Audit USAID…Then Shut it Down!

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Audit USAID…Then Shut it Down!

Audit USAID…Then Shut it Down!
by Ron Paul | Feb 3, 2025

As of this writing, when you attempt to access the US Agency for International Development (USAID) website or social media pages you are informed that, “This site can’t be reached.” The media reports that the new Trump Administration has not only frozen USAID activities but may be planning on bringing it back under control of the US State Department. Other reports, including statements by Elon Musk, suggest that it will be closed completely.

If true, the closing of USAID may be one of the most significant changes President Trump has made among many dramatic actions in his first couple of weeks in office. Many Americans may still have the idea that USAID is a government agency delivering relief at disaster sites overseas. They may still remember the bags of rice or grain with the USAID logo on them. But that is not USAID.

USAID is a key component of the US government’s “regime change” operations worldwide. USAID spends billions of dollars every year propping up “NGOs” overseas that function as shadow governments, eating away at elected governments that the US interventionists want to overthrow. Behind most US foreign policy disasters overseas you will see the fingerprints of USAID. From Ukraine to Georgia and far beyond, USAID is meddling in the internal affairs of foreign countries – something that would infuriate Americans if it was happening to us.

When President Trump ordered a 90 day pause in USAID activities, we quickly learned just how pernicious the agency really is. The US media reported that Ukrainian press outlets were scrambling to keep their doors open when the US dollars stopped flowing. It is reported that 90 percent of the media outlets are funded by the US government!

This means that there is virtually no independent media in Ukraine, only fake news outlets willing to toe the US Administration’s propaganda line. Does anyone think these wholly US-funded “news” outlets would ever publish a story that the US government did not want published?

This is plainly immoral, but it is also dangerous. Most US mainstream media stories about Ukraine have their origins in the “reporting” of the local media. From battlefield news to casualties to the state of the Ukrainian military, the “news” from Ukraine is being written by US government-backed media outlets and then picked up by US and other western media. It is a closed propaganda loop that not only propagandizes the US citizen but also feeds false information into US government outlets – such as Congress – that rely on mainstream US media reporting for their news on Ukraine.

No wonder so many in Washington continue to support this hopeless war!

But USAID is not just in the business of disinformation. Elon Musk recently re-posted a New York Post article on X reporting that USAID funneled $53 million to EcoHealth Alliance to support gain-of-function research on coronaviruses at the Wuhan lab! Did USAID help fund COVID? Americans have a right to know.

In natural catastrophes overseas Americans have shown themselves to be extremely generous. Private volunteer assistance organizations can more effectively assist victims of disasters worldwide.

USAID needs a full and transparent audit. Americans deserve to know exactly what is being done in their name overseas. Then the agency needs to be shuttered completely, and its employees sent home. That would go a long way toward making America great again.
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https://ronpaulinstitute.org/audit-usaidthen-shut-it-down/
 
Point of order: shut it down, THEN audit. Then arrest, charge, try, convict, and imprison for life with no chance of pardon or parole all who violated the Public Trust.

The time for tyranny to die is here, the only question remaining being whether we actually kill it.
 
I'd rather pay for gay Irish plays than bombs that kill children.

Sadly, it's not an "either-or" proposition.

A government with the capacity to do the one kind of thing is ipso facto going to have the capacity to do the other kind of thing.

So we invariably tend to end up with "both-and".
 
Sadly, it's not an "either-or" proposition.

A government with the capacity to do the one kind of thing is ipso facto going to have the capacity to do the other kind of thing.

So we invariably tend to end up with "both-and".

And that sort of outcome in a nation such as America manifest as a result of the failure of its people to be the government. When people pawn off their responsibility to be part of the governance of the nation, choosing to trust strangers with their freedoms, they effectively take to their knees in supplication to evil men to rape their rights in every orifice.

We are the reason everything is shitty. We failed ourselves, our fellows, our children, and so on by not being the smartest, morally soundest, and most involved we can be for the sakes of all Americans. To defend your rights is to defend my own.
 
THREAD: USAID Exposed

The Needy Are the Human Shields of the American Regime
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsqpi-Auf8U
{Mises Media | 05 February 2025}

The media and political outcry that came when President Trump temporarily froze USAID and some domestic funding revealed how the political establishment uses the plight of the most vulnerable people to keep their rigged political system in place.

Read the article here: https://mises.org/mises-wire/needy-are-human-shields-american-regime [see below - OB]

Be sure to follow the Guns and Butter podcast at https://Mises.org/GB

Connor O’Keeffe produces media and content at the Mises Institute. He has a master’s in economics and a bachelor’s in geology. https://x.com/ConnorMOKeeffe



The Needy Are the Human Shields of the American Regime
https://mises.org/mises-wire/needy-are-human-shields-american-regime
{Connor O'Keeffe | 05 February 2025}

One of the first major actions President Donald Trump’s team took as he began his second term was to freeze government spending on various domestic “assistance” programs as well as on foreign aid administered by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

Late last Tuesday, hours before the domestic freeze was to go into effect, a federal judge put a hold on it, and the next day, the administration rescinded the freeze altogether. Similarly, the day before, the administration announced numerous waivers to the USAID freeze as groups within the executive branch battled over who was calling the shots.

Despite how quick the administration was in walking back the freeze on funding or making exceptions for foreign aid, the media still had a field day with all the chaos that erupted as a result. Reporters at establishment-friendly outlets across television and print went to great lengths to gather details about all the organizations providing goods and services to some of the most vulnerable people—at home and abroad—who were suddenly left wondering if their main source of funding had dried up.

Journalists raised the alarm about homeless veterans who would go without food, addicts who would go without professional support, students who relied on federal assistance to pay for college who would be forced to drop school, and the millions of people who depend on government programs for healthcare going without care—among many, many others.

The same goes for foreign USAID beneficiaries. The media ran alarming stories about the closures of soup kitchens feeding hungry people in war-torn Sudan, hospitals caring for destitute war refugees in Thailand, groups providing firewood to people enduring the harsh Ukrainian winter in a war zone, clinics preventing newborns from contracting HIV in Uganda, and more.

The media also seized on Elon Musk’s involvement in the USAID freeze to put their preferred spin on the situation—with one Politico writer characterizing the episode as “the world’s wealthiest person partially dismantling the world’s single-largest source of assistance to the world’s most vulnerable people.”

But beyond Musk and USAID, that sentiment is clearly how establishment figures in media and politics want us to think about the current administration’s effort to cut government: as a scheme to abandon the most vulnerable people in our country and around the world, to slash spending, and make room for tax cuts to the rich.

But that characterization starts to fall apart if we look beyond the subset of spending that the media is focused on, because USAID is funding far more than a couple of soup kitchens and hospitals. As Ron Paul explained in his column on Monday [see this thread - OB], “USAID is a key component of the US government’s ‘regime change’ operations worldwide.”

Much of the agency’s funding gets passed on to NGOs and media organizations in regions that are central to Washington’s foreign agenda. The same goes for dissident groups and “independent” media outlets in and around countries controlled by governments that Washington wants to overthrow.

As the New York Times revealed deep in their article about the USAID freeze, a substantial number of the groups and media organizations that make up the opposition coalition in Iran are struggling after being cut off from their primary source of funding—the US government. The same goes for Ukraine, where the freeze revealed that 90 percent of media organizations in the country rely on US government grants.

So, not only has USAID been used to fund groups working to unseat governments Washington wants toppled, but also to fund the outlets spreading the Washington party line around the world.

As Dr. Paul explained in his piece, the American media relies heavily on reporting from these local US-government-funded outlets when describing developments in countries like Ukraine. This means—thanks to USAID—the US government has created a propaganda loop that gives them a lot of control over how information from around the world is understood by the American people.

USAID is invaluable to the many government officials who are constantly pushing to expand US foreign interventions to further Washington’s imperial ambitions and to indulge the foreign governments and weapons companies that spend billions on lobbying. These wars then put many of the poorest people in the vulnerable positions that USAID then sweeps in to ostensibly address. The agency does a lot to keep the racket at the heart of American foreign policy going.

And the federal government’s rackets are not limited to foreign policy. Far from it. A tremendous amount of domestic spending goes towards programs we’re told are meant to make things like healthcare, education, banking, housing, food, and childcare more affordable and accessible. But across the board, despite these programs being in place for decades, the problems keep getting worse.

Prices for these incredibly important goods and services keep shooting up. And every year, the government pours more and more money into these programs which does nothing to slow or reverse the trend. What it does do, however, is transfer billions of our tax dollars into the pockets of government officials and politically-connected businesses and NGOs.

And again, the rise in the cost of living that these programs bring about forces more people into vulnerable positions where they rely on government benefits.

Then, whenever a group within the government threatens to cut the spending that fuels these rackets, these vulnerable people, who are themselves victims of the rackets, experience the quickest, most acute, and most visible pain. The political class can then hold the very real suffering of these folks up as the reason their racket needs to continue. They use our basic human aversion to seeing needy people suffer to keep the rigged system in place.

The needy are the economic human shields of the political establishment.

If an administration or political party is ever going to successfully address the spending and institutionalized corruption that is driving us off a cliff, they need to understand this dynamic. And then they need to turn around and make sure the American public understands it too.

And finally, those trying to cut government spending need to stop playing into the hands of their opponents in the political establishment. To use an analogy from Harry Browne, the government is breaking the legs of the most vulnerable people and then handing them a crutch. No successful effort to cut government spending can come from focusing on the crutch. It must center on and prioritize the many government policies that are worsening and even outright causing these problems in the first place.
 
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