Why the Latest Story From the Epstein Files Could Give Trump Grounds for...
There's Nothing 'Gorgeous' About Socialism
Chicago's Brandon Johnson Say's There's No Evidence a Corporate Head Tax Is a...
Pastor Urges Christians and Jews to Unite Against Rising Antisemitism
Person of Interest in Brown University Shooting Identified
What We Know About the Australia Terror Attack
Trump Mourns Lives Lost in Recent Terror Attacks
Hit-and-Run Suspect Arrested by ICE After Citizen Suffers Life-Threatening Injuries
Brown Shooting That Killed 2, Wounded 8 Might Have Targeted Jewish Economics Professor
10 Dead, 11 Wounded in Australia Mass Shooting
Two Dead, Eight Wounded in Brown University Shooting
The Season Was Made for Remembering
America’s Foster Care Crisis Demands a Return to Faith, Family, and Community
A Call to Remember the Persecuted Christians
Restoring a Generation’s Love for Faith and Country
Tipsheet

Rand Paul's ‘Festivus Report’ Details the Insane Ways Government Wasted $54 Billion in 2020

AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File

Festivus is upon us. Popularized by Seinfeld, it’s the time of year to air grievances—and Sen. Rand Paul has plenty of them from 2020. 

The Kentucky Republican’s “Festivus Report” details $54 billion in government waste, which is particularly egregious during a year where Americans have lost so much as a result of coronavirus lockdowns.

Advertisement

What started as a 15-day period to slow the spread of COVID-19 turned into the better part of a year and “while that was happening, Congress spent as never before, doing so ostensibly without a care,” the report states. 

The deficit for Fiscal Year 2020 was a staggering $3.1 trillion—yes, some of it was COVID relief, the report notes, “but a lot of it was not.”

“[P]erhaps somebody can explain to me why the Kennedy Center needed $25 million for salaries? Or why Congress reimbursed some agencies for money they had spent in late 2019 and early 2020, before COVID hit, on efforts unrelated to COVID?” Paul wondered. “Maybe, just maybe, cutting agencies blank checks is why the debt skyrocketed from $23 trillion to more than $27 trillion. Spending was about 50% higher than last year, and payments of interest on the public debt remained extremely high at $387 billion.”

He then gave a powerful visual: “If you laid out that many $1 bills end to end, it’d be enough to wrap around the earth 1,506 times.”

The worst part about it is that none of that government spending actually helps anyone.  

“It is more important than ever for Congress to find its fiscal backbone,” he urged. “Our debt puts at risk the long-term solvency of major programs such as Social Security. And why? To pay for test tubes for COVID tests that turn out to be soda bottles? To see if hot tubbing a few times a week eases stress? Or is the risk worth it so we can literally lose drones over Afghanistan?!?”

Advertisement

These are just some of the grievances you’ll find in this year’s report “highlighting $54,746,524,505.37 of totally wasted money.”

Paul points out that of this staggering sum, the average taxpayer is responsible for $10,006.55, which means the government wasted 5,471,368 people’s taxes.

You couldn’t even stay alive long enough to count to $54,746,524,505.37 if that’s literally all you did, he adds. If it were possible, you’d finish in the year 3756.

Some of the highlights from the report were posted on Twitter.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement