications were 100% reliable between Houston and Cape Canaveral? Redundancy! A
simple telephone line between the two places would not be enough. I expect there are cables laid through the Gulf of Mexico, and some laid on land,
passing around New Orleans. And micro-wave towers, too. I wonder what NASA pays AT&T for those cables plus maintenance?
Well why you ask, did NASA put the “brains” of the Moon project in Houston? Here’s why. The Dems had 259 seats in the House. The long time (17
years) Speaker of the House, Sam Rayburn, died in office in late 1961. He was succeeded by Majority Leader John McCormack. The Dems had 65 seats in
the Senate and 1 independent who voted with the Dems.
The Vice President, Lyndon B. Johnson, had been designated by President Kennedy to head up JFKs “Moon and Back in This Decade” program. Johnson
had just come off 8 years as Senate Majority Leader. Speaker McCormack was a fellow Massachusetts man with JFK. In part as a tribute to Speaker
Rayburn, ti was agreed to divide the upcoming space program between Texas and Florida. (Florida was the best location from which to launch a moon
shot. It was a default choice).
I estimate the removal of the control center to Houston has cost the US about $20 b. over what it would have cost to have it in Florida where logic
says it should have been. The biggest on-going earmark!