Stuff You Should Know - What was the purpose of USAID?

Episode Date: July 3, 2025

USAID has saved tens of millions of lives across the globe since its inception. But those days are over. Learn all about this soon-to-be-gone program.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy informatio...n.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an iHeart Podcast. Just like great shoes, great books take you places. Through unforgettable love stories and into conversations with characters you'll never forget. I think any good romance, it gives me this feeling of like butterflies. I'm Danielle Robay and this is Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club. The new podcast from Hello Sunshine and iHeart Podcasts, where we dive into the stories that shape us on the page and off. Each week, I'm joined by authors, celebs,
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Starting point is 00:01:38 That's right. As it turns out, weirdly super timely because as of this recording date yesterday this is July 1st yesterday June 30th will have been the kind of the final day for most USAID employees I saw a headline yesterday in the New York Times where Bono cries yeah Bono can probably did cry But people like President George W. Bush and President Obama and Bano all got together and said, hey, USAID did so much good work. We're very proud of the work we did. George W. Bush in particular was proud of the program that started under his watch,
Starting point is 00:02:22 the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, that he initiated that saved 25 million people's lives. President Obama said, I wish I could do a good Obama, he said ending USAID would go down as a colossal mistake, ending your presence and your programs out in the world, and this was directly to employees, they did like video messages, that's why it's in that person. Yeah, I think they actually had a video call too for them. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Ending your presence in your programs out in the world hurts the most vulnerable and it hurts the United States. To many people around the world, USAID is the United States. And then I gotta read Bono's quote, cause you know, why not? Before you do, I just wanna say like, you nailed the Obama with the, in the middle of it.
Starting point is 00:03:05 Uh, Bono said, it's not left-wing rhetoric to feel hungry, heal the sick. If this isn't murder, I don't know what is. That was a pretty good Bono. Yeah, it was more of a Larry Mullen Jr. But we say all that because, you know, I'm not really sure whether or not
Starting point is 00:03:22 we should speak in the past tense on this, with a lot of this stuff. Well, today's the day, so like you said, yesterday was the last day that USAID existed as an independent agency in the US federal government. Today's the day that it got absorbed into the State Department, and I believe also today, the State Department, Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
Starting point is 00:03:44 the former senator from Florida announced that there is going to be some sort of new foreign aid agency called America First, which is a mind bender. Is it really? Yes. So that it's not fully going away. It's just going to be restructured. They're going to be doing it differently. And it's really hard to say, it's really hard to get across how big of a deal it is that something like USAID specifically is being done away with wholesale. Just rolled up mothball, done. Really abruptly, really quickly.
Starting point is 00:04:18 It's not being kind of slowly rolled back or anything like that. It just got, it's head cut off. Right? Oh, right. Yeah. Within six months after it just got, it's head cut off. Right? Within six months after it being announced, it was just done.
Starting point is 00:04:30 And it's, of course, because we're talking about the United States, it's a political hot button issue. Everything is a political hot button issue. But this one should not be divided between the left and the right. Like this is how America influenced the entire world for decades. Some of it was really bad. Some of it was really good.
Starting point is 00:04:53 But I feel like me personally, it needed a lot of restructuring, but I think it was a good infrastructure, a good apparatus that just needed to be retooled. I think it was a little ham-fisted, to say the least, to just stop it immediately. That's my take on it. Yeah, I agree. And for a second there a few minutes ago, I thought you were going to say, Marco Rubio said it was now called America. Yeah. Is that a Team America reference?
Starting point is 00:05:22 I think, yeah, that was from that movie, right? I think so. I hope so. Yeah, I think it was too. I saw there was a, who was it, there was a Democratic House member, a senator the other day that was, as far as what you were talking about, and we're going to get into the numbers here and the history of everything, but he was talking about kind of what you were saying was like, just kind of shuttering this, guys, if the budget of the United States is the height of the ceiling of this room and it was a
Starting point is 00:05:48 big room he said the budget for USAID is these two credit cards stacked on each other and he said you know to there has been waste in there and there has been some fraud and we're gonna cover that stuff because we like to be even-handed sure he said and that's it at its worst, but at its best, you're shuttering something that costs so little money for us that has saved tens of dozens of millions of lives of people. And not only just life-saving, but as you'll see, just influence for people around the world to, like Bono said, like to some people around the world, USAID is America and that's like they're the people that came in and helped us
Starting point is 00:06:26 when we were at our most dire. That's the United States. Yeah, yeah. So hopefully we'll kind of get it across. If you're already mad, you know, politically speaking, just settle down and listen, because we're not approaching this from like a, no, Obama's right kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:06:42 It's like, just listen to this and make up your own mind. We're not gonna try to steer you. We were just sharing our own opinions on it. We're allowed to have those because we're thinking, feeling human beings. That's right. All right, so the US historically is the single humanitarian,
Starting point is 00:06:58 the largest single humanitarian aid donor in the world. We supplied about 40% of humanitarian aid in 2024, as either the wealthiest or one of the wealthiest countries in the world. Foreign assistance falls into these broad categories when it – and again, this is all foreign assistance. USAID is within that, as we'll see, but humanitarian assistance is about 25% of it, and this is like, you know, medicine, food and shelter to save people after epidemics and disasters and famine. Development assistance is 60 percent. Those are programs installed to develop democratic nations economically, politically, socially.
Starting point is 00:07:41 And then the last smaller piece, smallest piece, is security funding, 15%. It's not a part of the U.S. military. There are programs to help strengthen foreign militaries and foreign police to, you know, get their act together and instill some sort of rule of law where there might not be any. Yeah, and we don't want to be Pollyanna-ish about this. Like, USAID identified the police in training and outfitting and helping financially the police in different countries is like the best way to tap into that local, that nation's like the pole, keeping your pulse on that nation's local stuff, right? Because the police are the
Starting point is 00:08:20 ones who like suppress riots and suppress demonstrations. They're the ones who, um, arrest people like bringing in the military is way too. Big of a deal. Do you, the police can do it. So USA definitely focused on training police. That was a big one too. And that just kind of peels back the layer because right now, Chuck, let me just say this and I'll stop. Um, there's a lot of really like.
Starting point is 00:08:41 I'll just say this and I'll stop. There's a lot of really like sunny, glowing, like really fairly not fully realistic talk about USAID and what it does. It does a lot of this stuff, but it leaves out a lot of the darker side. And I think you have to take it as the whole thing to fully understand its value in the world. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:09:04 And that's our aim here. Uh, but if you're talking about since World War II, we've distributed about $4 trillion in today dollars to foreign assistance, which is a lot of money. Um, but like I mentioned earlier with a little credit card, um, metaphor that I ganked from that Senator, um, as a percentage of our federal budget, uh, foreign aid accounts for 1% of our total government spending. And that's all foreign aid. The USAID's portion is 0.5%. So like just USAID has less than a percent of the federal budget.
Starting point is 00:09:39 Yeah, there's two credit cards laying on the floor. You're right. Maybe credit card wasn't the best thing to use. Right? I think they're like insurance card or something. Or that probably wouldn't have been good either. Library card, how about that? Yeah, don't talk about insurance. Yeah, library cards are not controversial, right? Yeah, they're a little bit controversial, sure.
Starting point is 00:09:59 All right. Especially school libraries. Since 1961, most of this foreign aid has come through the US aid office, because that's when it was established, the US Agency for International Development, created by John F. Kennedy. And the idea was, as we'll see, was to create what he called, or what everybody calls, soft power around the world. Because it was a time during, you know, as you'll see during the
Starting point is 00:10:25 Cold War when the influences of the Soviet Union and China were worrisome. And Kennedy saw the writing on the wall and was like, hey, I think like we need to get in there before other countries get in there with their communism and spread our message of democracy by helping assist them. Yeah, which is like totally in step with the containment policy of keeping communism in check and keeping it from spreading. Rather than using the military every time,
Starting point is 00:10:55 you could also basically grease some palms around the world in these countries that were hanging in the balance in the third world. You could sway them over the democracy side and they could become an ally and trading partner of the U.S. Why not? Yeah. And you can trace the roots of this back to the Marshall Plan when in 1947, post World War II, Secretary of State George Marshall said, hey, we got to rebuild Europe and put a lot of money into that. I think it's about $175 billion in today dollars. And he claimed at the time that it was, quote,
Starting point is 00:11:26 not directed against any country or doctrine, but against hunger, poverty, desperation, and chaos, which is partly true. But what was also true was the Marshall Plan was to stop the Soviets and stop Stalin from going in further to Europe, and like we said, sort of plant the American flag over there in a way. And this was one of the tools.
Starting point is 00:11:44 USAID was one of the bigger tools during the Cold War to establish our influences like a country that's trying to do good. Yeah, this was helped along, I think the Marshall Plan was 1947, did you say that? Yeah. Like later on in the 50s, it was helped along by a couple of MIT economists,
Starting point is 00:12:04 Walt Rostow and Max Milliken. And they basically said this Marshall Plan that we use to rebuild Europe and keep countries from falling into the hands of the Soviets and communism, this is a good idea even outside of the context of rebuilding after World War. This should just be part of American policy. Yeah. And Kennedy liked this idea eventually so much.
Starting point is 00:12:28 Senator Kennedy at the time would hire Walt Rostow as a policy advisor on his staff. And when he was elected president, he appointed him as his deputy national security advisor. And Kennedy, before, you know, when he was a young congressman, he was not into foreign assistance. He was like, America first, we got to help ourselves first.
Starting point is 00:12:46 But then he went on a seven week congressional trip in 1951 to Pakistan, Israel, India, Malaysia, Thailand, Korea, Japan, and what is now Vietnam, French Indochina at the time. And he was like, you know what, I'm all for the military, but it can't just be a military exercise. We gotta have an economic stake in this, and we gotta do that through foreign aid. Yeah, there was also a book that helped change his mind
Starting point is 00:13:14 a few years later, The Ugly American. It was published in 1958. It was a bestseller, and essentially, it was a fictionalized version of the experiences of the authors as diplomats in pre-war Vietnam. And it almost satirizes American diplomacy at the time, which was you had diplomats who were at parties with other diplomats in gated communities way far away from the people of the country they were trying to serve. And these guys argued,
Starting point is 00:13:45 no, you need to immerse yourself in it. You need to learn the language. You have to find out what these people really need or else all you're doing is patronizing them and wasting money. And it had a huge impact on America in general, but also Kennedy who is like, this is my North Star here, and guiding how foreign policy in America should go. And even took out a page in the New York Times, a full page ad saying, this is a great book. How was that?
Starting point is 00:14:19 It was pretty good. This, you know, shortly thereafter in 1959, when Cuba falls to Castro, all of a sudden it's like, hey, this is literally happening right outside our back door. So the time is now. He didn't create the idea for foreign aid. We had programs at the time, Food for Peace, the Development Loan Fund, and others, but Kennedy was the one in March of 1961 to wrap that all up,
Starting point is 00:14:46 tie a bow on it and say, here Congress, this is USAID and this is a new program along with the Peace Corps that we're creating that, like the great ambitions that America should pursue and Congress got on board. Yeah. One of the big things that he pushed for with the creation of USAID in particular was five year budgets. Ha, good luck. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:11 So foreign aid up to that point, and then after that point, cause he didn't get the five year budgets he was looking for. No. The USAID budget was tied to annual federal budgets. And so it was, you know, it suffered the vagaries of congressional fights over budgets that happened every year. But the point was, the reason Kennedy wanted a five-year budget was because if his USAID people were going to these countries that were
Starting point is 00:15:38 like, should we go communist or democratic? They needed to come to them and say, hey, you're sympathetic to democracy, you're running for president, here's what we can do for you, that you can actually build a platform around, because we're going to guarantee that you're going to get this funding, X number of dollars for five years,
Starting point is 00:16:00 because we want this country to be a democracy, and we wanna make you the leader of the democracy any way we can. And Congress was still like, no, we're not gonna do that. Yeah, I feel like that's a good time for a break, and we'll come back and talk about some successes of USAID over the years right after this.
Starting point is 00:16:17 -♪ Star-Spangled Banner playing. -♪ Star-Spangled Banner playing. Just like great shoes, great books take you places. Through unforgettable love stories and into conversations with characters you'll never forget. I think any good romance, it gives me this feeling of like butterflies. I'm Danielle Robay and this is Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club, the new podcast from Hello Sunshine and iHeart Podcasts. Every week I sit down with your favorite book lovers, authors, celebrities, book talkers,
Starting point is 00:16:52 and more to explore the stories that shape us, on the page and off. I've been reading every Reese's Book Club pick, deep-diving book talk theories, and obsessing over book-to-screen casts for years. And now, I get to talk to the people making the magic. So if you've ever fallen in love with a fictional character or cried at the last chapter or passed a book to a friend saying, you have to read this, this podcast is for you. Listen to Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:17:28 American history is full of wise people. Well, women said something like no 99.99% of war is diarrhea and 1% is glory. Those founding fathers were gossipy AF and they love to cut each other down. I'm Bob Crawford, host of American History Hotline, the were gossipy AF and they love to cut each other down. I'm Bob Crawford, host of American History Hotline, the show where you send us your questions about American history and I find the answers,
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Starting point is 00:18:22 podcasts. This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, Sophia Bush is here. Tell me how that feels to be considered a hot lesbian. Quite an honor. You know what's funny is you do this weird math. If you're a woman dating men, nobody wants to talk to you about your sexuality. They just want to either say you're a woman dating men, nobody wants to talk to you about your sexuality. They just want to either say like you're a prude or a slut, you know, if you date too much, they criticize you.
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Starting point is 00:19:13 but hi, I've always been here. Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. All right, so we're back and as promised, we're going to talk about some of the success stories of USAID over the years. More than half of our funding for USAID in the 1960s went towards something we talked about quite a bit over the years here and there called the Green Revolution, which was a campaign led by Dr. Norman Borlaug, a hero to many in history, to fight hunger in Asia
Starting point is 00:20:01 by saying, hey, let's modernize your agricultural practices. Let's bring them into the new age with your irrigation techniques, fertilization techniques, how to rotate crops, getting you better crop yields, even when it's a drought going on. And he was very, very successful at this and changed the world and this ran through USAID. Yeah, so today's estimates put the number of lives
Starting point is 00:20:27 that Norman Borlaug and the Green Revolution and USAID for overseeing this program saved us probably about a quarter of a billion people. So right out of the gate, one of the first things USAID does is save a quarter of a billion lives from starvation. That's good enough, but at the same time, Chairman Mao is pushing the Great Leap Forward in China, where he's
Starting point is 00:20:50 completely restructuring the agricultural industry, taking a ton of peasant farmers, putting them in iron and steel factories and drastically limiting the food supply. So that 45 million Chinese citizens die in three years. So people were able to look around and be like, wow, this communist idea really didn't work. This USAID idea worked really well. Tell me a little more about USAID.
Starting point is 00:21:18 And Chuck, I feel like I should also say, it's just come to me, Yumi used to work for Peace Corps, not as a Peace Corps volunteer, but as like one of the people in the home office. And I told her we were recording on USAID, and she pointed out very quickly, it's USAID. So we've been saying USAID this whole time. Apologies to everybody. I say we just keep saying USAID.
Starting point is 00:21:41 I think most people say USAID and I identify it as USAID, so I think that's fine. Okay, good. It's just Yumi who calls it USAID. I think most people say USAID and I identify it as USAID so I think that's fine. Okay, it's just you who calls it USAID? No, no, no. I'm just saying I think we'll be forgiven because most people read that as USAID and they know what we're talking about. Gotcha. Okay. One of the ones I want to mention, well I mentioned earlier the initiative launched by President Bush in 2003, the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and what a success that has been. the initiative launched by President Bush in 2003, the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, and what a success that has been.
Starting point is 00:22:08 But the one that really gets me is smallpox. This was a deadly disease in the 1960s that was killing kids all over the world, and we eradicated that thanks to USAID, how's that? Very nice. Partnering with the CDC to establish an anti-Smallpox campaign in each country where it was a big, big problem.
Starting point is 00:22:31 And they have saved over the past 11 years by completely eradicating smallpox basically. Millions of lives every single year. Yes, and the only two places in the world where you can find smallpox on the planet today is in Siberia and Atlanta. Yeah, that's right. Talking about saving lives,
Starting point is 00:22:52 not just from, like you said, PEPFAR and from smallpox, but the USAID's taking on tuberculosis has saved an estimated 58 million lives since 2000. And I believe that estimate was either from 2017 or 2020, so it's probably higher than that by now. And then malaria too. I think they estimate that since 2000, the President's Malaria Initiative under USAID has saved nearly 12 million lives. And that in countries where the president's malaria initiative exists, there's been a 48% decline in malaria deaths on average. So like they're literally saving actual lives by going in and being like, oh, this is a real
Starting point is 00:23:38 problem. Let's fund the people who are working to combat this in the place where it's a problem, and it's having these demonstrable effects, like positive effects, like saving people's lives. Yeah, and they had their little American flag patch on the whole time. People know exactly where it's coming from. That's right, they don't put that Canada flag on their backpack and lie to everyone. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:01 And that was even a thing when I traveled Europe in the mid 90s. Yeah, for sure. It was a Canadian flag because they were like, we're not American, please don't be fooled by my accent. Right, exactly. I have no love for Bill Clinton. I don't even know who that is. Why would I even bring up Bill Clinton? We said we were going to cover this even-handedly and there have been plenty of criticisms and controversies over the years with USAID. I guess, which one should I talk about? How about this one?
Starting point is 00:24:32 It's not a perfect program. There have been all kinds of what you would call a devil's bargain over the years trying to fight communism, one of which was, you know, we've talked in the past about CIA-engineered coups across the world to topple dictatorial regimes. Foreign assistance provided by USAID was used a lot of times as a negotiating chip to basically win allies here and there. So that's, you know, maybe not the purest use of what it was set out to be. No, a good example of that is Afghanistan.
Starting point is 00:25:05 US AIDS involvement in Afghanistan after the US invaded is just widely considered a total disaster. Afghanistan received more than a hundred billion dollars in foreign aid from the United States and something like 40% of it went directly to government officials, warlords, drug lords, insurgents who bought weapons with it and then fought the United States with it. Yeah. Not a good look.
Starting point is 00:25:34 And I found a statistic too that over 15 years, USAID spent almost $1. billion dollars just on helping Afghan farmers transition from opium production to anything but opium essentially. And the opium farmers in Afghanistan said, thanks a lot for the money. Where's going to use this instead to expand our opium production as it stands. And between 2013 and 2015, uh, in Kandahar province alone, opium cultivation more than doubled, like 119% in two years because of USAID money, which was now going not just to insurgents,
Starting point is 00:26:14 but to create the heroin supply in the United States. Yeah, black eye on that one for sure. More recently, there was a company called Chemonix that was awarded the single largest contract ever from USAID. It was a $9.5 billion contract and the goal there was to streamline delivery worldwide of medical supplies, you know, mosquito nets, contraceptives, vaccines, stuff like that. And it was very poorly managed by USAID. And there was, Keymonics was involved with false reporting between them and their partners. And it was just a pretty big debacle. And, you know, USAID continued to pour money into it, even as it was floundering, which, again,
Starting point is 00:27:00 another stain on their reputation, which, you know, we say all this stuff to fairly report, but also to point out that, like, you know, we say all this stuff to fairly report, but also to point out that like, it makes it a really easy target when you can say, you know, we spent nine and a half billion dollars on this thing that was mismanaged. And you know, fraud like that is definitely something to root out, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:17 no one's saying like that stuff's okay. And then Chuck, there's one more terrible story of USAID dropping the ball that we just have to share. Can we? Take it away then. Well, there's a guy named Alan Gross, who I guess was an IT dude, who was hired as a subcontractor for USAID to go to Cuba in 2009 and set up alternate access to the internet for the small Jewish community in Cuba there. A few things, USAID was illegal in Cuba at the time, probably still is. The government controlled access to the internet in Cuba, probably still does.
Starting point is 00:27:57 And the Jewish community in Cuba did not ask for alternate internet access, it was just thrust upon them. So Alan Gross was discovered and arrested as a spy because USAID sent him in there. The guy barely even spoke Spanish from what I read. And the United States had to trade three Cuban actual spies that they'd had since the 90s to get Alan Gross back from Cuba. Oh yeah, I remember that. Do you remember that one? I do. It's just so nuts and just so misguided that I couldn't not include it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:31 Agreed. Yeah. Let's talk about it being an easy target because the thing is, they have so many different things going on in so many parts of the world that inevitably some of them are going to turn out to be crooked or rotten or poorly managed or a waste of money. Um, that's just, that's a given. Nobody's, I don't think debating that.
Starting point is 00:28:51 What, what I think is important is how the agency or an agency or anybody in that position responds to that kind of thing. Right. So there, there's been like a few examples of controversies that were non controversies because USAID handled it really well. A big one was a USAID charity that USAID funded in Kenya, the Children of God Relief Institute, ran an orphanage for children in Kenya who had been affected by AIDS. And in 2021, USAID was told by a whistleblower
Starting point is 00:29:26 that this charity was covering up rampant sex abuse of children in its orphanage. Yeah, the USAID Inspector General said that the Children of God Relief Institute, quote, "'knew or should have known of multiple incidents of child sex abuse.' And USAID found out about this and they cut off funding in 2023 and told the Kenyan police like,
Starting point is 00:29:46 here's everything we have on this. Yeah, that's another kind of indirect service that USAID provides is they do high quality international inspections of something like a single charity in Kenya. And then they share the information, the results of their inspections, their investigations and sometimes it can bring criminal charges against people who were doing wrong. Really USAID is making sure that their money's not being spent or going to bad actors but it has this other rippling effect that I think in some ways actually provides justice that otherwise might not have been provided.
Starting point is 00:30:27 Yeah, totally. Another sort of annoying way that modern politics works in this country is the sort of homing in on a single, either soundbite or just something that they know will be super grabby. And both sides do this. I'm not like picking on any particular side here. Of the way we absorb our content these days,
Starting point is 00:30:51 and a big example of this is, we spent $50 million on condoms in Gaza, and that's just not true. That's not what happened, but no one cares to know the truth, it seems like, as long as they can run that headline and tweet about it, you know? Yeah, it's just bad info all around.
Starting point is 00:31:11 The $50 million is, so this group was actually getting an injection of $100 million, they were getting it in 50, and then another 50 later. So it wasn't even just $50 million, there was $100 million, It was going to a group called the International Medical Corps working in Gaza. They provide emergency medical services and they do have a, there is some family planning that they provide, services they provide, but that includes way more than just contraception. And that's not anywhere near a focus of what they do in Gaza or anywhere else with their
Starting point is 00:31:48 emergency medical services. And then to top it all off, the director of the International Medical Corps said, the money that we've already gotten, not a single dollar has been spent on condoms anyway. So this whole thing is just totally, not just blown out of proportion, it's wrong. And yet, like you said, that's the sound bite that gets reported all throughout the news on any part of the spectrum. And it's just, like, it's just such a bad time
Starting point is 00:32:14 to take in information right now. Yeah, it's pretty depressing. I totally agree. Thanks. Should we take another break? Yeah, let's, because we've got much more. Yeah, yeah, we've talked about some highs and lows. We're going to talk a little bit more about that and whether or not USAID is a good investment for the United States right after this. Just like great shoes, great books take you places, through unforgettable love stories
Starting point is 00:32:49 and into conversations with characters you'll never forget. I think any good romance, it gives me this feeling of like butterflies. I'm Danielle Robay, and this is Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club, the new podcast from Hello Sunshine and iHeart Podcasts. Every week I sit down with your favorite book lovers, authors, celebrities, book talkers, and more to explore the stories that shape us, on the page and off. I've been reading every Reese's Book Club pick, deep-diving book talk theories, and obsessing over book-to-screen casts for years.
Starting point is 00:33:20 And now I get to talk to the people making the magic. So if you've ever fallen in love with a fictional character or cried at the last chapter or passed a book to a friend saying, you have to read this, this podcast is for you. Listen to Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. ever you get your podcasts. American history is full of wise people. Well, women said something like, no, 99.99% of war is diarrhea and 1% is glory.
Starting point is 00:33:55 Those founding fathers were gossipy AF and they loved to cut each other down. I'm Bob Crawford, host of American History Hotline, the show where you send us your questions about American history and I find the answers, including the nuggets of wisdom our history has to offer. Hamilton pauses and then he says, the greatest man that ever lived was Julius Caesar. And Jefferson writes in his diary, this proves that Hamilton is for a dictator based on corruption.
Starting point is 00:34:26 My favorite line was what Neil Armstrong said. It would have been harder to fake it than to do it. Listen to American History Hotline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler. Sophia Bush is here. Tell me how that feels to be considered a hot lesbian. Quite an honor. You know what's funny is you do this weird math.
Starting point is 00:34:56 Like if you're a woman dating men, nobody wants to talk to you about your sexuality. They just want to either say like you're a prude or a slut. You know, if you date too much, they criticize you. If you don't date, you must be frigid, whatever. And then the thing that gets added when you're actually more fluid with your sexuality is the swing goes to you better identify exactly who you are so we can figure out what name to call you. And it's like, okay. And you know, I sort of looked around and was like, has nobody been paying attention to like all the hot girls I've been kissing on camera? You know, maybe not in front of you off camera, but hi, I've always been here. Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
Starting point is 00:35:36 podcasts. So you said we were going to talk a little bit about a few more highs and lows. Just today, I would guess this was strategically released, the British Medical Journal, very respected British Medical Journal, The Lancet, released a report that said that since I think 2000, maybe 2002, I can't remember, an estimated 91 million deaths, preventable deaths have been prevented because of USAID funding. It's pretty impressive. 91 million people? Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:23 All right. But, and this in like 20 like 25 years, something like that. It's not since they started. But they also estimate that within the next five years, by 2030, about 14 million preventable deaths won't have been prevented because of the cuts to US aid funding. Right.
Starting point is 00:36:44 Which is not good. No, it's not. And that kind of brings us to whether or not it's a good investment for the US. We've kind of mentioned some of the highs and lows and at its best, you are saving hundreds of millions of lives since its inception. At its worst, cost billions of dollars for, you know, dictators to line
Starting point is 00:37:07 their pockets sometimes or criminals to get funded and arms get funded and drugs get funded. So it's a reasonable thing to put it under a microscope for sure. A little bit more about the budget, you know, 2024 the budget was $21.7 billion, which is .3 of the total federal spending, which is $6.8 trillion. .3% compared to 4% for the Department of Education, also going away. And the Department of Defense at 13% compared to.3%. Since 1980, USAID spending has increased 106%, while overall government spending has increased close to 200%. So it's not like it's even kept pace with our spending
Starting point is 00:37:56 as a government overall since 1980. Right, right. So that's the best you can do, essentially, when you try to talk about whether it's a good investment, is point out how little we actually spend on it. Right. Yeah. You know, because the, the it's so it's basically impossible to calculate the return on investment because the return on investment is worldwide goodwill toward the United States.
Starting point is 00:38:25 the United States and the United States can be like, hey, you know that favor you owe me? I'm calling it in because we're putting a military alliance together or this giant American business wants to start doing business in your country, whatever it is. And that is actually something that made me curious about why Trump was so hell bent on shutting down USAID because it's not like he's not into people owing him favors. With USAID, it's an unwritten thing. You owe America favors now. You're our friend, but it's not like we're just giving you money and it's just strictly
Starting point is 00:38:59 goodwill, just strictly lifesaving. That's the stated goal, but there's also an undercurrent there where, like, if we call in a favor, you better come to our help. Yeah, that is fairly perplexing. I never really thought about it like that, because, I don't know, kind of one of his things is leverage. Right, yeah, that's a better way to put it. That keeps that leverage in place.
Starting point is 00:39:21 So, yeah, it's very interesting. As far as what Americans think about this, this is a poll from Pew Research in 2019, so it's a little bit old. It might be skewed a little bit differently now, but they thought it was kind of split, you know, 30, 30, 30, 30% or 33-ish percent thought that we should increase foreign aid spending.
Starting point is 00:39:43 About 33% said we should reduce it, and about a third said we should keep it about the same. Yeah, so take that for what it's worth. Yeah, also, speaking of polls, apparently polls consistently show that Americans grossly overestimate how much the US spends on foreign aid. Typically, Americans think we spend about 25%,
Starting point is 00:40:04 or a quarter of our national budget on foreign aid. Typically Americans think we spend about 25% or a quarter of our national budget on foreign aid. That's staggering that people think that. Again, remember we spend roughly 1%. I think it was 1.2% back in 2023. So like just the difference in perception is nuts. I wonder how many people out there are like, wait, it's that and we're not doing that anymore? I wonder if that's going to be an outcome of it or not. I also feel like, you know, we should wait and see
Starting point is 00:40:30 what this America First Agency's policies and things are. If they reactivate some of these existing networks or infrastructure that USAID already had, or if they're just starting over from scratch. So I'm curious about that. Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, to insert my opinion here because we are real humans and we have them, or if they're just starting over from scratch. So I'm curious about that. Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, to insert my opinion here,
Starting point is 00:40:48 because we are real humans and we have them, what frustrates me the most, I think, is that this idea, like you just said, like there are people out there that think we spend 25% of our money on other countries, which is a joke, that they will be like, you know how much better my life is gonna be when we cut off funding to help these people around the world
Starting point is 00:41:07 and help us instead? When that doesn't happen? Yeah, that's a good point. And when their lives don't change at all in any way, I just wonder if anyone's gonna look back and say, God, what a, what a, I mean, it might be 50 years from now. Like, what a horrible thing that we did to not help the most vulnerable people of the world when people thought that all of a sudden, their life was gonna look better in the United States
Starting point is 00:41:34 because we stopped saving the lives of others. I don't know. I feel like we, as Americans, have really demonstrated the ability to do all sorts of mental gymnastics to support our point. So who knows? Yeah, that's a good point. One other thing that's a big problem with just rolling back USAID, especially
Starting point is 00:41:54 so abruptly is USAID is a thorn in autocrat sides around the world. Like if you allow USAID to work in your country, you got to take what you like and what you don't like. It's not a buffet. USAID supports a lot of pro-democracy groups and organizations and countries that are kind of short on democracy. And now those groups are going to be left without funding, also very importantly left without implicit American support for them and them not being abused or their human rights being abused. And they're basically just being left out to dry and autocrats are going to be able to do more of what they do. So it is very much a blow to global democracy as well as just lose US aid. And there is one more thing that is causing concern
Starting point is 00:42:46 lose US aid. And, and, there is one more thing that is causing concern among people who are concerned about this, and that is that this is going to leave a vacuum around the world in foreign aid that China in particular is going to be happy to step in and fill. So they will be the ones growing influence around the world, and they're already at it actually. The US spent 3.8 trillion, remember, in foreign aid over the last 80 years since World War II. China has spent one trillion already just in the last 12 years. So not only will we be losing our ability to make and keep friends,
Starting point is 00:43:21 we'll be giving our biggest rival a chance to gain even more. Yeah, yeah, for sure. And you know, if you're, depending on what side of the fence you're on with this, you might think, hey guys, you didn't talk about this, this, and this, and those were all bad programs. Are there other people that might say
Starting point is 00:43:38 you didn't talk about this, this, this, and those are all great programs distributed through USAID. And that, you know, we just don't have hours and hours to go over every single thing. We tried to cover a little bit of both. Yeah, I feel like it's worth saying then, there are, like you, especially if you're critical of America's influence around the world,
Starting point is 00:43:59 and especially the underhanded version of it, USAID is very much involved in that. So if you're critical of that, you are probably critical of USAID, and you're probably not exactly shedding a tear for USAID being rolled back. That's definitely one point of view out there. I think if we're talking about trying to be fair here,
Starting point is 00:44:19 I think that's an important thing to point out. Yeah, for sure. So USAID, I think hopefully we've presented enough info that you can make up your own mind. We certainly respect you trying to do that. Don't just listen to us. And of course, that means it's listener mail. Yeah, since Josh just said, don't listen to us.
Starting point is 00:44:41 I think that's a good rule of thumb, right? Great advice from a podcaster. Hey guys, this is another Chuck correction. It was kind of on both of us, I guess. Hey guys, long time listener, really enjoy the variety of topics. For the first time in 10 plus years, I feel compelled to write in and ask for a correction. During the Sunset Boulevard episode, Tangent, you guys were talking about American Graffiti, and surmised that it was based on the Sunset Boulevard
Starting point is 00:45:08 like, cruising zone. That is not correct, guys. I never do this. American Graffiti is based on coming of age in Modesto, California. That's what we said. This is where George Lucas grew up, guys. The movie references a number of local streets, roads, and nearby cities. It was not filmed here, but it was definitely based
Starting point is 00:45:27 on the car cruising culture of Modesto in the 60s. And I didn't know that rich Ulm from Modesto Native. And I wish I had known that because I link Modesto in my mind to one of my top three modern bands of all time, Grandaddy out of Modesto. Oh. Grandaddy, out of Modesto. Oh, Grandaddy, yeah, they were great. Yes. I thought you were gonna talk about Red Tail
Starting point is 00:45:52 or Red Hawk Beer. Oh, no, no, no, is that a Modesto beer? Yeah, it's really good. I'll have to try that. That's all I got. That was Rich? That was Rich Ohm. Well, where were you when we needed you, Rich,
Starting point is 00:46:02 when we were talking about it being set in LA? That's my question. Not in Modesto, because he's a Modesto native, so probably not still a Modesto. No, he could still be a Modesto. Yeah, but I figured he would say current Modesto resident, and here's where I live. Maybe.
Starting point is 00:46:18 Maybe. Okay, well, either way, Rich, maybe you can email back in and let us know which is the case. And while we're waiting for an email from Rich, we're also waiting for an email from you. You can send it to us at stuffpodcastatihartradio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
Starting point is 00:46:45 you listen to your favorite shows. Just like great shoes, great books take you places. Through unforgettable love stories and into conversations with characters you'll never forget. I think any good romance, it gives me this feeling of like butterflies. I'm Danielle Robay and this is Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club, the new podcast from Hello Sunshine and iHeart Podcasts where we dive into the stories that shape us on the page and off. Each week I'm joined by authors, celebs, book talk stars, and more for conversations that will
Starting point is 00:47:22 make you laugh, cry, and add way too many books to your TBR pile. Listen to Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Bob Crawford, host of American History Hotline, a different type of podcast. You, the listener, ask the questions. Did George Washington really cut down on territory? Were JFK and Marilyn Monroe having an affair? And I find the answers. I'm so glad you asked me this question.
Starting point is 00:47:52 This is such a ridiculous story. You can listen to American history hotline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, Sophia Bush is here. Tell me how that feels to be a hot, considered a hot lesbian. Quite an honor. You know what's funny? When you're actually more fluid with your sexuality,
Starting point is 00:48:17 the swing goes from nobody gives a shit who you're sleeping with to you better identify exactly who you are so we can figure out what name to call you and it's like is nobody even paying attention to like all the hot girls I've been kissing on camera? Hi, I've always been here. Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an iHeart podcast.

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