[Vision2020] Wife of fallen firefighter breaks her silence

Ron Force rforce2003 at yahoo.com
Wed Oct 9 09:07:09 PDT 2013


It's laid out by law. The budget has two parts:

Mandatory
Definition: Mandatory spending funds U.S. Federal programs that have already been established by Congress under so-called authorization laws. These laws both establish the federal programs, and mandate that Congress must appropriate whatever funds are needed to keep the programs running. In other words, Congress cannot reduce the funding for these programs without changing the authorization law itself. Funding  can't be changed without, quite literally, an act of Congress.

http://useconomy.about.com/od/glossary/g/mandatory_spend.htm

Mandatory spending is 60% of the Federal Budget. Forty per cent is Social Security and Medicare.

Discretionary
Definition: Discretionary fiscal policy is the portion of the Federal government's actions that can be changed year to year by Congress and the President. It is usually executed through each year's budget or through changes in the tax code. It is that portion of the budget that's outside of Mandatory spending, such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and Obamacare.
http://useconomy.about.com/od/glossary/g/discretionary.htm


Half the 40% that is discretionary is the Defense budget.


 
The Federal government has been characterized as an insurance company with an army. 

Ron Force
Moscow Idaho USA



On Wednesday, October 9, 2013 8:41 AM, Paul Rumelhart <godshatter at yahoo.com> wrote:
 
This leads me to a question.  Who decides that death benefits will be frozen during the shutdown, but that Social Security payments will continue?  Why are monuments that are unstaffed when open now have security guards to keep the public away?
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>Is this laid out in law somewhere, or is it fully at the whim of the executive branch?
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>Paul
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>On Wednesday, October 9, 2013 7:34 AM, Tom Hansen <thansen at moscow.com> wrote:
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>As the clock ticks on . . .
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>Courtesy of KOB News (Albuquerque, New Mexico) at:
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>http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S3178641.shtml?cat=500
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>Wife of fallen firefighter breaks her silence
>For the first time, the wife of fallen wildland firefighter Token Adams breaks her silence.
>Adams was killed about a month ago in an ATV crash while checking out reports of smoke in the Jemez Mountains.
>In just the last few weeks, his wife Hiedi not only lost her husband, she also gave birth to a daughter.
>Now, the federal government shutdown has frozen her late husband's federal benefits.
>It is a difficult conversation. The first one she's had out in the open since her husband's death.
>But she says her voice is one of many wives and husbands and children helpless as the federal government shuts down and leaves them with nowhere to turn for help.
>In every stream and sun-painted canvas of the Jemez, Hiedi Adams hears the whispers of a man she says belonged to this land.
>"It's hard, driving into the mountains," Hiedi said. "'Cause I see him. It's hard. It's hard to see it every day."
>As days turned into a week in early September, at the end of a long search in the same mountains he loved, Token Adams, the love of Hiedi's life was found lifeless on a stable mesa in the Jemez.
>"Doesn't really seem like it's happened," Hiedi said. "It's miserable. Lonely."
>But that crushing loss, that loneliness, became joy two weeks ago when Hiedi gave birth to Ayla.
>But, just as the joy set in, so did the government shutdown.
>"I had a meeting set for benefits tomorrow," Hiedi said.
>Hiedi was supposed to finalize her late husband's federal benefits, but the meeting set for tomorrow has been canceled. She's told it could be as much as four weeks before Token's benefits begin.
>Suddenly a single mom, Hiedi said she wants New Mexicans to know what families like hers are going through as the federal government furloughs employees. She said she's one of the lucky ones. The community has stepped up with donations.
>"That's what I'm living off of," Hiedi said.
>But, not everyone is in her shoes.
>"You know, you have families who are both on government pay and you think up to four weeks without a paycheck, what's that going to do for their families?" Hiedi wondered. "I feel for them. It's going to be really tough."
>And tough doesn't seem to do it justice. But then Hiedi looks around, at the mountains echoing her husband's memory, and her children echoing it too. And happiness reigns, for now.
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>Hiedi Adams with her newborn daughter, Ayla.
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>Seeya 'round town, Moscow, because . . .
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>"Moscow Cares" (the most fun you can have with your pants on)
>http://www.MoscowCares.com
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>Tom Hansen
>Moscow, Idaho
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>"There's room at the top they are telling you still But first you must learn how to smile as you kill 
>If you want to be like the folks on the hill."
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>- John Lennon
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