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Posts Tagged ‘Debt Ceiling’

It’s the spending stupid

by Phantom Ace ( 6 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Economy, Special Report, unemployment at July 13th, 2011 - 9:32 am

Barack Hussein Obama is holding firm on raising taxes. He claims it will only be targeted on those making 250,000 or more. The problem is there are not enough people making that amount to equal 1 Trillion in new taxes. The GOP should turn the tables and point out that GE paid no taxes last year. Their CEO Jeffery Immelt is one of Obama’s biggest supporters and this hypocritical stance should be pointed out. The problem with our deficit and debt is spending, not revenue!

There are a lot of pieces to the debt-ceiling deal. There are the taxes upon taxes, as the Wall Street Journal editors describe it. That’s the roughly $1 trillion in new Obama taxes on top of what he’s already signed into law. It’s an economy and jobs killer.

Then there’s the entitlement piece, which may be more interesting since Obama is apparently open to extending the Social Security and Medicare retirement age and using the so-called chained-CPI, which would lower cost-of-living adjustments (and increase income-tax thresholds). Whether the president is serious about these entitlement measures, no one knows. It’s noteworthy that he’s at least talking about them, although he’s linking them to higher taxes.

[….]

And the public is onto this. The highly accurate IBD/TIPP pollsters have just released an incredible result. Get this: The public rejects a debt-ceiling increase by a huge 58 to 36 percent. That includes 59 percent of independents and even 38 percent of Democrats. That is the tea party revolt.

Read the rest: The Spending Is the Problem

Spending is the problem. Why should we spend more than we take in? Most families and businesses can’t do this. Yet the Progressives feel the government must spend money. If Obama wants to increase revenue, then we should enact pro-growth policies that increases the amount of tax payers, that is the answer to the revenue part.

Obama uses Kids to Demagogue Republicans

by Phantom Ace ( 14 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2012, Fascism, Headlines, Liberal Fascism, Progressives, Republican Party, Socialism, Tranzis at June 29th, 2011 - 3:09 pm

Progressives throughout history love to use children to score political points. Whether it was Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Castro or Chavez, the Left loves to claim they’re for the Children. Taking a page out of his ideological soul-mates, Barack Hussein Obama at his press conference claimed Republicans are anti-Children. He said the debt ceiling debate is about corporate jets vs. children.

Kids versus corporate jets.

If President Obama’s news conference accomplished anything on Wednesday afternoon, it underscored, in striking tones, his strategy for winning the debt ceiling fight with Republicans: Make it a clash of classes.

  • Rich versus Poor.
  • Us versus Them.
  • Those who support children, food safety, medical research and, presumably, puppies and apple pie versus the rich fat cats who don’t.

In Obama’s world, Democrats are for kids and Republicans are for corporate jets. That is a sharp distinction that could help put the GOP on defensive, but it may not be enough to persuade Republicans to change their posture on the debt-ceiling talks.

Republicans have cast Obama as a tax-raiser and a Big-Government spender. This was his jujitsu move to turn their arguments against them. With a hint of disdain, Obama even dredged up the death of Osama bin Laden to score a political point.

“I’ve been doing Afghanistan, bin Laden and the Greek crisis,” Obama said, jabbing Congress for being out of session so much. “You stay here. Let’s get it done.”

This is 3rd World Liberation rhetoric. The GOP should say they are defending the Children by wanting to address the debt issues. Obama shouldn’t be allowed to get away with his demagoguery. He is on the side of people who fly private corporate jets.  Bring up his connections to George Soros and GE. The GOP needs to fight him and stop being nice.

Republicans might cave to Obama on Debt Ceiling

by Phantom Ace ( 3 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Headlines, Misery Index at June 8th, 2011 - 4:12 pm

This report if true, if one of the reasons that I don’t trust the GOP on fiscal and economy issues. The House GOP is considering a vote to extend the debt ceiling through the end of 2012. This is kicking the can down the road and hurt them electorally. People voted them in to rein in spending. Clearly, they a not serious.

Republicans want a short-term increase to the debt ceiling if the talks led by Vice President Biden do not produce sufficient spending cuts, Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) said Tuesday.

Kyl, who is representing Senate Republicans in the high-level talks, said his caucus largely agrees with House Speaker John Boehner’s (R-Ohio) demand that the increase in the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling be paired with even bigger spending reductions.

[….]

Negotiators in the Biden talks are looking for a way to increase the debt ceiling enough so that it does not need to be raised again until the end of 2012, after the next election. Kyl said that timeline would require a debt-ceiling increase of $2.4 trillion.

But Kyl said the GOP would look to a shorter-term increase in the debt ceiling if the talks fail to produce more than $2.5 trillion in cuts.

If true, once again the GOP will have proven itself all talk about fiscal or economic Conservatism. Wake me up when we have a true Conservative Party in this country.

Common Sense on US Federal Debt Limits

by 1389AD ( 134 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Economy, Elections 2010 at June 6th, 2011 - 8:30 am

Congressman Allen West (R-FL-22)

Congressman West Statement on the Debt Ceiling Vote

(WASHINGTON)– Congressman Allen West (FL-22) released this statement tonight after he voted “no” on H.R. 1954 to implement the President’s request to increase the statutory limit on the public debt:

“Tonight I did what I stated I would do when I ran for the House of Representatives. I voted against increasing a debt ceiling absent of spending control measures to right our fiscal ship of state.

Over the past two years, President Obama and Congressional Democrats have overseen the largest budget deficits in the history of the United States. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid chastised the Republicans and President George W. Bush in 2006 when he stated, ‘Most Americans know that increasing the debt is the last thing we should be doing…any credible economist would tell you we should be reducing debt, not increasing it.’

When the United States Congress was faced with raising the debt ceiling in 2006 Senator Barack Obama stated, ‘The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies.’

I stated tonight that I will not vote for this debt increase unless all of the following criteria are met or included in the final bill that would aim to raise the debt limit:

• The United States Congress must pass a Balanced Budget Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

• A failsafe trigger mechanism must be put in place that would automatically cut spending if we reach a set percentage limit towards hitting the debt ceiling.

• Federal spending as part of the GDP must be capped at 18-20%.

• Congress must lower the corporate tax rate for American businesses by at least 10% before any vote on raising the debt limit is considered.

The American people sent a Republican Majority to the House of Representatives to reduce spending and put our country on a sustainable financial footing. If I were to close my eyes, abandon my principles, and vote yes to raising the debt limit, Congress would continue to spend the taxpayers’ money without a clear plan to reduce our long term debt. We do not have a revenue problem in Washington – the facts are clear – we have a spending problem.”

* Attached here is the entire Statement for the Congressional Record.