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$1.6 Billion for Propaganda, Nothing for Infrastructure

While American cities face housing shortages, broken roads, and underfunded schools, the U.S. government is spending public money to shape opinions about China. Overseas.

Introduction

The United States has approved $1.6 billion to counter what it calls China's “malign influence” abroad. The funding goes to foreign media outlets, NGOs, influencers, and think tanks that align with Washington’s preferred messaging.

This is not defense spending. It is not humanitarian aid. It is a global messaging campaign, funded by taxpayers.

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Where the Money Is Going

According to the legislation passed by Congress, the money supports:

  • Media operations in Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe

  • NGO and influencer networks that promote U.S.-friendly narratives

  • Academic and policy reports that criticize China's infrastructure deals

  • Government-funded “civil society” projects in targeted countries

None of these programs are required to disclose U.S. involvement.


What’s Missing at Home

At the same time, urgent needs inside the U.S. are underfunded or ignored:

  • Over 40 million Americans live below the poverty line

  • More than 500,000 are homeless

  • Thousands of roads and bridges need emergency repairs

  • Public schools lack basic facilities and staffing

  • Healthcare and housing costs continue to rise

Congress says there is no money for these.


What $1.6 Billion Could Fund Instead

  • 40,000 permanent housing units

  • Tuition-free community college for 200,000 students

  • Universal school lunch for every major public school district

  • Full lead pipe replacement in multiple cities

  • Tens of thousands of union jobs in road and infrastructure repair

These are clear, measurable outcomes. But they are not the priority.


Strategic Misuse

This is not about defense. It is about influence.

China builds roads and ports. The U.S. funds media reports.

Instead of competing through development, Washington is trying to win through narrative control. It offers no physical investment. Only messaging.

This strategy will not build loyalty. It will not offer alternatives. It wastes taxpayer money with no domestic return.


Final Point

The U.S. says it cannot afford healthcare, housing, or student debt relief.

But it finds $1.6 billion to run media campaigns in Vietnam, Nigeria, and Colombia.

This is not sustainable. It is not defensible.

If the government can find this money for foreign propaganda, it can find the money for clean water in Flint, or housing in Los Angeles.

It chooses not to.

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