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Posts Tagged ‘Budget’

Great Article at American Thinker, by William Tate

by The Kraken ( 170 Comments › )
Filed under Debt, Economy at February 13th, 2014 - 9:02 am

Folks, the following is a 25% edit of a longer article by William Tate, over at American Thinker.  I chopped it way down, and left out a lot.  For the meat of the matter, go to the original.  It sounds like Mr. Tate has really done his homework, and the information is “compelling”.  I’m not going to put the rest in a blockquote ghetto, but everything below the line was written by Mr. Tate, and all I have done is whack and weed it down to a quarter its original length.  Enjoy, and shiver:


The Obama machine is scrambling to minimize damage inflicted by the Congressional Budget Office’s  report, but a full reading shows that job loss could be even worse than previously reported. The report may be even more damning because of what isn’t there.

The CBO report concedes that “some employers might leave wages unchanged and instead employ a smaller workforce.”  Alternatively, “some employers will respond to the penalty by hiring fewer people at or just above the minimum wage.”

Still, the CBO argues, “there is no compelling evidence that part-time employment has increased as a result of the ACA.” (Emphasis added.)

It’s an artfully worded statement, dependent on the word, compelling. (More on that later.) And it depends — in a quite Clintonian way — on what the meaning of the word, is, is.

Could it be that there is — meaning currently, right now, today — little “compelling” evidence about the impact of the employer mandate on jobs because the mandate hasn’t taken effect yet, and keeps getting delayed? And that, by delaying it, the Obama administration is delaying the negative impact of Obamacare on jobs — now until after they leave office?

After virtually ignoring the impact Obamacare will have on employers, the CBO report still concludes that the equivalent of 2.5 million jobs will be lost, primarily because of workers who decide to cut back on work.

The Obama propaganda machine would have us believe that’s because these workers will no longer be stuck in “job lock.”

However, what the CBO report actually says is that these workers will decide to work less because they will be hitting income thresholds, which will mean smaller Obamacare subsidies. Simply put, the CBO concludes that these folks won’t want to work more and take home less.

The CBO even admits that such an Obamacare subsidy structure “effectively raises people’s marginal tax rates.”

Here We Are Again!

by Flyovercountry ( 130 Comments › )
Filed under Debt, Economy, Marxism, Progressives at January 15th, 2014 - 12:00 pm

Driving to work this morning, I listened to the radio and heard something new. Apparently we have a new debt ceiling hard date coming at us as early as tomorrow. We’ve not seen this before, have we? Our government has enough money to keep it operating through tomorrow, and then, unless we agree to take on more debt, we won’t.

Don’t panic, those political elites came to a quiet and and largely unreported compromise, and have agreed on a spending bill and debt ceiling increase which will keep the farce going through the remainder of 2014. Guess what ended up happening to those, “spending cuts,” promised during one of these previously debated budget deals, that were supposed to kick in with this year’s budget.

As for what I believe the theme of our government should be, at least in terms of what its overall impact to our economic well being will be, that can be summed up in two words, “Ramming Speed!”

This should explain it all, and do so in a way that even a Congressman would be able to understand, (though I suspect that most of them will not.)

As for the compromise itself, you may be wondering what types of things would we be paying for that might cost our nation $1.6 Trillion. Well, have no fear. The Heritage Foundation has waded through this assault on common sense. Just click the link to read their complete analysis. Some of the things that struck me as maybe being less important than the vital government services that always seem to find themselves threatened whenever budgetary cuts are suggested follow:

$35 Million to provide Abortion Services for Chinese Citizens, because it’s just too darned easy to kill our own unborn any more. There’s just no challenge to it.

$474 Million to build walking trails in California, because when faced with economic collapse, my chief concern is whether or not people who think 55 degrees is cold have ample opportunity to take nature walks.

$8.6 Billion to Head Start, a program so vital that every study of its efficacy has shown the program to do more harm than good in terms of preparing our young urban youths for the rigors of full day school participation.

$1.9 Billion for more renewable energy boondoggles, because that whole Solyndra thing turned out to be so successful.

$292 Million for more crap like Cowboy Poetry Festivals, because when I think no spending beyond what’s absolutely necessary, I see Cowboys reading their poetry to both of the hippies who might be mildly interested in attending something so mind numbingly vacuous.

Of course, Let’s not forget my personal favorite, $40 Million to teach Chinese Prostitutes how to hold their liquor, something upon which I’m willing to bet a lot, that they already know the better points of.

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.

Sometimes Punting Is The Proper Play

by Flyovercountry ( 165 Comments › )
Filed under Debt, Democratic Party, Economy, Republican Party, taxation at December 12th, 2013 - 7:00 am

Political Cartoons by Lisa Benson

“The fault Dear Brutus is not within our stars, but within ourselves that we are underlings.”

I’m going to take a contrarian position today, both from one which my fellow conservatives are taking, and from the position that I myself would usually take. Here is my position, we should go for the Ryan/Murray deal, and we should go for it quietly. I know that most of you reading this will blast me for my heresy, and let me state for the record, I agree in advance with most of what you’re going to say. I only ask in advance, that you consider my arguments at least a little before passing your judgement.

First off, our current predicament is entirely due to the fact that we have not won sufficient elections recently to establish our will, nor even to adequately represent our wishes upon the national scene. That is a fact of life. Elections have consequences, and what we have happening in Washington right now is just the brutal reminder of the beautiful truth behind that statement. There is a second part to this however. Until we start winning elections, and winning them in bulk, we will never again get our way, no matter how passionately we state our well reasoned arguments. While I agree that we are far too often duped by some pretender or traitor, there are also some good people from our side who have stood up for their principles and done what was promised, and those people deserve our support.

The next point I’d like to make is that while this deal sucks, the current spending level can only be described as insane, and we are well into the period of time when according to the last deal, and the one before that, and the one before that, and the one before that, promised that the future cuts would be taking place, we both know that this was where we were going to end up anyhow. No matter how fiercely our brave House Members fought, and no matter how tight a budget they passed and sent to the Senate, it would be DOA. The Senate would reject it, Harry Reid would strip up the version sent over, the Senate Democrats would have passed an amended version that would have been this monstrosity or worse, and the GOP in the House would have caved like cheap suits. After a long protracted fight in which this bill or worse would have been signed into law, we would have all been left feeling violated once again, and wondered what in the world they even bothered for anyhow.

Another thing that I’d like to mention is this. The entire process is nothing more right now than one giant squirrel, as in the variety that I warned about yesterday. Barack Obama is bleeding, and any budget fight right now would represent a fierce distraction from his bleeding carcass, and one by the way that would almost guarantee his regaining popularity, at least amongst his base. Winning elections should be our top priority. Obamacare is the gift that will do that for us, or at least be a major help. By November of next year, the employer mandate will up the number of previously insured but no longer able to afford it Americans to about 150 Million pissed off people. All of the above will be searching for their pitch forks and torches. We can spend the next year helping to keep them focused on the one single issue that will help us rid our Universe of the Marxists for at least a generation, or we can allow ourselves and our fellow citizens to become distracted, throwing away the gift that reality and Team Obama have so thoughtfully given. Paul Ryan’s budget was a political maneuver, and while many of us do not like those, losing the tactical war has been part of our downfall for a very long time. Frankly, I’m happy to see that at least one member of the GOP finally gets that, and has done something about it.

Like it or not, this is the price to be paid for those protest votes, purity tests, staying home on election day because you didn’t like that your guy lost and the other guy’s candidate won in the primaries. As Jimmy Johnson told his Dolphin Team during a playoff game in which they got beat by over 50 points, “if you don’t like it, do something about it.” There is only one something that can be done about it. Yes, our guys got slammed tactically when they controlled the Senate, House, and the White House, and they let us down by continuing to act like Democrats. Since then however, there have been 80 or so worthy Tea Party House Members elected and a few in the Senate. The answer is not to stop supporting them, the answer is to get more of their kind elected, so that they can make a difference.

Ryan’s punt may seem like a purposeful throwing of the game, but it is not. He is a policy wonk, and is playing chess, while others are playing checkers. What he is trying to avoid, and succeeding at avoiding by the way, is 8 weeks of headlines in which the GOP is blamed for throwing grandma off of the cliff, starving puppy dogs, while the Obamacare disaster takes to the back pages, all for the grand prize of having an even worse deal passed in the end anyhow. He has punted with the wind at his back, and has decided to let his defense try to force the fumble, and right now, their offense has shown that they are prone to fumbling the ball. The best and only path to having your way right now is the exact path that Paul Ryan has chosen to take. We need to have our guys win in both 2014 and 2016. Without that, cutting spending will be nothing more than a pipe dream, no matter how loudly we all proclaim to want that.

For the record, here’s what the Heritage Foundation had to say about it.

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.

Halloween Special: Creatures That Won’t Die Part Three – The Insatiable Need For Increased Spending

by Flyovercountry ( 225 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Economy, Progressives at October 18th, 2013 - 12:11 pm

During one of the UAW strikes against General Motors in 1970, Richard C. Gerstenberg, the CEO of GM, asked the President of the UAW, W.P. Reuther what he wanted, since GM had previously capitulated on every single demand made during earlier strikes. Reuther’s reply was one word, simple, and chilling. More, was all he said. Within two decades of that conversation, the car company that at the time held an eye popping 54% of the world market, would find itself closing nearly half of its plants, the subject of a Michael Moore hit piece, and constantly on the verge of insolvency, the last one by the way has not been made any better by a $50 Billion government bail out. Such is the nature of the left, and all would be well advised to heed these words. They, no matter what they claim, will always want more. They may couch it in terms of, “just a little more,” or, “only their fair share,” or even my personal favorite, “just enough to fund this year’s brand spanking new entitlement dujour.”

I had some realizations over the course of the Sequestration and recent government shut down. One is that the anxiety felt by Americans was totally disconnected from the reality. In reality, hardly anyone even remembers that Sequestration happened. In fact, if not for the leaders of the Democrat Party screaming like Kirstie Alley’s girdle while she’s out pimping her Scientology diet crap, not one single American taxpaying citizen would ever have known that such an event had taken place. One positive effect of the Sequestration however, is that it set the baseline budget joke back to its 2008 level, a political defeat for the President that has had far greater impact than anything else attempted by the Republicans since his inauguration. Keeping the Sequestration intact was a much greater political triumph than any reporting on this latest budget show down than any reporting on it will ever be willing to admit, much less credit Ted Cruz and Mike Lee for. Secondly, except for Veterans utilizing their well earned benefits, a minority of overpaid government employees, and anyone foolish enough to actually visit a national park or something that Barack Obama mistakenly believed to be a national park, the government shut down had zero effect on anyone actually working for a living.

The argument from the political left in all of these arguments has been the simplistic statement that our government can not possibly get by on one penny less than what it had to spend last year, plus a plucky 8% automatically built in growth, thanks to the miraculously bad idea known as baseline budgeting. So, when you hear those words that we just need to tweak our tax revenues just a little bit to squeeze out a few more pennies to cover the bills that we have, balderdash! The fact is that spending will be increased to fill out any shortfalls in negative cash flow that may mistakenly crop up, and that spending will for ever increase, as government largess is the lazy man’s way of not only holding on to a power base, but also actually increasing that base. The problem of course is that we mere little people are the lucky beneficiaries of such malevolence.

I remembered this snippet from an essay authored by Thomas Sowell. If a government agency was responsible for two activities, one of them erecting monuments to Benedict Arnold and the other being the supply of life saving medications for children, which one would you expect to be disturbed if that department suddenly had its budget cut. The answer of course would be providing life saving medications for children, as cutting this activity would be the one most likely to get the citizenry on board with reinstating the lost budget. Otherwise, the citizens might realize that they never actually wanted those monuments to Benedict Arnold in the first place.

Our government has shut down 18 times now, and the reporting of this hardly noticeable event as though it were the end of civilization as we know it is fairly recent. If you polled Americans at large, I’m not certain at all that more than a handful of people could tell you that the government ever shut down prior to Newt Gingrich assuming the duties of House Speaker, even though most of these events happened during the Presidencies of Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. During the punditry’s analysis of who won and who lost, they’ve never correctly identified the losers, which is inevitably you and I. We lose because the ensuing budget, or lack thereof has never been sane, or even decreasing.

Just remember, what the political left wants can be summed up in one simple, concise, and chilling word, more. We give them today on average, a full one fifth of our annual national income in order to run things in Washington. That is not enough. Art Laffer has fortunately mapped out the relationship between tax rates and revenues. He has found, while proving the theory of Andrew W. Mellon, the economist who served as Calvin Coolidge’s Secretary of The Treasury, that no matter where our marginal tax rates are placed, revenue will be one fifth of our national income. So when they seek to increase our taxes to cover that little increase in what they suddenly can not do without, our national income will suffer, and that cost will invariably be borne by those earning a living. We have long been guilty of conflating wealth and income in our nation, and I blame this on a serious lack of qualified people teaching basic economics in our public school systems. I do not know how to say this any clearer, so here it is. The wealthy do not pay taxes, and they will not ever pay taxes, no matter what we do with our tax rates or code. Warren Buffett, even while he was jetting around the nation telling anyone with a sofa and a talk show that he felt he should be paying a higher rate than his secretary, who was recompensed at over a Million bucks per year at the time, he had a team of accountants and lawyers who’s sole purpose in their working lives was the lowering of Buffett’s tax bill. He also had a judgement in which the Supreme Court found him guilty of cheating by a cool $1 Billion on previous returns. The more will come from those working for a living, as directed by those who don’t have to, and redistributed to those who do not want to.

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.