Do you have a source for that pie chart? It doesn’t represent the budgetary spending on the congressional budget website. Maybe the creator mislabeled non-defense discretionary spending solely as education?
Yikes! Yeah, that’s disinformation. It needs to be taken down.
That pie chart is sourced from a commercial (.com) site that claims it obtained its data from another .com site, and does not remotely represent the information on the congressional budgetary government website. It falsely claims $1.7T spending on education, which is the entire annual discretionary budget. The only way that could be possible is if the US spent no money on defense for a year.
Do you have a source for that pie chart? It doesn’t represent the budgetary spending on the congressional budget website. Maybe the creator mislabeled non-defense discretionary spending solely as education?
https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2024-03/59727-Federal-Budget.pdf
It’s from the Wikipedia page on the US government spending.
Yikes! Yeah, that’s disinformation. It needs to be taken down.
That pie chart is sourced from a commercial (.com) site that claims it obtained its data from another .com site, and does not remotely represent the information on the congressional budgetary government website. It falsely claims $1.7T spending on education, which is the entire annual discretionary budget. The only way that could be possible is if the US spent no money on defense for a year.