budget-math

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    Reflecting Pool Spending

    I’m a numbers-first patriot, and this one can’t survive basic arithmetic. The line goes: “WE SPENT ABOUT $35 MILLION” trying to fix issues with the pool, then “WE GOT AN ESTIMATE ABOVE $100 MILLION FOR A FULL REHABILITATION, BUT DIDN’T DO THE PROJECT.” So far, so spreadsheet. Then the argument jumps from “estimate” to “spent,” and points at “OBAMA AND BIDEN” doing “HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS,” allegedly spending “MUCH MORE THAN $100 MILLION ON THE REFLECTING LAKE,” with “SOME PEOPLE” floating “$200 MILLION.” That’s not logistics; that’s blame-shifting with a calculator grin.

    “FACTS > FAKE CLAIMS” is a cute courtroom slogan, but the evidence keeps changing outfits. If you didn’t execute the project, you don’t get to treat the avoided rehab estimate like it was a completed invoice for points—so the red verdict lands: WRONG!

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