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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (533819)2/1/2004 5:39:07 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
From the man who started the BUDGET OF MASS DESTRUCTION!
"To assure that Congress observes spending discipline, now and in the future, I propose making
spending limits the law. This simple step would mean that every additional dollar the Congress wants
to spend in excess of spending limits must be matched by a dollar in spending cuts elsewhere. Budget
limits must mean something, and not just serve as vague guidelines to be routinely violated. This
single change in the procedures of the Congress would bring further spending restraint to Washington."
WHAHAHAHAHAA
what a bold faced LIAR!
Op-ed Columnist: Budgets of Mass Destruction

February 1, 2004
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN



It should be clear to all by now that what we have in the
Bush team is a faith-based administration. It launched a
faith-based war in Iraq, on the basis of faith-based
intelligence, with a faith-based plan for Iraqi
reconstruction, supported by faith-based tax cuts to
generate faith-based revenues. This group believes that
what matters in politics and economics are conviction and
will - not facts, social science or history.

Personally, I don't believe the Bush team will pay a
long-term political price for its faith-based intelligence
about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Too many
Americans, including me, believe in their guts that
removing Saddam was the right thing to do, even if the
W.M.D. intel was wrong.

The Bush team's real vulnerability is its B.M.D. - Budgets
of Mass Destruction, which have recklessly imperiled the
nation's future, with crazy tax-cutting and out-of-control
spending. The latest report from the Congressional Budget
Office says the deficit is expected to total some $2.4
trillion over the next decade - almost $1 trillion more
than the prediction of just five months ago. That is a
failure of intelligence and common sense that threatens to
make us all insecure - and people also feel that in their
guts.

As Peter Peterson, the former Nixon commerce secretary and
a longtime courageous advocate of fiscal responsibility,
puts it in "Running on Empty," his forthcoming book: "In
the 1980 election, Ronald Reagan galvanized the American
electorate with that famous riff: `I want to ask every
American: Are you better off now than you were four years
ago?' Perhaps some future-oriented presidential candidate
should rephrase this line as follows: `I want to ask every
American, young people especially: Is your future better
off now than it was four years ago - now that you are
saddled with these large new liabilities and the higher
taxes that must eventually accompany them?' "

While in his book Mr. Peterson equally indicts Democrats
and Republicans as co-conspirators in the fiscal follies of
our times, the Democrats should still follow his lead and
make this their campaign mantra: "Is your future better off
now than it was four years ago?" That's what's on people's
minds. It should be coupled with the bumper sticker: "Read
My Lips: No New Services. Bush Gave All the Money Away."
And it should be backed up with a responsible Democratic
alternative on both taxes and spending.

That is the only way to expose what the shameful coalition
of Karl Rove-led cynics, who care only about winning the
next election; voodoo economists preaching supply-side
economics; and libertarian nuts who think that by cutting
tax revenues you'll shrink the government - when all you do
is balloon the deficit - is doing to our future. And please
don't tell me the tax cuts are working. Of course they're
working! If you put this much stimulus into our economy -
three tax cuts, loose monetary policy and out-of-control
spending - it will produce a boom. Eat 10 chocolate bars at
once and you'll also get a rush. But at what long-term
cost?

"Quite simply," argues Mr. Peterson, "those bell-bottomed
young boomers of the 1960's have fully matured. The oldest
of them, born in 1946, are only six years away from the
median age of retirement on Social Security (63). As a
result, our large pension and health care benefit programs
will soon experience rapidly accelerating benefit outlays.
. . . Thus, at a time when the federal government should be
building up surpluses to prepare for the aging of the baby
boom generation, it is engaged in another reckless
experiment with large and permanent tax cuts. America
cannot grow its way out of the kinds of long-term deficits
we now face. . . . The odds are growing that today's
ballooning trade and fiscal deficits, the so-called twin
deficits, will someday trigger an explosion that causes the
economy to sink - not rise."

The same Bush folks who assured us Saddam had W.M.D. now
assure us these budgets of mass destruction don't matter.
Sure. "During the Vietnam War," notes Mr. Peterson,
"conservatives relentlessly pilloried Lyndon Johnson for
his fiscal irresponsibility. But he only wanted guns and
butter. Today, so-called conservatives are out-pandering
L.B.J. They must have it all: guns, butter and tax cuts."

This is so irresponsible and it will end in tears.
Remember, says Mr. Peterson, long-term tax cuts without
long-term spending cuts are not tax cuts. They are "tax
deferrals" - with the burden to be borne by your future or
your kid's future.

If this isn't the election issue, I don't know what is.

nytimes.com

CC