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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 10K a day who wrote (98748)5/22/2007 4:10:45 PM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 173976
 
Thanks for underscoring my point, doooood....lol



To: 10K a day who wrote (98748)5/22/2007 10:16:34 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 173976
 
'Malaise' Maestro
By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Tuesday, May 22, 2007 4:20 PM PT

Leadership: When it comes to economic performance, there's no contest: Apart from the early years of the Depression, Jimmy Carter's brief tenure as president was the worst in the 20th century.

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Profile In Incompetence: Second In A Series
More on this series

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Carter's rather smug attempt to rank President Bush as the worst president ever wouldn't be so bad if it weren't so wrong. The irony, of course, is that the peanut farmer from Plains, Ga., shares that distinction with a number of other presidential mismanagers of our nation's economy.

Carter apparently has gotten so used to being called the "greatest living former president" that he's forgotten to consult the record. And what the record shows is he inherited a bad economy and made it worse — much worse — before a man named Ronald Reagan came in and changed course.

Here's where things stood in 1980, Carter's last year in office, and in subsequent periods:


• Carter: Interest rate, 21%. Inflation, 13.5%. Unemployment, 7%. The so-called "Misery Index," which Carter used to great effect in his 1976 campaign to win election, 20.5%.

• Reagan's last year: Interest rate, 9%. Inflation, 4.1%. Unemployment, 5.5%. Misery Index, 9.6%.

• Bush today: Interest rate, 8%. Inflation, 2.6%. Unemployment, 4.5%. Misery Index, 7.1%.

It's not even close. The only question is: Why did things get so bad under Carter? And that's a long story. The fundamental reason, however, is he made mistake after mistake, blinded by the leftist rhetoric his party adopted after the infamous '72 Democratic Convention, when the so-called New Left seized control.

In office, Carter adopted the Keynesian economics of the time, buying into the theory that there was a reverse "trade-off" between inflation and unemployment — an idea that proved spectacularly wrong. The U.S. became mired in "stagflation," with both inflation and unemployment rising sharply.

As things grew worse, Carter sharply boosted government spending. When that didn't work, he blamed the American people. "I think it's inevitable that there will be a lower standard of living than what everybody had always anticipated," he told advisers in 1979. "The only trend is downward. But it's impossible to get people to face up to this."

Those remarks were followed by his now-famous "malaise" speech in which he unveiled six proposals — including import quotas, windfall profits taxes and increased spending on alternative fuels — to combat higher oil prices charged by OPEC. Nothing about tax cuts. Nothing about finding more energy. In short, he told Americans to consume less, but pay more.

"We have learned that 'more' is not necessarily 'better,' and that even our great nation has its recognized limits," Carter said, borrowing heavily from the "limits to growth" movement that swept liberal intellectual circles in the '70s.

With public anger growing and his own polls lagging, Carter started wearing sweaters and encouraging us to turn down the thermostat. But his big spending didn't work. The resulting budget deficit, 12 times bigger than the one President Nixon left, gave him a serious public relations problem.

On this score, Carter might have escaped his own malaise if he had cut taxes to get the economy going again. But even with marginal income tax rates at a hefty 70%, he accepted the common wisdom that a tax cut would boost inflation and lower government revenue. He was dead wrong.

As noted in "The Commanding Heights," a leading economic history of the last century, "Carter's attempts to follow Keynes' formula and spend his way out of trouble were going nowhere."

Eventually (but grudgingly), Carter did agree to slash the tax rate on capital gains to 28% from 40%. But that didn't kick in until 1979. By then it was too late to help him politically.

Two other moves have garnered Carter praise: setting deregulation in motion and naming Paul Volcker as Fed chairman in 1979. Carter did begin deregulation, for which he deserves credit. And to be sure, Volcker clamped down on the growth in money supply, bringing on a deep recession but also killing the inflationary spiral.

Inflation, however, was already easing when Carter entered office. It was only after he named a political supporter, the late G. William Miller, as Fed chairman that prices really took off. Miller, who served only a year, is now viewed as the worst Fed chief ever.

Volcker? He wasn't Carter's choice. He was nominated only after a contingent of Wall Street power brokers, alarmed at the economy's decline, went to the White House and demanded the appointment of the well-respected president of the New York Fed.

In his last years in office, Carter spoke of an "erosion of our confidence in the future." But his failure to support the Shah of Iran led to a takeover of that oil-rich republic by fundamentalist Muslims, and a second Mideast oil shock hammered the economy and pushed inflation to new highs.

Desperate, Carter tried "voluntary" wage and price controls. They didn't work. He tried credit controls. They didn't work. He kept oil-price controls mostly in place, and created a vast new bureaucracy — the Energy Department — that has since wasted tens of billions of dollars without creating a single drop of new energy.

The result can be seen in key indicators of American well-being. Real median after-tax income fell nearly 3% during Carter's last two years. For his entire term, productivity — the fuel for future growth in standards of living — rose a miserable 0.6% a year.

That's why, when candidate Ronald Reagan said, "Ask yourself if you're better off today than you were four years ago," the answer came back a resounding "No."



To: 10K a day who wrote (98748)5/22/2007 10:18:44 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 173976
 
Less Of Moore
By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Tuesday, May 22, 2007 4:20 PM PT

Hypocrisy: Propaganda filmmaker Michael Moore is wondering where America's soul has gone. He could get the answer by engaging in a little bit of introspection.

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Moore is being feted and toasted at the Cannes Film Festival for his latest manipulative movie "Sicko" just as he had been for "Fahrenheit 9/11." Imagine that: Garnering applause at a snooty international event for anti-American movies.

Naturally, the media treat Moore as if he's a serious person making serious movies, which lets him explain his higher motives in creating an opus with a schoolyard title.

"I'm trying to explore bigger ideas and bigger issues, and in this case the bigger issue in this film is who are we as a people?" Moore told reporters after a press screening.

"Why do we behave the way we behave? What has become of us? Where is our soul?"

Speaking of "soul," the real soul-destroying problem we have in this country comes from a cadre of hostile culturati who harbor malice for the virtues that made America strong and proud. Moore is mainly an ego-driven opportunist, but he fits in neatly with the sneering elitists since he speaks their language so well.

The elitists — who are always on the left — trade in lies, half-truths and disinformation. They're anti-capitalists (except when it benefits them). Their goal is to undermine our American tradition of free men, free markets and individuality that has served better than any other system in history. They dreamily long for progressive (or more precisely, statist and socialist) policies to regiment human behavior. They are nostalgic for a time that never was in this country but regrettably was in the Soviet Union.

The elitists' rejection of our time-honored values has torn at our souls, assaulted our sensibilities, eroded our work ethic, softened our attitudes about responsibility and increased our sense of entitlement. The last insult is in their mainstreaming of mushy thinking.

The insufferably narcissistic Moore, who lives on the ritzy Upper West Side of Manhattan while portraying himself to be just another working man, has helped the cause by using the art of distortion to paint America as a villain.

In "Sicko," his critique of the U.S. health care system, Moore tries to claim that U.S. medical care is a captive of free-market "greed." Nearly 20 years earlier, he used "Roger & Me" to try to paint General Motors and then-CEO Roger Smith as cogs of a rapacious American corporate machine that devours the weak and the poor.

Moore was most dishonest when he made "Fahrenheit 9/11." He accused President Bush of using the 9/11 attack as a rah-rah excuse to go to war with Iraq. It was propaganda. Dave Kopel of the Colorado-based Independence Institute documented 59 deceits in the movie.

In his Riefenstahl-ish "Sicko," Moore tries to make the argument that Cuban health care is superior in both quality and cost to U.S. health care. But if it were Moore's own health at stake, would he choose Cuba or the U.S.? This year even dictator Fidel Castro had to call in a doctor from abroad to get proper medical care for a relatively uncomplicated illness.

But don't say anything negative about the island-prison's health care. Doing so has landed many a Cuban in prison — assuming the care itself didn't put him in the ground — as would making a film that criticized the Cuban government, even on milder terms than Moore criticized the U.S.

It's reasonable to think that Moore himself may have considered the irony. But his greed and ego override it.

Were Moore merely poking at an ossified establishment, were he a modern-day Will Rogers or H.L. Mencken, then his work might have value.

But he has tried to pass off his fiction as fact. He goes for the emotional at the expense of the rational. He stages scenes and takes cheap shots. His is the work of a pretentious auteur looking for his own soul. That such a man should be praised is a shame on everyone involved.



To: 10K a day who wrote (98748)5/22/2007 10:19:29 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 173976
 
ibdeditorials.com



To: 10K a day who wrote (98748)5/22/2007 10:20:43 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 173976
 
The Do-One-Thing Congress
By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Tuesday, May 15, 2007 4:20 PM PT

Legislative Failure: For all the promises of its new Democratic leaders, Congress seems truly interested in doing only one thing: surrendering in Iraq. No wonder its public approval ratings have sunk below the president's.

Congressional Democrats' latest attempt to leave our troops in Iraq high and dry comes in the form of amendments to, of all things, the Water Resources Development Act.

Appeasing the party's anti-war base, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada is allowing a vote this week on an amendment he co-authored with Wisconsin Democrat Sen. Russ Feingold to withdraw forces from Iraq in a just over 10 months.

Reid also is letting another amendment come to the floor, which he co-authored with Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, the Michigan Democrat.

That measure contains a gimmick they call a "presidential waiver," a mechanism in which the president would "waive" Congress' withdrawal deadline every 90 days based on progress made by the Iraqi government.

What president (other than, maybe, the milquetoast Jimmy Carter) would stoop to performing that kind of song and dance for Congress — on the deadly serious subject of war — every three months?

The Reid-Levin amendment would also "pressure" Iraq's government by withholding economic aid. That idea is both misguided and pointless, as military historian Frederick Kagan shows in last month's American Enterprise Institute "Phase II" analysis of Iraq.

"The Iraqi government holds more than $10 billion in surplus funds that it was not able — for bureaucratic, security, and other reasons — to expend last year," Kagan notes.

"This sum dwarfs any amounts Iraq might hope to expect from the outside, and shows that the Iraqi government is increasingly able to fund the rebuilding of its own country. The challenge now has shifted from funding and undertaking reconstruction programs from the outside to helping the Iraqis spend their own money to develop their own state."

But without the U.S. military finishing its job and, together with Iraqi forces, establishing security, a functioning economy will be impossible — giving the terrorists an upper hand.

As Kagan points out, "Failure to provide essential services not only alienates the population from the government, but also creates space for militias and insurgents to offer those services at a rudimentary level in return for loyalty and control over the population."

Reid's games are part of the House and Senate's attempts to get a new supplemental spending bill on the president's desk by Memorial Day. The House's version now splits war spending in two, with less than $43 billion funding operations through July 31, then another vote in July to release the remaining $52.8 billion for operations through October.

What can you say about a Congress that cannot pass a bill to fund our troops? This is a Congress that actually ties spending for the global war on terrorism to a nearly $14 billion water bill, a chunk of which is devoted to Hurricane Katrina rebuilding efforts.

As Congressional Quarterly noted this week, since taking over Congress this year, the Democrats have only passed 26 laws, 12 of which "changed the name of a federal building, post office or national recreation area."

So much for the "new America" House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised, transformed by fresh measures on energy, health care and campaign finance. Maybe we should be grateful: Better they do nothing than something utterly wrong or even harmful.

This Congress largely has refused to find common ground with the president on anything. No wonder Gallup reports this week that Congress' approval rating, which has dropped steadily from 37% when Democrats took over, is now at 29% — well below the 33%-and-holding for President Bush that the media routinely describes as "rock-bottom."

Congress' dismal rating is also 3 percentage points below the 32% average of the first five months of the year, with some 64% of those polled by Gallup disapproving of the new Congress' performance.

Remember the hoopla about Pelosi's first "hundred hours"? The 110th Congress has now passed the 100-day mark. What has it done



To: 10K a day who wrote (98748)5/23/2007 12:57:10 PM
From: SeachRE  Respond to of 173976
 
I agree 100% on perv`s BDS BS...