03 October 2013

More widespread than we thought

Slate has an article about the true extent of the government shutdown:
The two-day-old government shutdown has forced monuments and memorials in the US to close, but in France? Apparently so.
Outside the Suresnes American Cemetery and Memorial (photo, of an earlier visit by then-President Bush) on the western outskirts of Paris, France 24 reports, a sign informs visitors that "Due to the United States government shutdown, this site is closed to the public.” An American embassy spokesman in Paris confirmed the closure, but Suresnes isn’t the only site abroad to close its doors due to the shutdown, according to France 24. “The move affects some twenty cemeteries in France, Belgium, Britain, Italy, Tunisia, and Mexico which serve as the final resting place for troops who died in landmark campaigns such as the Normandy D-Day landings, the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC) said on its website.”
While it may come as a surprise that monuments abroad are operated by the US government, according to the ABMC website, the commission is an agency of the executive branch established by Congress in 1923 charged with, in part, “designing, constructing, operating, and maintaining permanent American cemeteries in foreign countries.” The commission operates 24 permanent US military cemeteries and 25 memorial structures in fifteen countries, according to the site.
Rico says you never know what Congress can fuck up until it does...

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