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ANewFormation

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ANewFormation
·ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Haha, yeah I should have put quotes around "only" but you have to keep in mind that this ~900billion that remains is the entire government budget for everything besides stuff like medicare, social security, and so on.

When people think about government spending they tend to handwave away billions and, as per this thread, millions are seen as a rounding error.

But I think thats because most people are thinking about the entire budget - which is around was 6.7 trillion on total revenue of 4.9 trillion.

But when "only" 900 billion of that is left for all the neat things government could do it really nails home the impact of things like a trillion dollars per year spent in interest on the debt.

It really also makes clear why starting to slim things down is essentially becoming necessary. The current system is not sustainable.
ANewFormation
·ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Fishing is dangerous work and will continue to be so for the foreseeable future.

What matters are the data which nobody has dug up. Was there a significant reduction in fatalities following this committee's creation? Did it have a significant and likely causal relationship on those declines? And finally - assuming there was a decline d the committee was responsible for it, are they still meaningfully necessary or are the prior established rules sufficient to maintain the improvements moving forward?
ANewFormation
·ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
A very small nitpick but the discretionary budget of the US is far smaller than most realize - in 2024 it was only 1.75 trillion.

And notably, most military spending is discretionary, so the remaining funds for basically all the neat dynamic things government can do is less than a trillion.

A million is of course still a rounding error at e.g. $900 billion, but it adds up really fast, especially when you consider that these are ongoing costs.