To: Arthur Radley who wrote (465339 ) 9/26/2003 7:37:27 AM From: Arthur Radley Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670 Shrub....Lie #1.. Not for nation building. Lie #2....Promised to cut spending. Yeah! For citizens of this country(funny that we are being accused of being unAmerican, and our prez is sending all our money to Iraq for... Sept. 26 — A new curriculum for training an Iraqi army for $164 million. Five hundred experts, at $200,000 each, to investigate crimes against humanity. A witness protection program for $200,000 per Iraqi participant. A computer study for the Iraqi postal service: $54 million. SUCH NUMBERS, buried in President Bush’s $20.3 billion request for Iraq’s reconstruction, have made some congressional Republicans nervous, even furious. Although the GOP leadership has tried to unite publicly around its president, cracks are beginning to show. “President Bush should live up to his recent pledges to restrain spending, by . . . taking a strong stance that the new Iraq can and should pay for its own reconstruction,” wrote Rep. Tom Feeney (Fla.), a freshman Republican, and Stephen Moore, a conservative economist, in an editorial for the National Review. The discontent is relatively contained so far, said Jim Dyer, Republican staff director of the House Appropriations Committee, but that is because few lawmakers have read the proposal’s fine print. As more details seep out, he said, anger is sure to rise. $50,000 GARBAGE TRUCKS Those details include $100 million to build seven planned communities with a total of 3,258 houses, plus roads, an elementary school, two high schools, a clinic, a place of worship and a market for each; $10 million to finance 100 prison-building experts for six months, at $100,000 an expert; 40 garbage trucks at $50,000 each; $900 million to import petroleum products such as kerosene and diesel to a country with the world’s second-largest oil reserves; and $20 million for a four-week business course, at $10,000 per pupil.