national debt

Whatever Happened To “It Takes Money To Make Money”?

Posted 9/9/11 at 8:04am by jamie

The AP has put out a fact check of President Obama’s claim last night that everything in his jobs program is paid for:

resident Barack Obama's promise Thursday that everything in his jobs plan will be paid for rests on highly iffy propositions.

It will only be paid for if a committee he can't control does his bidding, if Congress puts that into law and if leaders in the future - the ones who will feel the fiscal pinch of his proposals - don't roll it back.

Apparently the Constitution has changed since President Obama took office. I thought that every program laid out by every President since the start of our country was dependent upon a Congress that the President doesn’t control? As matter of fact the Constitution says that and has since day one. Congress is a separate and independent branch of Government. Of course there are times when the President’s party controls both chambers, but that still doesn’t mean the President controls the Congress. That was obvious in 2009-2010, when Republicans launched a record number of filibusters against the democratically controlled Senate.

But even if it isn’t paid for, so what? The trillions of dollars the Bush tax cuts have cost us wasn’t paid for either, yet Republicans still passed them and keep them alive. Where was all the complaining that these had to be paid for? Hell – they are one of the biggest contributors to the national debt.

Republicans Don’t Give A Shit About The Country – Only Their Party

Posted 3/17/10 at 9:47am by jamie

I’ve been saying it all along and now Mitch McConnell is validating it:

Before the health care fight, before the economic stimulus package, before President Obama even took office, Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican minority leader, had a strategy for his party: use his extensive knowledge of Senate procedure to slow things down, take advantage of the difficulties Democrats would have in governing and deny Democrats any Republican support on big legislation.

Republicans embraced it. Democrats denounced it as rank obstructionism. Either way, it has led the two parties, as much as any other factor, to where they are right now. Republicans are monolithically against the health care legislation, leaving the president and his party executing parliamentary back flips to get it passed, conservatives revived, liberals wondering what happened.

In the process, Mr. McConnell, 68, a Kentuckian more at home plotting tactics in the cloakroom than writing legislation in a committee room or exhorting crowds on the campaign trail, has come to embody a kind of oppositional politics that critics say has left voters cynical about Washington, the Senate all but dysfunctional and the Republican Party without a positive agenda or message.

The WaPo Is Saying The Senate Bill Will Increase The National Debt By $132 Billion

Posted 12/19/09 at 7:00pm by jamie

OK this is very interesting. The Washington Post has an interactive feature up where you can view all kinds of things about health care reform, including this:

wapohcrdebt

Compare that to what the CBO letter says today:

CBO and JCT estimate that, on balance, the direct spending and revenue effects of
enacting the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act incorporating the manager’s amendment would yield a net reduction in federal deficits of $132 billion over the 2010-2019 period (see Table 1)

I would venture to say this is an error in the WaPo’s little Flash application, but that hasn’t stopped the GOP from pushing this:

goptwtwapo

More On The ‘Conservative Litmus Test’

Posted 11/24/09 at 10:50am by jamie

Last night Keith Olbermann pointed out that according to the new ‘conservative litmus test’ being floated around the RNC that Reagan would fail it – rather interesting since the resolution is title “Proposed RNC Resolution on Reagan’s Unity Principle for Support of Candidates”.

Here is the criteria to being a conservative according to the RNC and you must meet at least eight of these points to be considered for RNC support should the measure pass.

(1) Smaller government, smaller national debt, lower deficits and lower taxes by opposing bills like Obama’s “stimulus” bill
(2) Market-based health care reform and oppose Obama-style government run healthcare;
(3) Market-based energy reforms by opposing cap and trade legislation;
(4) Workers’ right to secret ballot by opposing card check
(5) Legal immigration and assimilation into American society by opposing amnesty for illegal immigrants;
(6) Victory in Iraq and Afghanistan by supporting military-recommended troop surges;
(7) Containment of Iran and North Korea, particularly effective action to eliminate their nuclear weapons threat
(8) Retention of the Defense of Marriage Act;
(9) Protecting the lives of vulnerable persons by opposing health care rationing and denial of health care and government funding of abortion; and
(10) The right to keep and bear arms by opposing government restrictions on gun ownership

Here is Keith explaining how Reagan would fail six of those points:

It really is telling when the RNC doesn’t even know their own idol and what he actually stood for.

Christopher Buckley Explains His Reasons For Leaving The Nation Review

Posted 10/15/08 at 10:31am by jamie

A lot of wingnuts are dismissing Christopher Buckley for leaving the National Review. They seem to forget that the National Review wouldn't be here if it wasn't for his father, who founded the magazine. Buckley shares a sentiment that I hear from countless Republicans, especially the Reagan class of Republicans:

While I regret this development, I am not in mourning, for I no longer have any clear idea what, exactly, the modern conservative movement stands for. Eight years of “conservative” government has brought us a doubled national debt, ruinous expansion of entitlement programs, bridges to nowhere, poster boy Jack Abramoff and an ill-premised, ill-waged war conducted by politicians of breathtaking arrogance. As a sideshow, it brought us a truly obscene attempt at federal intervention in the Terry Schiavo case.

Instead today's Republican party has become a group of hate-filled irrational thinkers who believe America's only obligation is global dominance. They don't give a damn about the people of this country, as long as they can wage wars and instill feelings of fear and hatred into their followers. John McCain was different from this, but that was back in 2000. Now he has sold his soul in an attempt to become President. To hear him or his campaign talk, they act like McCain becoming President is a right due to his time as a POW. They care nothing about country or principal and continue to rally the troops to yell out hateful and violent lines about his opponent. If Reagan was alive today he would beat McCain's ass - literally.

Fixing The Economy - The House In Action

Posted 6/14/06 at 1:08pm by jamie

So the stock market is back to the 2005 levels, inflation is rising, people are losing jobs, people who have jobs have an insecure feeling about their income, the national debt is at record levels, we got army bases who might get the power shut off for failure to pay bills, etc., etc., etc. So how will Congress act to fix all these problems? Well they are already working on it:

Despite record low approval ratings, House lawmakers Tuesday embraced a $3,300 pay raise that will increase their salaries to $168,500.

The 2 percent cost-of-living raise would be the seventh straight for members of the House and Senate.

Lawmakers easily squelched a bid by Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, to get a direct vote to block the COLA, which is automatically awarded unless lawmakers vote to block it.

That's right. We will put more money back into our economy through the pockets of our Congress. Thanks Congress for caring. I feel better now. You know they could have done something really bad like raised the minimum wage. Oh wait. How could they do that when they are only working 98 days this year? Remember - this House is working less than any session of Congress in over 60 years.

I think I will send a letter to my Representative today , thanking him for doing this. Of course he helped even more because he is the Majority Leader and his salary now stands at $183,500. Way to go Mr. Boehner.

When We Need Money

Posted 3/16/06 at 9:54pm by jamie

We raise the national debt. That measure was passed by Congress today and sent to Bush for his signature.

The Senate voted Thursday to allow the national debt to swell to nearly $9 trillion, preventing a first-ever default on U.S. Treasury notes.

The bill passed by a 52-48 vote. The increase to $9 trillion represents about $30,000 for every man, woman and child in the United States. The bill now goes to President Bush for his signature.

The measure allows the government to pay for the war in Iraq and finance Medicare and other big federal programs without raising taxes. It passed hours before the House was expected to approve another $91 billion to fund the war in Iraq and provide more aid to hurricane victims.

Wow. I am so glad the Bush economy is doing so well. This is that "trickle down" theory in action. Now that they have done this, perhaps it is time to cut taxes even more. Why should we worry about it? Let our children worry about the problem. Hell don't we all have an additional $30,000 lying around - we should just send it in and pay off the debt.

It is apparent that this administration believes in some sort of mystical money tree that goes along with this divine creator who made the world in six days. This is truly the administration of fairy tales and the land of make believe. Of course now we need another Bill Clinton to come in and fix everything Bush and his gang-banging buddies in Congress have screwed up. Nice to know how "fiscally responsible" they truly are.

Our Nation In The Poor House

Posted 12/30/05 at 5:53pm by jamie

Well this is some disturbing information coming from the treasury:

Treasury Secretary John Snow has warned that unless Congress raises the
national debt limit, the US government will run out of cash to finance its
daily work in two months.

In a letter to Senate leaders Thursday, Snow said the statutory debt
limit imposed by Congress of 8.184 trillion dollars would be reached in
mid-February and the government would then lose its borrowing power.

"At that time, unless the debt limit is raised or the Treasury Department
takes authorized extraordinary actions, we will be unable to continue to
finance government operations," said the letter, seen by AFP.

Snow warned that even if the Treasury took "all available prudent and
legal actions" to avoid breaching the ceiling, "we anticipate that we can
finance government operations no longer than mid-March".

"Accordingly, I am writing to request that Congress raise the statutory
debt limit as soon as possible."

The Republican-led Congress last voted to increase the debt limit in
mid-November 2004, despite opposition from Democrats who demanded the
free-spending federal government tighten its belt instead.

Article continues

here

Well this is the great news we hear about our economy. Bush and Congress
certainly appear to be running a conservative government, that is if you
redefine the word. Ironically the article points out that the Democrats were the
party to last try to be more conservative in government spending. What an irony
that is.

A New Strategy - Recall Bush

Posted 12/6/05 at 6:03am by jamie

The brilliant Ted Rall brings up an option to deal with our President that I
have thought of in the past. Follow the lead of California and start a national
recall.

One solution is to establish a California-style recall system on the
national level. If a significant percentage of Americans loses confidence in
the president and his administration to the extent that they're willing to
sign a recall petition, a special election should be held within three
months. The number of required signatures should be high
enough--California's system calls for 12 percent of the number of people who
cast votes in the preceding election--to ensure that recalls are only held
as the result of widespread disgust among the citizenry.

To avoid disruption, the constitutional amendment creating the recall
provision could prevent such elections from being held more often than, say,
annually. And a recall won't automatically result in a new party taking over
the White House--just a new administration. But it would replace our current
system of political stagnation with a more dynamic democracy.

The threat of recall would make sitting leaders responsive to the people
more often than the current four-year election cycle, and would allow
disastrous and unpopular leaders like Bush to be replaced posthaste. Of
course, national recall elections wouldn't guarantee that the people would
always be happy with their leaders. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the man who
replaced Gray Davis after the recall, currently "ranks among the most
unpopular governors in modern California history," reports the San Francisco
Chronicle. But Californians don't have to wait until the next election to
get rid of him.

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