In his first term, President Trump presided over two shutdowns. One lasted for 3 days and the other for a record-breaking 35 days. Here is yet another opportunity to determine which agencies are really needed and which can be disbanded. Do we really need the Department of Education. It was only created in 1979 and education outcomes were better before its creation than since. It has already undergone some trimming, but elimination would save more money. What about the Department of Housing and Urban Development? Another relatively new agency (1965), it doesn't appear to have improved that which it was created to oversee. If the agency hasn't found a way to prevent urban decay and homelessness despite billions in funding and 6 decades of experience, maybe it isn't possible. Oh, but how much worse would it be without HUD? Let's find out. Department of Labor should be abolished. Another money pit that generates regulations that discourage job creation. Department of Transportation is yet another government expansion from the 1960s. What does it do? They show up after a train derailment or a plane crash and grandstand. As if the companies wouldn't endeavor to prevent such incidents themselves; derailments and plane crashes are terrible for profits. Oh, but it makes it appear the government is doing something. We'll regulate against derailments and crashes.
The US has a $37 trillion national debt and thinks it doesn't need to cut anything. Even with the government 'shutdown,' the debt is still growing. It is time to look at the successes of Argentina's pruning of its bloated government and the benefits that have followed.
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