Back in February, Senate
Repugicans blocked a bill that would have expanded veterans’ benefits,
and built 27 new VA clinics and facilities over the next ten years,
because they thought the bill was too expensive. Sen. Jeff Sessions
(r-AL) spoke for the group of 41 repugican cabal obstructionists when he said, “This
bill creates new veterans’ programs and it’s not paid for—it’s all
borrowed money.”
The veterans benefits bill would have cost $21 billion over ten years.
Today, the House Ways and Means Committee advanced a
bill that would give businesses a $600 billion tax cut. Democrats have
been opposed to the repugican scheme to add nearly $300 billion to the
deficit without paying for it. According to The Hill,
“As with the research tax break, Democrats said they generally
supported the incentives considered by the committee. But none of them
voted for any of the tax breaks, insisting they couldn’t get on board
with clearing another slate of tax breaks that would add more than $300
billion to the deficit. In all, the dozen preferences approved by the
Ways and Means panel over the last four weeks cost $600 billion over a
decade.”
$2.1 billion a year over ten years to provide better
care for our veterans is too expensive, but $60 billion a year over the
same time period is affordable as long as the money is going to the
business sector. This is a case of blatant repugican hypocrisy. The repugicans are refusing to pay for their tax cuts for business, but
they have the nerve to tell people who fought and bled for their country
that they can’t have better medical care.
Veterans didn’t risk their lives so that the Koch
brothers could have another tax cut. The repugicans would rather take from
veterans and give to the business community. One year of the business
tax cuts could pay for the veterans benefits nearly three times over.
It’s a matter of priorities, and in the delusional repugican mind, tax cuts are
more important than veterans.
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