That means you need to cut $1.3 trillion or so from this portion of the budget:
Discretionary spending: $1.378 trillion (+13.8%)
$663.7 billion (+12.7%) – Department of Defense (including Overseas Contingency Operations)
Should be able to cut at least 71% of this by ending the wars, refraining from getting into any others where we are not directly attacked
militarily by a regular army, closing the several extraneous overseas military bases, clipping CIA/NSA charters limiting them to very specific duties and placing them under a very strict managerial microscope meaning no more operations beyond that of strictly passive observation; all other actions to be undertaken by military only. These along should take a large bite out of the big fat military butt.
We could reduce active and career military forces, replacing them with updated nuclear arms and a very simple policy that includes withdrawal from all international treaties, strictly defensive positions (non-interventionism), and the clear message that any nation which attacks us militarily will be turned into a vitrified, glow in the dark wasteland that will remain uninhabitable for the next several hundreds of thousands of years, not a solitary soul whether man woman or child to be spared.
Augment that policy with ones drawing heavy manufacturing back to our shores which, once secured we develop steep ramp contingency planning for the rapid conversion of manufacturing resources for wartime production just in case we decide not to nuke someone but must repel an invading army (yeah
right).
$78.7 billion (−1.7%) – Department of Health and Human Services
Gone. $78.7 down...
$
72.5 billion (+2.8%) – Department of Transportation
Gone. $151.2 down...
$52.5 billion (+10.3%) – Department of Veterans Affairs
Gone. $203.7 down...
$51.7 billion (+40.9%) – Department of State and Other International Programs
Gone. $255.4 down...
$47.5 billion (+18.5%) – Department of Housing and Urban Development
Gone. $302.9 down...
$46.7 billion (+12.8%) – Department of Education
Gone. $349.6 down...
$42.7 billion (+1.2%) – Department of Homeland Security
Gone. $392.3 down...
$26.3 billion (−0.4%) – Department of Energy
Gone. $418.6 down...
$26.0 billion (+8.8%) – Department of Agriculture
Gone. $444.6 down...
$23.9 billion (−6.3%) – Department of Justice
Gone. $468.5 down...
$18.7 billion (+5.1%) – National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Gone. $487.2 down...
$13.8 billion (+48.4%) – Department of Commerce
Gone. $501 down...
$13.3 billion (+4.7%) – Department of Labor
Gone. $514.3 down...
$13.3 billion (+4.7%) – Department of the Treasury
Might keep this one, though they would have to prove themselves worth their keep.
$12.0 billion (+6.2%) – Department of the Interior
Gone. $526 down...
$10.5 billion (+34.6%) – Environmental Protection Agency
Might keep this one, but only to observe and report. ZERO executive power. Let us say we cut them by 71% (7.5 billion)
$533.5 down...
$9.7 billion (+10.2%) – Social Security Administration
Gone. $540.5 down...
$7.0 billion (+1.4%) – National Science Foundation
Gone. $547.5 down...
$5.1 billion (−3.8%) – Corps of Engineers
Gone. $552.6 down...
$5.0 billion (+100%-NA) – National Infrastructure Bank
Gone. $557.6 down...
$1.1 billion (+22.2%) – Corporation for National and Community Service
Gone. $558.7 down...
$0.7 billion (0.0%) – Small Business Administration
Gone. $559.8 down...
$0.6 billion (−14.3%) – General Services Administration
Gone. $560.4 down...
$0 billion (−100%-NA) – Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)
Gone. $560.4 down...
$0 billion (−100%-NA) – Financial stabilization efforts
Gone. $560.4 down...
$11 billion (+275%-NA) – Potential disaster costs
Gone. $571.4 down...
$19.8 billion (+3.7%) – Other Agencies
Gone. $591.2 billion
$591.2 plus $471.23 (defense) == approx. 1.063 trillion dollars cut.
Not so difficult, actually. Trim the fat, restore the business environment and it is almost miraculous to observe how a nation returns to economic health.
I say put the bulk of it to the torch and those in our way to the sword.
Have a nice day.
