Posted on 09/25/2023 9:34:36 AM PDT by Mariner
A “60 Minutes” segment broadcast on Sunday caused an uproar after the show reported that American taxpayers are “subsidizing” Ukraine’s economy and paying for all of Ukraine’s first responders.
The news comes as a recent Fox News poll found that 56% of Republicans say the U.S. should be sending less support to Ukraine. A recent CNN poll found that 55% of Americans say Congress should not authorize additional funding to support Ukraine.
“American taxpayers are financing more than just weapons. We discovered the U.S. government’s buying seeds and fertilizer for Ukrainian farmers… and covering the salaries of Ukraine’s first responders – all 57,000 of them,” the CBS News show reported. “That includes the team that trains this rescue dog – named Joy – to comb through the wreckage of Russian strikes looking for survivors.”
“And the U.S. also funds the divers who we saw clearing unexploded ammunition from the country’s rivers – to make them safe again for swimming and fishing,” the segment continued. “Russia’s invasion shrank Ukraine’s economy by about a third. We were surprised to find that to keep it afloat the U.S. government is subsidizing small businesses.”
(Excerpt) Read more at dailywire.com ...
Ukrainian Partisans don't like it to be widely known.
Are the public safety unions giving the required kickbacks to the Demoncrats?
I don’t believe it. Our leaders like to be transparent, and they would have told us if our vast aid included these expenditures /s
And everyone is a first responder. Especially their retired government bureaucrats.
They’ve been rather busy. There’s a war going on.
Six months ago Boden said that money was going to public pensions in Ukraine. He said it quite plainly. Jeeze. Don’t people listen?
All to keep the bribery, graft and kick-backs flowing.
Billions of American tax dollars being laundered through the Ukraine and over into the pockets of career politicians and bureaucrats in Washington DC.
It’s obscene.
It’s going to the Ukraine government pensions for retired bureaucrats.
Social Security and Medicare are known as third rails of American politics for a reason. Reducing benefits is very unpopular, but higher taxes are divisive, too — and without at least one of those two steps, both programs are on track to become unable to make full payments in the next decade. Exact projections have fluctuated based on overall economic conditions, but the most recent estimates show Social Security running out of money to cover full benefits by 2033, and part of Medicare by 2031.
The candidates are split on whether to call for changes to the programs, but those who say they would leave them untouched generally have not explained how they would keep them solvent.
He says he wouldn’t cut the programs but hasn’t explained how he would keep them solvent.
Former President Donald J. Trump has said he would not make any cuts to Social Security or Medicare benefits. However, he has also opposed raising taxes to bring in more funding for them, which means his plans would not keep the programs solvent for the long term. A spokesman for his campaign did not respond to requests for comment. Read full position
He says he’s open to Social Security cuts for younger Americans.
Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida has ruled out reducing Social Security benefits for current retirees and people near retirement age, but he has expressed openness to reductions for younger Americans. Read full position
She says she’s open to cuts for younger Americans.
Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina, has suggested that she would raise the Social Security retirement age for people currently in their 20s in accordance with increases in life expectancy, though she has not given a number. (The retirement age is currently 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later.) Read full position
He wants to partly privatize Social Security, but his plan for Medicare is unclear.
Former Vice President Mike Pence has tried to contrast himself with candidates who say they would leave Social Security and Medicare untouched. Read full position
He says he wouldn’t cut the programs but hasn’t explained how he would keep them solvent.
Senator Tim Scott said at a campaign event this spring that he would “never, ever cut Medicare or Social Security benefits.” But at another event, he also said that policymakers would “have to look at the overall entitlement state of our nation.” Read full position
He supports a higher retirement age and lower benefits for wealthy people.
Former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey supports raising the retirement age for people currently in their 40s or younger, and ending Social Security benefits for the wealthiest people, a policy known as means-testing. “Do we really need to have Warren Buffett and Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk collecting Social Security?” he asked in an interview with Fox News in July. Read full position
He wants to let people claim benefits early while still working, and he would have a commission consider changes.
Former Gov. Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas has suggested that people who begin claiming Social Security benefits early should be allowed to continue working while still receiving the benefits. By continuing to earn a paycheck, these workers would keep paying into the Social Security system through payroll deductions, increasing the program’s funding. Read full position
He says he wouldn’t cut the programs but hasn’t explained how he would keep them solvent.
My guess would be 50% makes its way back to fatten our bureaucrats too. Clean as a baby’s bottom in fresh laundry.
I assume Biden's fellow democrats are getting their 10%n or better... so the scum of the earth is doing well. More mansions for DC...
ping
Ukraine is not a NATO country yet it appears that we spend more there than we do in any NATO country. Just saying.
“...and covering the salaries of Ukraine’s first responders...
I believe it has already been reported Biden has directed the US pay salaries, pensions and associated expenses of the massive Ukrainian government with US taxpayer funds.
One of the biggest and most successful international con artists of all time. No wonder Biden admires him.
factcheck.org
April 2022
snip
Ukrainian Finance Minister Sergii Marchenko told the Washington Post that Ukraine
needed at least $2 billion per month in emergency economic aid from the US.
Marchenko said Ukraine is seeking the economic support to continue to pay for
<><> Ukraine pensions,
<><>salaries for health care and education officials,
<><> and other “humanitarian needs,” the Post reported.
p
Biden's, Blinken's and Nuland's 51st state. Or maybe it's just a territory, angling to become a state? < sarc, but not much >
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