Your site's heaviest users are typically repeat visitors, and they'll have your locally-hosted .js files cached anyway, so they'll only take that bandwidth hit the first time they visit the site.
- Are my site's vistors typically repeat visitors? (As opposed to first-time visitors)
- Are my site's visitors likely to have fast net connections?
- Am I comfortably within my site's allotted bandwidth capacity?
Each "yes" answer is a reason to avoid relying on externally-hosted Javascript at Google.
For example: if you're running a site like StackOverflow, where your visitors are generally tech-savvy people with fast connections and caches that are fully populated from the fifty other times they checked StackOverflow this morning, the gains from hosting your Javascript elsewhere are going to be pretty minimal.
But if you're running a site for senior citizens in Kuala Lumpor off of a 256kbps DSL line in your basement, your visitors will see some nice gains if you offload those JS files to Google!