Sophisticated politicians and journalists find the movie "Dave" simplistic. The same is said of Senator Tom Coburn when he has his annual moment of life imitating art.
Once a year, Coburn plays Murray Blum, the boring accountant in the movie who uses basic common sense to cut the federal budget as a favor to his friend, a presidential impersonator, played by Kevin Kline. He needs to find $650 million to keep a homeless shelter open. Murray shows him that the money can readily be found in wasteful and unquestioned government programs such as one that absurdly aims to make Americans feel better about their cars.
There are hundreds of such programs tucked away in various agency budgets and, like his fictional doppelganger, Coburn finds the most egregious ones. "We've had the Defense Department and people in the other nondefense discretionary departments screaming the cupboard is bare,"' Coburn said. "There's nothing else to cut. The fact is that just isn't true."
The Oklahoma senator's "Wastebook" lists 100 of them. There's the truly ludicrous (a $125,000 3-D pizza printer for astronauts) to the mildly ludicrous (a State Department effort to get liked on Facebook). The National Aeronautics and Space Administration spent $3 million to determine whether there was intelligent life in Congress.
And, apparently, our government doesn't know about this newfangled thing called Google. While some of us can type in the word "infrastructure" and hit the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button, the Department of Commerce's National Technical Information Service is spending $50 million to look up easily accessible stuff.
Did you know you can deduct certain medical procedures if they are necessary for your job? Our irrational tax code allows brothels in Nevada to take $17.5 million in exemptions for such necessities as breast implants. Pole workers of a different sort — — those tending to electrical and other wires — — got a $10,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to put on the PowerUp project, a 90-minute dance that will feature "bucket trucks, cranes and field trucks, plus a set of 25 utility poles," all set before a live audience.
OK, ridiculing the NEA is shooting fish in a barrel. But Coburn also takes on a Republican sacred cow: the Department of Everything, as he calls it, which, among other things, is studying beef jerky. This summer, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel wailed that because of the mandatory spending cuts under sequestration, "We risk fielding a force that is unprepared."
Coburn found plenty of savings he could use to prepare it. The Pentagon is leaving 2,000 Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles, which cost $500,000 each, in Afghanistan to be destroyed after U.S. forces withdraw.