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# $1 billion for Amtrak, which hasn’t earned a profit in four decades.
# $2 billion to help subsidize child care.
# $400 million for research into global warming.
# $2.4 billion for projects to demonstrate how carbon greenhouse gas can be safely removed from the atmosphere.
# $650 million for coupons to help consumers convert their TV sets from analog to digital, part of the digital TV conversion.
# $600 million to buy a new fleet of cars for federal employees and government departments.
# $75 million to fund programs to help people quit smoking.
# $21 million to re-sod the National Mall, which suffered heavy use during the Inauguration.
# $2.25 billion for national parks. This item has sparked calls for an investigation, because the chief lobbyist of the National Parks Association is the son of Rep. David R. Obey, D-Wisc. The $2,25 billion is about equal to the National Park Service’s entire annual budget. The Washington Times reports it is a threefold increase over what was originally proposed for parks in the stimulus bill. Obey is chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
# $335 million for treatment and prevention of sexually transmitted diseases.
# $50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts. $4.19 billion to stave off foreclosures via the Neighborhood Stabilization Program. The bill allows nonprofits to compete with cities and states for $3.44 billion of the money, which means a substantial amount of it will be captured by ACORN, the controversial activist group currently under federal investigation for vote fraud. Another $750 million would be exclusively reserved for nonprofits such as ACORN – meaning cities and states are barred from receiving that money.
# $44 million to renovate the headquarters building of the Agriculture Department.
# $32 billion for a “smart electricity grid to minimize waste.
# $87 billion of Medicaid funds, to aid states.
# $53.4 billion for science facilities, high speed Internet, and miscellaneous energy and environmental programs.
# $13 billion to repair and weatherize public housing, help the homeless, repair foreclosed homes.
# $20 billion for quicker depreciation and write-offs for equipment.
# $10.3 billion for tax credits to help families defray the cost of college tuition.
# $20 billion over five years for an expanded food stamp program.