The Budget
is a
Moral Document
http://www.umoi.net/artman/publish/witness/article_899.shtml
THE
BUDGET IS A MORAL DOCUMENT
By
Bernice Powell Jackson
Over and over again last fall we heard news
reports that the presidential election was
determined by moral values. Over and over again
we heard references to the bible in those
discussions. Yet, an examination of the federal
budget now being proposed by the Bush
administration belies a commitment to the biblical
call for economic justice. In the words of the
old saying, “the devil is in the details.”
The
budget is a moral document. It shows how we as a
nation choose to spend our money. This budget
shows that we are choosing to increase our defense
spending, extend tax cuts to the wealthiest and
cut programs for the poorest and sickest.
The
budget is a moral document. As any middle or high
school student who learns budget basics knows, a
budget is composed of two parts – income and
expenses. In the case of the proposed federal
budget, the government’s income will be reduced
dramatically by the extension of 2002 low tax
rates for dividends and capital gains through
2010. Three-quarters of these tax cuts have gone
to those who earn over $200,000 a year (with
half going to those Americans who earn more than
$1 million a year.) This amounts to a $23 billion
loss of income to the federal government. The
Congressional Budget Office estimates that these
tax cuts will increase our deficit by an
astounding $1.6 trillion over the next ten years.
The budget is a moral document. Not only will
our national income be decreasing, but our
spending is increasing on military, homeland
security and other international programs. For
instance, the administration’s proposed budget is
asking for more than $400 billion for the
Department of Defense discretionary budget
alone. This does not include any funding for the
war or occupation in
Iraq
or Afghanistan, an amount estimated to be $153
billion. Veterans groups worry that it also does
not adequately fund rehabilitation costs for
wounded and disabled soldiers.
The budget is a moral document. Since the
proposed budget decreases income and increases
military costs, in order to balance the bottom
line it must make massive expense cuts to programs
targeted for the poorest and the sickest
Americans. For instance, nearly 150 programs that
provide vital social services to the poor and to
families and communities will be cut. For
example, while taxes will be cut for the
wealthiest Americans, the Earned Income Tax
Credit, a program which provides tax relief to
poor working families, will be drastically
reduced. Or, despite the fact that one in five
American women under age 65 currently has no
health insurance at all, the administration is
proposing $60 billion in Medicaid budget cuts over
the next ten years.
As
Congress has begun debating the budget, its
proposed cuts are also draconian. For instance,
cuts to programs for low income Americans proposed
by the House of Representatives would be 10 times
larger than those proposed by the Senate.
The
budget is a moral document. How are we, the
richest nation in the world, caring for our
children? The Food Stamp program would be cut by
$1 billion over 10 years, and the nutrition
program for pregnant women and children would also
receive huge cuts. Children’s health insurance
programs would be cut. Moreover, this budget
would reduce funding for primary and secondary
education and delete 48 Department of Education
programs while reducing 16 others. It would
freeze child care funds for working mothers as
well as funding for Head Start, which would result
in some 25,000 poor children being dropped.
The budget is a moral document. “Some contend
that these cuts will stimulate the economy and
improve life for all Americans, but we believe
that stocking the rich man’s larder is a peculiar
strategy for getting Lazarus (the poor man at the
gate in the bible) more food,” said a joint
statement by leaders of the Episcopal Church, the
United Methodist Church, the United Church of
Christ, the Presbyterian Church (USA) and the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. “For even
as this budget reduces aid to those in poverty, it
showers presents on the rich,” it added.
On
April 4, 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was
assassinated in
Memphis,
where he had gone to support the garbage workers.
In those final weeks of his life, he was planning
a Poor People’s Campaign in
Washington, D.C., in which he wanted to focus the
attention of Congress and the American people on
“the least of these.” Maybe it’s time to once
again bring poor people to Washington to confront
our legislators and our President with the faces
of those whose lives will be impacted by their
budget cuts. Let them look into the eyes of the
children and the women and the elderly and the
disabled. Let them meet those of us for whom
moral values mean how we treat the poorest, the
weakest, the sickest, the youngest and the
oldest. Maybe that’s how we honor Dr. King.
Maybe that’s how we reclaim our moral values and
our souls.
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