Another budget-issue article, from NCReporter, all about damage from cuts:
Responding to the demands of new tea party-backed members of Congress and concerns among independent voters about the growing federal deficit, the White House and congressional Republicans proposed steep cuts in the federal budget, many of which will affect programs that aid the poor and vulnerable.
Many Catholics have warned that the budget is being balanced on the backs of the poor and the U.S. bishops conference has urged Congress to maintain funding for programs that aid the poor.
In a letter to members of Congress released last month, Bishop Stephen Blaire of Stockton, Calif., chairman of the bishops Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, called on Congress specifically to spare cuts to community health centers, job re-training and affordable housing programs, as well as aid to migrants. We remind Congress that the poor and vulnerable have a priority claim on our limited, although still substantive, financial resources, Blaire wrote.
Is there a bishops’ committee on fiscal responsibility? How government spending hurts poor people by encouraging inflation and endangering the fiscal well-being of the nation? Tell me which of these Departments & Programs has or provides room for such a committee?
Even bishops with heart in right place — we can’t assume that of all of them, fallen human nature being what it is — are caught up entirely in results of de-funding. Except for abortion and same-sex marriage, have they ever objected to government interference or complaisance? Are there no moral issues bound up in the statist approach?

Jesus multiplied the loaves and fishes to feed the hungry; alas, neither the bishops nor the government have figured out how to do it. Those who live off other people’s charity need to be careful, lest they become too moralistic about the need for more charity.
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Charity’s recipient is bound to favor charity. Comes the revolution, governments and maybe bishops too till know how to multiply loaves etc.
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