“I run the Office of Management and Budget in Washington, D.C. You work for NBC News in Washington, D.C.,” he said. “My guess is we’ve not spent that much time looking at the specifics of these allegations.”
Well then, my guess is that you really are as stupid as you look. That’s just my guess, but you work toward validating my theory every time you open your mouth.
Are you in MN or MO? My friend in Dallas tells me it’s 34 there. Better than the 104 she had every day in the summer.
@clauscph Mulvaney said that? Well, in response I’m going to send them a donation as they asked me to do in the mailer they sent me yesterday. “Aged, infirm and hungry” are about the saddest words in a sentence I can think of. My mother relied on them for a while.
Silly, I know, but we check the weather reports from places our friends and family live in. Occasionally check the weather from places some are buried in. Don’t ask.
I don’t know who to believe, the nine women, the mall employees, the staff of the high school and the local YMCA…or the guy who prances around waving a tiny gun?
Okay, you sent me to the Google machine. Selfish bastard makes a fine word salad. Two months later he backpedaled and said no cuts would be made. What a heartless, soulless bunch a minority of people voted for but yet still get to govern…
“Meals on Wheels sounds great,” Mulvaney said during the White House news briefing, adding that “we’re not going to spend [money] on programs that cannot show that they actually deliver the promises that we’ve made to people.”
Looking further around the Googleverse, I see that his remarks were taken out of context and he didn’t actually say that, but it’s not a stretch to think he or anyone in this admin would cut off needy people. I’m still going to send them a few bucks, just as I do for the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank.
He was not talking about Meals on Wheels, but about a program in the Housing and Urban Development Department known as CDBG, or community development block grants.
Meals on Wheels comes from a separate program run out of the Health and Human Services Department, said Jenny Bertolette, vice president of communications at Meals on Wheels.