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The Weird, the Woke, the Wasteful: 10 Flavors of Pork for 10 States Bringing Home the Bacon

Among pork projects crammed in the omnibus spending bill is $2.35 million for Leahy Center in Lake Champlain, Vermont, named after retiring Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who requested it. Pictured: Leahy, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, speaks to reporters Tuesday at the Capitol about the spending package, for which he was the lead Democrat negotiator. (Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

You can learn a lot about a man by seeing how he spends his money. You can learn about a congressman by seeing how he spends everyone else’s money.

Congress is—yet again—preparing to spend nearly $2 trillion of taxpayers’ dollars in a massive omnibus spending bill.

Some in Congress are reluctant to keep overspending taxpayer dollars, but the complicity of some GOP senators in the latest budget negotiations shows—yet again—that some legislators on both sides are willing to blow out spending while paying lip service to fiscal restraint.

Appropriators have thrown in thousands upon thousands of pet projects across the country to help entice members of Congress to vote for the massive budget.

Here is a small sampling of the pork that soon may be coming to 10 states if Congress passes this spending bill.

New York Pork: Hip Hop, LGBTQ+ Causes, Social Justice

Massachusetts Pork: Pillow Dancing, Woke Arts and Businesses

Hawaii Pork: ‘Shoreline Equity,’ Fish Collections

Illinois Pork: Destroying Buildings, Charging Buses, Qualifying Justice

Maryland Pork: Oysters, History, Equitable AI

Missouri Pork: Animated and Proud

Connecticut Pork: Kelp and Trolleys

California: Street Dining, Neighborhood Equity, Equitable Energy

Pennsylvania: More Identity-Based Pork

Maine Pork: Blueberries and 3D-Printed Housing

Honorable Mentions

This is, sadly, just scratching the surface of the waste in the latest massive federal budget.

Many of these wasteful provisions are humorous, but there’s nothing funny about a $7,400 inflation tax, America’s $31.3 trillion of debt, and two parties in Congress that refuse to address that debt.  

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