The Stupid Party

signalmankenneth

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The Stupid Party
By Robert Borosage
Created 02/04/2010 - 12:47pm

The GOP: Grand, Old and Preposterous

The GOP is unable and unwilling to have a serious conversation with Americans about the fix we are in. Instead the party's leaders posture and pose, as practiced as a Gregorian chorus in chanting their poll tested messaging that makes utterly no sense.

President Obama has just put forth his 2011 budget. It wrestles with priorities in a country facing double digit unemployment, record deficits, while waging two wars. The president seeks a small jobs program in the short term, while committing to deficit reduction beginning next year.

He would raise top end taxes, crack down on multinational tax havens, force equity fund managers to pay income taxes like the rest of us, while putting a freeze on domestic discretionary spending for three years, embracing "pay-go" budget discipline on any increase in entitlements or cuts in taxes, and pushing for health care reform which addresses the source of long term deficits - out of control health care costs.

Like any budget, the president's is a political document -reflecting both his priorities and his compromises. Progressives and conservatives will find much to criticize. It deserves, at the very least, an adult response from the opposition.

Instead the House Republican leader, the perpetually tanned John Boehner, greets the president's proposal with poll-tested message: [1]

"President Obama is submitting another budget that spends too much, taxes too much and borrows too much. Filled with more reckless spending and more unsustainable debt, the president's budget is just more of the same at a time when the American people are looking for Democrats in Washington to listen and change course."

Senate Leader Mitch McConnell, fresh from voting against what was his own wrong-headed enthusiasm, the bipartisan deficit commission, says [2]"'Look, I don't think anybody in the country thinks we have a problem because we tax too little, I think the problem is we spend too much." So, I like the commission idea, just as I said a few months ago. I think a better way to do it is target spending.'

"Spend too much, tax too much and borrow too much." Clearly, Republicans believe that we can reduce our deficits by cutting spending even while cutting taxes. So what would they cut?

Boehner refers the president to the 2009 Republican budget [3], put together by Rep. Paul D. Ryan, who passes as the party's idea man.

That budget would freeze domestic discretionary spending till 2014, but Obama's budget does that. It would increase spending on the military over the Obama budget, and pledge all the money needed to fight two wars (with Republicans insisting that the military get more, not less resources to do so). It would create a "trigger" on Social Security that might cut benefits for "high income earners," but not until 2036. No savings there.

So where do the cuts come from?

The Republican budget would repeal any spending remaining in the recovery act and oppose any new spending for jobs. This includes repealing the "Make Work Pay" tax credit that gives most Americans a small tax break, and presumably the support for food stamps, aid to states to avoid layoffs of teachers and police, and the infrastructure construction projects that remain. But there isn't a lot of money left in the recovery plan and the president's new proposal is modest, at best.

The big cuts come from Medicare and Medicaid. Republicans now rail against any "Medicare cuts," referring to the end of billions in subsidies to enable private insurance companies to compete with Medicare. But the Republican budget would abolish Medicare for everyone under 55, replacing it with a voucher program that would be outpaced by inflation over time. The Center for Budget and Policyh Priorities estimates [4] that means about $600 billion in cuts over 10 years would come from Medicare spending.

It would similarly end the guarantee that Medicaid provides to low income children, seniors and the disabled, turning it into a block grant to states that would create over $600 billion in cuts below projected expenditures.

But at the same time, the Ryan budget extends generous tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans. It would not only extend the top end Bush tax cuts that Obama would let expire, it would lower the top rate from 35% to 25%, and eliminate taxes on capital gains which go overwhelmingly to the wealthiest Americans.

The Citizens for Tax Justice estimates [5]this constitutes another tax break of about $75,000 a year for America's millionaires (the wealthiest 1%). (While over a third of low and middle income taxpayers would pay more under the Republican plan that Obama's plan). It would cut the corporate tax rate to 25% without closing any loopholes that already enable the US corporations to pay one of the lowest effective tax rates in the industrialized world. The income tax proposals would have cost about $225 billion more in 2010 alone than the President's budget.

Lowering taxes while cutting Medicare and Medicaid doesn't help in lowering the deficits. The Republican budget suggests - ignoring the lesson of the last10 years - that trickle down tax cuts will produce faster growth.

Fact is Republicans don't have a plan for deficit reduction - they just have different priorities. They want tax cuts for the wealthy and the corporations that they would pay for with deep cuts for working and poor families, and the elderly in Medicare and Medicaid. They'd spend more on the military and even less on domestic investments.

This is what George Bush Sr. called "voodoo economics," the same voodoo that led us off the cliff under George Bush and handed Obama two wars, an economy in free fall and a trillion dollar deficit when he walked in the door.

Republicans don't have a policy, they have a posture. They don't have a program; they have a "message." We could call them the stupid party, but this is working well for them. Only for the country, it doesn't add up.
gop-treason-2010.jpg
 
The January jobs report is notable for its annual revisions and the divergence of the two different unemployment surveys. First, the household survey showed a drop in the unemployment rate from 10.0 percent to 9.7 percent. The payroll survey showed continued job losses of 20,000 for January.

The unemployment rate of 9.7 percent is almost double the rate thought consistent with full employment.

Further, the only reason the unemployment rate is not even higher is that millions of Americans have left the workforce altogether, as shown by a drop in the labor force participation rate to 64.7 percent from a peak in 2007 of 66.4 percent.

Since January 2009, 1 million Americans have simply left the workforce.

The Obama budget now projects a budget deficit for 2010 of $1.6 trillion, pushing the national debt as a share of the economy to nearly 64 percent.

In addition to the usual policy bling of government-directed investment in everything from distressed urban communities to welfare for farmers, Obama has proposed a tax credit for new hires.

Not all sectors have lost jobs, however. Health care and social services (+679,000), education (+117,000), government (+95,000), and utility (+3,000) payrolls have expanded even as the economy has contracted.

All these sectors rely heavily on government spending, and this insulates them from the downturn.

Government spending stays high as long as the government can borrow to make up the shortfall. The new Obama budget does exactly this, borrowing $0.42 out of every $1.00 it spends.
 
Of course SMK's post is simply a partisan hit piece expressing the lefties views and blaming the Republicans for all the countys problems...Rather than address each little piece of bullshit, I'll just point out this....

Congress has been in control of Democrats for the last 4 years..(and many other times in the past)..6 months of that with a 60 vote unbeatable majority in the Senate and a Democrat white house...

Democrats would raise taxes as usual and Obamas spending cuts are a joke, and the public knows it....its the claim Obama would "force equity fund managers to pay income taxes like the rest of us".....
Really ? Like I said...Dems have control, so where is the reform in the tax code?

this is reality......

DSCC Chairman Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) equivocating on legislation to raise taxes on publicly traded equity firms, hedge fund giant James H. Simons, who earned $1.7 billion last year at his Renaissance Technologies LLC, donated another $28,500 to the DSCC.

By late July, Schumer was off the fence -- and on the side of the hedge funds and private-equity firms in opposing the Democratic legislation.

[B]The measure has deeply divided Democrats[/B], pitting a rank and file that has railed for years against inequities in the tax code against the party's money men, who are reluctant to bite the hand that has generously fed them. Hanging in the balance is the AMT, enacted in 1969 to ensure that the wealthiest Americans pay at least some taxes. Instead, it has increasingly affected middle-class taxpayers.

Thats just the tip of the iceberg....
Instead of real reform, we get manufactured outrage, and bullshit from the brainwashed like signalmankenneth....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/06/AR2007110602313.html
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Democrats were frantically trying do some special favors for labor unions before Scott Brown was seated and Democrats lost their supermajority in the Senate.

They succeeded in getting Patricia Smith, the Obama administration's nominee for Solicitor of Labor, through a party-line cloture vote, even though it's entirely likely she lied in her Senate testimony about a program she was involved in as New York's labor commissioner that unjustly benefited unions.

However, with Scott Brown being seated early and Democrats losing their supermajority, Big Labor may well have just seen their secret weapon shot down.

More than Smith, Big Labor had a lot riding on the nomination of Craig Becker to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Becker, a lawyer for the AFL-CIO and the SEIU, authored a paper as a law professor about how the NLRB could be used to enact a sweeping overhaul of labor laws that would benefit unions, and all without congressional approval.

Becker dismissed questions about the paper saying he would be "practical" while serving on the NLRB. However, that seems dubious given how hard labor leaders were pushing his nomination. And Becker had already authored one of Obama's executive orders dealing with labor regulations. Not surprisingly, the executive order benefited unions.

But now that Brown has been seated, it's very probable that his nomination will be filibustered. After being unable to pass card check legislation and unhappy with the Democrats' proposed "cadillac tax" in health care legislation, Big Labor is going ballistic about the likely failure of Becker's nomination. According to Sam Stein at the Huffington Post, labor leaders are "fuming" - But the recriminations over granting Brown an early start date are already flying. Becker's nomination to the head of the NLRB was supposed to be considered while Democrats still had 60 votes. Party leadership had planned to hold a confirmation vote this week, multiple sources tell the Huffington Post.

But a series of delays, engineered primarily by Sen. John McCain (R-Ari.), pushed consideration back. And as things stand now, a full Senate vote on Becker will not take place before Brown is granted a vote -- leaving the nomination either completely dead or in deep peril.

"Democrats were outmaneuvered yet again," emailed a labor source. "I'm used to us caving, but they just hit the mat. I love how we cave to the Republicans and won't seat our Senator, Franken. Then we reverse cave and seat their senator. I mean forget the analogy of one is playing checkers and the other playing chess. It's like one is playing chess while the other is sitting there picking their nose."
 
The Republicans wouldn't vote for an Obama budget that Ronald Reagan had risen from the grave and written. Their goal isn't to make America a better place. Their goal is to win power. They shut down government, make working things out impossible, and then accuse Democrats of incompetency for the trouble the Republicans have caused. It's a good strategy because Democrats are pussies and are just going to let them walk all over them, whether the bastards are destroying America from within or without.
 
Way to go Bravo

:good4u:
Congress has been in control of Democrats for the last 4 years..(and many other times in the past)..6 months of that with a 60 vote unbeatable majority in the Senate and a Democrat white house...


All that time, they have done nothing but blame President Bush, when in fact it is their own failure to do anything other than spend us in to debt.
 
Spending is what we in Big Gubmint want, and the elected puppets oblige every time.

Administrations and Congresses come and go, bureaucracies stay, and grow.
 
It seems like a nice article at first sight, but attacks on intellectual property in some of the comments made me uncomfortable. I know that its hard to patent an idea or a new product and everything is easier to bigger companies, but why the government is any better than the corporations?
 
big gubmit troll is damo
Ya think? I coudln't be Adam, he's a bright guy but imagination isn't his strong suit and it sure as hell aint STY or GL......Asshats all ready insane and doesn't need a troll. So who else could it be?

Besides, who else says "Gubmint" or "Jeebus" besides Damo?
 
It seems like a nice article at first sight, but attacks on intellectual property in some of the comments made me uncomfortable. I know that its hard to patent an idea or a new product and everything is easier to bigger companies, but why the government is any better than the corporations?

Because we have some control over who runs the gov.
 
It seems like a nice article at first sight, but attacks on intellectual property in some of the comments made me uncomfortable. I know that its hard to patent an idea or a new product and everything is easier to bigger companies, but why the government is any better than the corporations?

Big Gubmint is the answer. What was the question?
 
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