Permanently? That's a pretty extreme claim isn't it?
You too, Meadmaker. I find it curious that you are defending the notion of 10+ years of extremely high deficits given your past statements about deficits and balanced budgets. For example,
"If the economy grows (in real terms) between now and then, he may eventually have more income than you with which to pay it, and the reason why he has more income may be because your country borrowed/spent on his behalf today. If I believed that for a minute, then I could forgive a deficit."
So the question is, MM, do you honestly believe that Obama's programs will grow the economy? Is that why you seem willing to forgive Obama's deficit enhancing program? I take it then, that you don't believe the OMB analysis of the stimulus bill spending which says that 10 years from now that spending will be shrinking the economy. Do you predict that the economy will grow thanks to the stimulus bill in the near term more than the OMB ... which predicts minimal growth at best? And note that most of the massive spending that Obama is proposing over the next decade is NOT oriented towards stimulating or growing the economy ... but towards welfare for those who do not create the wealth. Do you think that can do anything but hurt future GDP?
Here's another of your past statements:
"How about if we just agree to pay the bills. Remember back when the GOP was all for a Balanced Budget Ammendment? Reagan campaigned on it in 1980. Newt made it part of the Contract With America. Why'd they give it up? I miss those days."
Do you still miss those days?
Or this statement:
"When it comes to budgets and taxes, everyone seems to think that if we just spent money on only my favorite programs, and lowered my taxes, that we could end all the problems with debt. Of course that's nonsense. So, instead of looking at whether this program or that program is a good idea, let's look back in the past and see who was successful and who wasn't. Who balanced the budget? Who made the debt get larger? How did they do it? There's a record here that's worth examining, if you ask me."
Do you think Obama has really done that, MM?
And this, talking about McCain:
"I think it is reasonably certain that his tax policies, if implemented, would continue to dramatically increase the national debt. That situation cannot continue indefinitely, and a depression is one possible outcome."
So do you think a depression is a possible outcome of Obama's even more massive increase in the National Debt?
So, calm down. Come the year 2010, Obama's power will probably be significantly diminished by mid term elections. Come 2012, if things are as bad as you think they will be, we will still be a democracy, and there will be a new guy, probably a Republican, to try and undo the damage.
Except that as LBJ proved, it doesn't take many years to get programs in place that will have long term consequence. It's a lot harder to undo mistakes than to make them. We are still suffering from LBJ's mistakes (and FDR's). Finally, it's almost impossible to reverse things unless someone like a Reagan comes along ... and I don't see anyone like him around.
In fact, someone (I think it was Neil Cavuto) recently made the comment that Obama is the anti-Reagan. Someone with the charm and glib tongue of Reagan, and the ideological conviction that Reagan had, but who thinks the opposite of Reagan when it comes to government, the people, and their respective roles. That's what makes Obama so dangerous now.
FWIW, I expected Obama to be more aggressive on deficit reduction, and am disappointed he is not. Four years later, to be half as bad as George W. Bush is an extraordinarily low standard.
This is simply dishonest. Obama will only get the deficit down to $533 billion in 2012 (before it goes back up under his proposals). That is NOT half, but in fact more than the deficit we saw under all eight years of Bush (except the last 3 months of his term). And since Obama has stated that the deficit is what got us in this economic mess, those last 3 months shouldn't count towards what constititutes halving the deficit, if we don't want to find ourselves in this mess *permanently*. Right?