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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alan Smithee who wrote (40626)1/26/2010 8:52:14 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Respond to of 71588
 
Wowza. You're replying to 3 1/2 year old posts?

A lot of time on your hands?


He had a job during the good economy of President Bush. Now that Obama is screwing up the economy he has lots of time to catch up. <:-)



To: Alan Smithee who wrote (40626)2/19/2010 9:02:43 AM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation  Respond to of 71588
 
Obama's Deafness to Voters May Cost Dems at the Ballot Box
by Gary Bauer

02/19/2010

President Bush was both loved and loathed for his resoluteness of purpose. But his successor has taken that trait to an entirely new level, to the point that he's become obstinate in the face of a clear reality.

President Obama, his lieutenants and media allies claim that prevailing public anger is rooted in frustration over a Washington that's "getting nothing done." They are wrong. Most of the outrage is the result of a Washington that's doing too much to push policies that have always failed.

Sure there are some areas in which the president has failed to act. Despite Candidate Obama's promises, there has been little transparency, miniscule amounts of bi-partisanship and no net spending decreases.


But other than that, the Obama administration's problems have nothing to do with inaction. Ever since a newly-inaugurated Obama tersely responded "I won" to Republican congressional leaders who challenged him over the contents of his first stimulus, he has been working feverishly to take the American economy away from its entrepreneurial roots and replace it with European-style socialism.

Liberal politicians and pundits are clinging to the idea that if only cap and trade became law, if only Congress passed more stimulus legislation, and if only the federal government took over the banking and health care industries, Democrats' November election hopes would brighten with the public's mood.

But there is no indication of that. Scott Brown won in Massachusetts in large part because he promised to be the decisive vote against socialized medicine and other wasteful spending.

Polls show that three quarters of independent voters have a favorable opinion of a cause-the Tea Party movement-that was founded on the pursuit of smaller government. Polls show most Americans want to start the health care debate over from square one and that only a third of Americans think the country is headed in the right direction.

Polls also show Americans disapprove of the job the president's done on almost every issue he has undertaken. A new CNN poll showed only a third of voters think Congress members have earned right to win reelection and that just 44 percent thinks Obama deserves to be re-elected.

The Left blames public discontent on everything from alleged GOP obstructionism and supposed Tea Party racism to voter ignorance. Obama is even implementing a new communications strategy to better convey his message to a nation he clearly believes is just too dim to understand anything beyond infantile slogans like "change we can believe in."

But the only communications problem right now has to do with the Obama administration's refusal to listen to an electorate that's loudly rejecting its agenda. The Democrats deliberate deafness to voter voices could prove electorally fatal in November when those voices will speak too decisively to be ignored, as the left learned in Massachusetts.

Democrats think they have hit on a winning narrative by labeling congressional Republicans "the party of no." But the real problem for Democrats is that the American electorate has become "the nation of no." No more fake stimulus. No more socialized medicine. No more government takeovers of industries. No more tax increases based on dubious science. No more government bailouts of irresponsible companies.

Democrats simply do not understand why so many Americans are so angry. Or perhaps it's that they do not care. All indications are that Democrats will push ahead with their agenda, passing more pork barrel spending and using reconciliation to ram through socialized medicine.

Obama's budget continues the irresponsible spending that's fueled the backlash. According to economist James Capretta, "From 1789 through 2008, the U.S. government borrowed $5.8 trillion. If the Obama budget were adopted in full, government borrowing would exceed $18 trillion by the end of the decade."

Some Democratic strategists are urging their candidates to double down on the Obama agenda. As one consultant told The Hill newspaper this week, "You can't in the late winter start saying, 'I'm not an Obama Democrat.' There's nowhere else to go."

In a recent meeting with Obama, Arkansas Democratic Senator Blanche Lincoln implored the president to change his extreme agenda and find common ground with Republicans. Obama's response was, essentially, "no." His goal, he suggested, is "to stir things up here."

Obama and congressional Democrats were swept into office on a wave of discontent over problems that occurred on the GOP's watch. Voters were looking for something new, anything new. And Barack Obama gave them a politician who in almost every way was the opposite of George W. Bush. But Obama wrongly interpreted the 2008 elections as a mandate to enact a leftwing policy agenda.

Joe Biden said this week, "Washington right now is broken. We understand why they're angry...We get it." He's wrong on both counts.

Americans are angry because most of them have a loved one who's unemployed or whose home is in foreclosure. And they're angry because an out-of-touch government is obstinately pursuing an agenda that will only aggravate those conditions.

And in a sense, Biden is wrong that Washington is broken. Yes, the political party currently running Washington is broken. But the Democrats' current crisis-the electoral losses, the plummeting poll numbers, the surprise retirements-is proof that our democracy is working just as our Founders intended.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Former presidential candidate Mr. Gary Bauer is president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
humanevents.com



To: Alan Smithee who wrote (40626)4/22/2010 10:38:45 PM
From: Peter Dierks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
Could the U.S. become Argentina?
Obama policies have put the nation on a similar downhill slide

By Richard W. Rahn

A century ago, if you had told typical citizens of Argentina (which at that time was enjoying the fourth-highest per capita income in the world) that it would decline to become just the 76th richest nation on a per capita basis in 2010, they probably would not have found it believable. They might have responded, "This could not happen; we are a nation rich in natural resources, with a great climate for agriculture. Our people are well educated and largely descended from European stock. We have property rights, the rule of law and an open free-market economy."

But the fact is, Argentina has been going downhill for eight decades, and it has the second-worst credit ranking in the entire world - only Venezuela has a lower ranking. Argentina, despite its natural resources and human capital, has managed to throw it all away. Argentina did not become relatively poor because of having been involved in destructive conflicts. It became poor because it has had a series of both democratically elected leaders and non-elected dictators who never missed an opportunity to make the wrong economic decisions. It is, once again, trying to renege on paying the principal and interest on Argentine government bonds to foreign bondholders, and hence New York state (where many of the bonds are serviced) may take further action against Argentina, including fines and asset seizures.

In the 1930s, the Argentine government increased its interventions in the private economy. Juan Peron took over in 1946 and ended up nationalizing the railroads, the merchant marine, public utilities, public transport and other parts of the private economy. For much of the past half-century, Argentina has engaged in a series of erratic monetary policies, often resulting in periods of very high inflation and economic stagnation. Because of their political power, the unions have been coddled, resulting in unsustainable wage-and-benefit programs. Excessive government spending has caused recurrent fiscal meltdowns, where both foreign and domestic debt-holders have lost many of their investments.

According to the Economic Freedom of the World Annual Report (published by the Fraser Institute in cooperation with the Cato Institute and others), Argentina ranks 105 out of 141 countries surveyed. Similarly, the 2010 Index of Economic Freedom (published by the Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal) ranks Argentina 135 out of the 179 countries surveyed. (The U.S. is No. 8 and falling.)

The U.S. has a per capita income of about $47,000 per year, while Argentina's is just $14,000 on a purchasing-power parity (PPP) basis. A hundred years ago, Argentina's per capita income was about 80 percent of that in the U.S. If Argentina had done as well relatively as the United States, it would have a per capita income of about $38,000 today. Countries can become wealthy in a few decades, as have South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Finland, by following the correct economic policies. They also can become relatively poor, as have Argentina, Cuba and Venezuela, by doing the wrong things.

Argentina has extensive import bans and controls. The Obama administration has been advocating protectionist trade policies and has opposed the ratification of previously negotiated trade agreements.

Argentina has income tax rates roughly equivalent to those in the United States but also has a value-added tax (VAT) and a wealth tax. Officials of the Obama administration and some members of the U.S. Congress are flirting with a VAT.

Argentina has continued to run inflationary monetary policies while at the same time attempting to treat the symptoms through price controls. The U.S. Federal Reserve has greatly increased the money supply, which is likely to produce future inflation. Officials of the Obama administration, at times, have advocated price controls of insurance companies, medical suppliers, financial institutions and even fees for carry-on luggage on airplanes.

Argentina's largest bank is state-owned, as are a number of its other banks. The Obama administration forced a number of large American banks to become partially government-owned. The two largest mortgage institutions in the United States - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac - are now largely government-owned-and-controlled.

Argentine courts are slow and corrupt. Property rights are not secure, and the government has willfully understated inflation statistics, causing foreign and domestic bondholders to lose much of their investments. The Obama administration unilaterally took away bondholders' rights in the GM and Chrysler cases and, in essence, took their assets and turned them over to the unions that had supported Mr. Obama.

Argentina has extensive labor regulations to favor unions, which greatly increase the cost of hiring. The Obama administration has supported costly labor regulations that the unions favor, which eventually will drive up the cost of hiring workers and result in higher unemployment.

Argentina has a long history of deficit spending, which, in turn, has made government debt burdens so high that the government refuses to pay the debt to the private domestic and international debt holders. Over the next 30 years, economists associated with the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, estimate (as have many U.S. economists) that the U.S. public debt will rise to between 200 percent and 500 percent of GDP. (It is now about 60 percent.) Debt levels of 200 percent to 500 percent cannot be supported; hence, the debt holders will face erosion of their capital through either inflation or nonpayment.

The U.S. is not yet Argentina, but, if many of the policies of the Obama administration are not reversed, America will only get poorer and, in as little as 30 years, become a middle-income country, while dozens of other countries will enjoy a higher standard of living.

Richard W. Rahn is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth.

washingtontimes.com