The Biden administration just can’t help itself. Instead of fixing the disasters right here at home—border chaos, skyrocketing crime, toxic train derailments—they’re busy building a new empire for American tax dollars. This time, the State Department wants to set up 12 shiny new “regional hubs” to run global disaster and emergency aid, all managed under a slick new bureau. Forget the old government team at USAID—they’ve been swept aside for yet another Biden bureaucracy.
What does all this really mean? While grocery budgets are squeezed and families worry about making ends meet, the White House is pouring resources into emergency response for the world, not Americans. Liberals claim it’s “humanitarian.” But whenever they pull a stunt like this, it’s American priorities that get left in the dust.
And let’s be real—this is classic Washington. More agencies, more bureaus, more bureaucrats. Instead of rooting out waste or actually helping Americans after events like Hurricane Ian or those wildfires in Hawaii, the left is obsessed with expanding their reach and patting themselves on the back for so-called “global leadership.” Biden’s team is so worried about what diplomats in Brussels think, they forget about the farmers in Kansas or families in Ohio.
Globalist elites love nothing more than to funnel your hard-earned dollars outside our borders. They dismantle old agencies, build shiny new ones, and shuffle the deck—only to chase the next international photo-op. But who pays the price? Everyday Americans, as usual. The liberal obsession with foreign crises is just smoke and mirrors to distract from their failures at home.
Here’s an idea: how about building 12 task forces to protect our own cities, secure the border, or fix the drug epidemic? No, that doesn’t fit the progressive playbook. Liberals would rather save face in front of the UN than stand up for real American families. When will Washington remember who they’re supposed to serve? Maybe when they set up a disaster hub for Middle America and not just some new desk job in a foreign capital.
Source: Washington Times
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