Welfare for the Rich

Congress passed the $2.2 trillion Heroes Act.

House Democrats said it gives money to “governments who desperately need funds.”

But it also gives lots of money to people who don’t need funds.

Maryland, which even The Washington Post admits is “flush with cash,” got enough extra money to pass a budget that “hands bonuses to every state worker.”

Even Atherton, California, where the median home price is $6 million, got Heroes Act money.

“There was no means test!” complains Lisa Conyers, author of “Welfare for the Rich,” in my latest video.

Omni Hotels & Resorts received $68 million in loans. Major airlines got $25 billion in loans from the CARES Act.

“Who wouldn’t like to play Santa Claus?” asks Conyers. “Who wouldn’t like to just be able to give everybody some money?”

Welfare for the rich didn’t start with coronavirus relief bills. Politicians have done it for years, and a pandemic didn’t stop them.

Nevada politicians gave Oakland Raiders owner Mark Davis $750 million for a new stadium. A stadium designer says Davis insisted on the very best, including natural grass on a field that “moves in and out of the building in one piece.”

Cool. But why didn’t Davis pay for it himself?

“I’m not a billionaire,” he said.

But he is. The team is valued at more than $3 billion, and Davis and his mom co-own 47% of it.

Politicians screw taxpayers to build stadiums for lots of rich people.

Minnesota gave the Minnesota Vikings $348 million for their new stadium. Santa Clara, California, gave the San Francisco 49ers $114 million, plus $850 million in loans. Team co-owner Denise York and her family are worth $3.5 billion, says Forbes. She ought to fund her own stadium.

“The taxpayers often vote for this stuff,” I say to Conyers, “so they must like it.”

“(T)hey’re promised there’s going to be all these jobs,” she replies, “not only at the stadium but at the hotels that are going to rise up around the stadium.”

Politicians always promise that public investment will return more in benefits to taxpayers. But it’s not true.

A study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City found new stadiums bring in about $40 million in jobs and tax benefits, much less than the $188 million that taxpayers pay.

Handouts to other corporations fare no better.

Ohio politicians gave General Motors millions in tax credits to keep its Lordstown plant open. GM then closed the plant. Politicians let GM keep a third of the money.

Wisconsin gave nearly $3 billion in tax breaks to Foxconn because it promised to create 13,000 jobs. Now the company promises to create only 1,454.

“If you look at the cost of each job, it was a million dollars,” Conyers points out.

Actually, it was more than a million.

Politicians often justify this corporate welfare by saying, “We didn’t give cash, just tax breaks.”

But “If some big company is in that town and they are not paying property tax, that means every other taxpayer is covering for them,” Conyers points out. “(F)ire departments still have to be paid for. Police departments still have to be paid for. Schools still have to be paid for!”

Then there’s the farm subsidy scam.

Both Republicans and Democrats eagerly give your money to agribusiness, even though farmers are now richer than the average American.

The politicians claim the handouts are not a payoff for political contributions but to “make sure there’s enough food to go around,” since “farmers have no control over price fluctuations and the weather.”

But that’s absurd. Other businesses adjust to price fluctuations and weather. America doesn’t subsidize fruit and vegetable farmers — yet we have plenty of fruits and vegetables.

The politicians claim they want to help “small family farms,” but they give 90% of the subsidies to the biggest farms.

Such welfare for the rich persists because, years ago, politicians voted for a handout, and once they start giving your money away, they never stop.

“I’m an American taxpayer,” says Conyers. “I don’t understand why money is leaving my pocket and going into the pocket of somebody who is wealthy.”

Me either.

Photo by Karolina Grabowska from Pexels

18 thoughts on “Welfare for the Rich

  1. I happen to live and work on a family farm, we are not rich, my siblings have outside jobs just to survive our newest work truck is a2011 GMC, that is our going to town vehicle. We have to skimp to be able to stay in this business. Or tractors are anywhere from 15 to 45 years old. I would think if we’re rich wouldn’t we have new tractors and trucks.

    1. When these guys say Farmers, the mean corporate farms not those that a hard working family farms.

  2. We need more of these exposes’. More importantly we need a practical system in government to institute constraints on such spending.

  3. With Covid ongoing, many will not be going to these stadiums in the next two years…especially in the colder weather per Fauchi. And maybe people will be so irritated they may not attend sports anymore. It has been happening. So no one will be getting hired. Maybe fired.

  4. Need to start fresh. These corrupted politicians are not going away. Sad but truth.

    1. I agree, a new Government needs to be “grown” from the local level all the way up.
      TERM LIMITS TOO PLEASE!

  5. Check your stats on Wisconsin. The only way Foxconn was to receive that money was if Foxconn met certain employee hires in a certain time period. No money was just handed to Foxconn

  6. The Rich do indeed get richer. I am flummoxed as to why the broadcast partners are not getting skewered for their subscription service cost. Despite the state of Minnesota having paid for us bank stadium and target field the tax payers who subsidized these stadiums can not watch on TV without exorbitant subscription cost to view the sports they paid for. Bally Sports North has now cut streaming options and limited their viewership rights to exclusive and expensive packages.

  7. Unfortunately, the big conglomerates are the ones that get all the tax money. Not to dis this article, but everybody sees hundreds of acres and see wealth. If farming was easy everybody would do it.

  8. YOU HAVE A PRESIDENT THATS GIVING AWAY MONEY AGAIN THAT WE DON’T HAVE! HE IS STILL THE GUT WHO WANTED TO GET RID OF THE CATTLE GUARDS! HE IS A PUPIT FOR THE THE DEMS!THE ONLY GOOD THING HE COULD DO WOULD BE TO GET RID OF PELOSI AND SCHUMER!
    HOW THEY DO ANY GOOD AFTER THE PURE STUPID THINGS THEY ARE DOING NOW? TERM LIMITS WOULD BE GOOD THING FOR THIS COUNTRY! EVERY ONE IS GETTING MORE MONEY THAN US VETERANS!

  9. I don’t mind give taxes to farmers that need the help, but I can barely Afford a house of my own why is my taxes paying for a stadium When they are Americans without homes and that suffer they can’t eat this is ridiculous

  10. why can’t this country stop welfare for rich and stop giving free stuff to the poor!

  11. If the government is giving money out, there are going to be crooks, other than govt employees !! Loans are different than free grants, these dim o rat run cities, are crooked and will NEVER pay back a LOAN !!

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