Starkville Daily News

Biden is giving $40 billion to Ukraine. Here's what that money could do here

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- TED RALL

n top of the $2 billion it already sent to Ukraine, the Biden administra­tion has asked Congress to ignore its previous request for $10 billion to pay for updated COVID-19 vaccines for American citizens (Pandemic? What pandemic?) and send an additional $33 billion to Ukraine instead. The House of Representa­tives not only obliged but authorized more than Biden wanted: $40 billion.

The U.S. Congress does this with military spending all the time. They live to please!

Every Democratic congressma­n voted “yes” to send weapons to a country that has “several hundred monuments, statues, and streets named after Nazi collaborat­ors,” according to The Forward. That even includes Alexandria Ocasio-cortez's “Squad,” who claim to be progressiv­e.

In the Senate, a rare voice of opposition was raised by libertaria­n Republican Rand Paul. “We don't need to be the sugar daddy and the policemen of the world,” Paul remarked. For his trouble, Paul was bizarrely accused of “treason” by online commenters who suggested that his surly Kentucky neighbor should assault him again. All Paul wanted was a week to go over exactly where all that money is going.

Whatever you think of the crisis in Ukraine, Paul has a point. A week isn't going to make any difference. We should distrust bullies who tell us there's no time to think, hurry up, shut up, do what we tell you. The total lack of debate in Washington, and in the news media, over the quick transfer of $40 billion to a country that is not a U.S. ally, has a grim human rights record and recently banned a bunch of political parties and opposition cable news channels, ought to prompt some sort of discussion. First and foremost, we ought to consider just how much money $40 billion is and what it could do here in the United States, for Americans.

The $40 billion we are sending to Ukraine will not change the outcome of the war. The United States would never commit enough money or ground troops to do that because it would risk World War III with Russia. The $40 billion will buy a lot of weapons and ammunition that will kill Russians and Ukrainians. Nothing more; nothing less.

So how much, exactly, is $40 billion?

Here in the United States, here are some of the things that $40 billion could do:

A $2,000 scholarshi­p for every college student. A $6,000 scholarshi­p for every college student who is officially in poverty. $72,000 to every homeless person. $2,400 to every veteran. $410,000 to every public school. $1.3 million to every public high school. It could be used to buy books and other equipment, fix broken infrastruc­ture, build something new for the kids. $1.3 million would pay the salaries of 20 new teachers for 10 years.

$500 to each American family. I pledge to use my $500 not to kill any Russians or Ukrainians.

$420 to every cat. That's a lot of kibble and litter. Cats don't kill Russians or Ukrainians.

$2 million each to every person wrongfully convicted of a murder they didn't commit.

Give a new, fully loaded car to a million people. Give a sweet, fully loaded Macbook Pro laptop to 10 million people.

Give a sweet new TV to 100 million people. Everyone who currently subscribes to Netflix gets three years for free.

Every adult gets a free subscripti­on to the Washington Post digital edition for three years.

Every adult gets 15 free tickets to the actual, real, in-person, not-at-home movies.

$40 billion would repair almost all of the 220,000 bridges in the United States that need to be repaired and replace all of the 79,500 that need to be replaced. Add the $2 billion we already sent to Ukraine and you can delete the word “almost.”

$40 billion would buy Twitter.

$86,000 for everyone raped over the last year. $7,000 to help care the caregivers of everyone suffering from dementia.

It would hire 50,000 journalist­s for 20 years. There are only 6,500 now.

$4,000 to every self-identified Native American and Alaska Native. It's not nearly enough considerin­g what has been done to them, but it's better than the current nothing.

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