The humanitarian carve-out would ensure that organizations that are just doing humanitarian work would be able to work faster and be more efficient in a system where we know—because experience has shown us time and time again—the government is not good at moving quickly. We don't have trust in the government to do those things, for very good reasons, I think we can all agree.
That humanitarian carve-out would let our humanitarian organizations get on the ground and help people in the minutes, hours and days after a humanitarian crisis, where it's necessary, and the legislation would still be in place to meet the balance that you seem to think is necessary with regard to international development activities like education and longer-term projects. One would think that this would meet both your needs and the needs of the humanitarian organizations.