Opinion Stop Asking Americans in Diners About Foreign Aid - Instead, keep explaining it.

By Tom Nichols
OCTOBER 30, 2023, 6:03 PM ET

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Robert Nickelsberg / Getty

Americans don’t understand foreign aid. Instead of relying on misinformed citizens, we should demand better answers from national leaders who want to cut aid to our friends and allies and imperil American security.

Persistent Foreign-Aid Myths

The Washington Post sent a reporter to a diner in Shreveport, Louisiana, last week to talk with voters in the district represented by the new speaker of the House, Mike Johnson. And wouldn’t you know it, they were very happy to see him become speaker, including one voter in the diner who—imagine the luck—just happened to be Mike Johnson’s mother. “God did this,” Jeanne Johnson said of her son’s ascension to the speakership.

I have my doubts about God’s participation in American elections, but she’s a proud mom, and understandably so. She told the reporter that Johnson “began leading as a child,” stepping up at a young age to help the family. That’s nice; my mom, God rest her soul, used to say nice things about me too.

The rest of the article included predictable discussions with the local burghers who hope we can finally overcome all this nastiness in our politics—there is no apparent awareness of how all that unpleasantness got started—and get to work and solve problems under the leadership of an obviously swell guy. (In fact, we are told he even calmed an angry voter at a town hall. Amazing.) Johnson, of course, also voted to overturn the 2020 presidential election, and has many views that would have been considered retrograde by most Americans even 30 years ago, but gosh darn it, people in Shreveport sure seem to like him.

I remain astonished that so much of the media remain committed to covering Donald Trump and sedition-adjacent extremists such as Johnson as if they are normal American politicians. But while Americans pretend that all is well, the rest of the world is busily going about its terrifying business, which is why one comment in the Post article jumped out at me.

“Politics here is personal,” according to Celeste Gauthier, 45. (The Post, for some reason, notes that Gauthier attended Middlebury College for a time—perhaps as a clumsy way of trying to tell us she’s not merely some rough local, and that she returned from Vermont to help run her family’s three restaurants.) She is concerned:

“People really do look at the funding we’re sending to Israel and Ukraine and say, ‘I can’t afford to go to Kroger,’” Gauthier said as she sat amid the lunchtime crowd, some of whom she said had stopped buying beverages because of the cost. “A lot of these customers know Mike Johnson and think we often get overlooked and maybe we won’t anymore,” she said.

I’m not sure what it means to be “overlooked” in a cherry-red district in a state where, as the Post notes, Republicans will control all three branches of state government once the conservative governor-elect is sworn in, but the comment about foreign aid is a classic expression of how little people understand about the subject.

Perhaps Gauthier or others believe that the new speaker—who has been opposed to sending aid to Ukraine—would redirect the money back to “overlooked” Louisianans, maybe as increased aid to the poor. He wouldn’t, of course, as he has already proposed huge cuts in social spending. As for Israel, evangelical Christians such as Johnson have a special interest in Israel for their own eschatological reasons, and Johnson has already decided to decouple aid to Israel from aid to Ukraine. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell—whose understanding of foreign policy is practically Churchillian compared with Johnson’s—is none too happy about that.

Let’s review some important realities.

First, foreign aid is about 1 percent of the U.S. budget, roughly $60 billion. Special appropriations to Ukraine have, over the course of 18 months, added up to about $75 billion, including both humanitarian aid and weapons. Israel—a far smaller country that has, over the past 70 years, cumulatively received more foreign aid from the United States than from any other country—usually gets about $3 billion, but Joe Biden now wants to add about $14 billion to that.
That’s a lot of money. To put it in perspective, however, Americans forked over about $181 billion annually on snacks, and $115 billion for beer last year. (They also shell out about $7 billion annually just for potato chips. The snack spending is increasing, perhaps because Americans now spend about $30 billion on legal marijuana every year.) Americans also ante up a few bucks here and there on legal sports gambling, and by “a few” I mean more than $220 billion over the past five years.

I know suds and weed and sports books and pretzels are more fun than helping Ukrainians stay alive. And I know, too, that supposedly small-government conservatives will answer: It’s none of your damn business what Americans are spending their money on.

They’re right—up to a point. But we are, in theory, adults who can establish sensible priorities. We pay taxes so that the federal government can do things that no other level of government can achieve, and national security is one of them. Right now, the Russian army—the greatest threat to NATO in Europe—is taking immense losses on a foreign battlefield for a total investment that (as of this moment) is less than one-tenth of the amount we spend on defense in a single year. This is the spending Mike Johnson is so worried about?

Of course, we might repeat one more time that much of the food and weapons and other goods America sends to places like Israel and Ukraine are actually made by Americans. And yet many Republican leaders (and their propaganda arm at Fox and other outlets) continue to talk about aid as if some State Department phantom in a trench coat meets the president of Ukraine or the prime minister of Israel in an alley and hands over a metal briefcase filled with neatly wrapped stacks of bills.

We need to stop asking people in diners about foreign aid. (Populists who demand that we rely on guidance from The People should remember that most Americans think foreign aid should be about 10 percent of the budget—a percentage those voters think would be a reduction but would actually be a massive increase.) Instead, put our national leaders on the spot to explain what they think foreign aid is, where it goes, and what it does, and then call them out, every time, when they spin fantasies about it. Otherwise, legislators such as Johnson will be able to sit back and let the folks at the pie counter believe that he’s going to round up $75 billion and send it back home.

That’s an old and dumb trope, but it works. If you’re a Republican in Congress, and if you can stay in Washington by convincing people at the diner that you’re going to take cash from Ukrainians (wherever they are) and give it back to the hardworking waitress pouring your coffee, then you do it—because in this new GOP, your continued presence in Washington is more important than anything, including the security of the United States.

Source (Archive)
 
We pay taxes so that the federal government can do things that no other level of government can achieve, and national security is one of them. Right now, the Russian army—the greatest threat to NATO in Europe—is taking immense losses on a foreign battlefield for a total investment that (as of this moment) is less than one-tenth of the amount we spend on defense in a single year. This is the spending Mike Johnson is so worried about?
How does killing Russian soldiers and blowing up Russian tanks help America's "national security"?

Is this the same way invading Iraq was for "national security"?
 
Let’s review some important realities.

How many of these rich faggots over-invested in Ukraine, of all places? I'd really like to see a list of names. They are behaving very reminiscent of the Lloyds Names from ye olden dayes, desperately twisting and turning in their own self-dug graves of avarice now that something has gone wrong with their money printer.

You'd think a journalist might be interested in such a list, too, but apparently they are too busy sneering at poor people eating lunch?
 
"Let's replace representative democracy and the Constitution with a technocracy led by The Experts of "Experts Say" fame, and have Forever Wars and endless aid to Ukraine!"
You jest, but there was NYT op-ed literally calling for this a while ago, because the damn dirty Deplorables keep committing wrongvote.
 
Literally an American media outlet, said to be written in American English.

Burgers now has an H in it, non-francophone goyem. Suck the girldick.
In this case burgher doesn't mean the sandwich. Burgher means an elite or wealthy social class. I think bourgeois comes from that word or the other way around. He's calling them elitist.
 
How many of these rich faggots over-invested in Ukraine, of all places? I'd really like to see a list of names.
These academics will never shake the Cold War mentality that we need our US tentacles everywhere or we'll lose influence. This is the century where we lose influence as a consequence of those policies and we're just doubling down.
They need a new ZOG colony after Afghanistan ended in the most humiliating way possible. What better place to infect with Faggot Worship than a conservative Christian country on Putler's doorstep?
 
That’s a lot of money. To put it in perspective, however, Americans forked over about $181 billion annually on snacks, and $115 billion for beer last year. (They also shell out about $7 billion annually just for potato chips. The snack spending is increasing, perhaps because Americans now spend about $30 billion on legal marijuana every year.) Americans also ante up a few bucks here and there on legal sports gambling, and by “a few” I mean more than $220 billion over the past five years.
Yes, a country with over 300 million people spent a lot of the money that they earned on food and alcohol. The government spent 7 TRILLION taxpayer dollars taken from those 300 million citizens. Your point about the American population spending around 250 billion of their own money on guilty pleasures doesn't mean dick when you consider the 7000 billion the government spent. It would be one thing if we could see the positive influence of that 7 trillion but everything just seems to be getting worse. Is it really any surprise when some working class joe in a cheap diner isn't happy about the government giving away billions of our money to foreign governments?
 
Nigger please enlighten me as to why I should care about Ukraine and Israel. "greatest threat to NATO" hahahaha come the fuck on what is this 1955? Russia can't even successfully invade what is very close to a European third world nation economically being supplied with arms and money on their own fucking border. What the fuck do you think would have happened if they had to fight all of NATO and the US at once? Well besides nuclear war I don't see their armies even getting close to the Vistula, never mind being an actual military threat to NATO even if they went "total war mobilize everything now!". The damage has been done to them. They have lost "military superpower" status in just one year, and they are sacrificing their already critical young male population. STOP SENDING THEM MORE MONEY

Israel? They are shooting modern fighter jet rockets at a terrorist organization whose most advanced attack was some mongoloids on paragliders. If Israel can't handle the shit they're currently in without even more American money that they have been getting for fucking decades maybe we should re evaluate the usefulness of such "allies". If the dual citizens in congress want to help their countrymen so much maybe they should get a express ticket back to the homeland and fight for it.

You know what I think would really improve national security and make me feel better? Getting the fuck out of some useless desert shithole that one of my best army friends is scared as fuck they might actually try to pull some shit to deploy people again over there.
As much as I hate Islamic terrorists I can actually slightly sympathize with them. I would probably hate the US too if everytime I heard Israel yell "oy vey" my family got obliterated by a tomahawk missile. Pulling the US completely out might actually improve the area, probably not, but it can't be worse than what we got now.

Let the sandniggers and shlomos fight over their useless land for the 1000th time and leave us out of it. When was the last time the US had a major terrorist attack on our own soil? The only nation on this Earth that has any chance of being a threat to us is China, and they still have a really long way to go, and I highly doubt Chinas plan is to use hard military power to achieve most of their aims anyway.
 
I too wanna jump on the burgher bandwagon.
burgh·er
nounarchaic•humorous
plural noun: burghers
a citizen of a town or city, typically a member of the wealthy bourgeoisie.
He was talking to poor people. The opposite of burghers. What a faggot.
 
We pay taxes so that the federal government can do things that no other level of government can achieve
Yes, we do take money from ourselves at gunpoint, you were saying about how we should be grateful for this I believe?

How about it's my money and fuck your goals: you couldn't figure them out when you HAD the money and support, and now that you and your cabal of conspirators destroyed the global economy to take advantage of a "pandemic" to do a dry run, gee golly whizzackers some people ain't so happy about feeding the beast that assfucked them with a proverbial cactus for 3 years, and now is going in for round 2 with the consequences of pretending the economy wasn't in the shitter by printing money.
 
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