thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,611
What, you think his legislative agenda was a secret?
What part of his legilative agenda increased the deficit?
What, you think his legislative agenda was a secret?
You're kidding, right?
Why on earth would you say that? Because that graph shows deficit relative to GDP? If so, you're badly mistaking my argument. And my previous response to GreNME should have demonstrated what I meant. Let's take a look back so I can hopefully clarify for you:
Note: quadrupled refers to the deficit having increase by a factor of four over what it had been.
Note that I talked about an infinity-fold increase in going from zero deficit to $1 deficit. Relative to GDP, $1 is still negligible. But relative to past deficit, it's and infinity-fold increase. In other words, when I was talking about relative increases being irrelevant, I meant relative to what the deficit had been. Just as when SoT said that the deficit increased by a factor of four, he meant relative to what the deficit had been. In fact, I even edited that post quite some time ago to include the word "fractional", with the express purpose of trying to clarify that point. Measuring relative to GDP (versus in dollar amounts) isn't at issue here, especially since the GDP hasn't varied by that much, so the large changes in deficit-to-GDP ratios have also been large changes in dollar amounts. Either of those measures will tell the same story: the deficit exploded in 2009.

Are you in the circus, Ziggy? Because your mental gymnastics are fantastic.
Like I already said, taking the old Ron Paul tropes and repackaging them as if they're something new is neither convincing nor rational.
Nothing irrational to be concerned about it, except that's NOT what the Tea Party is about.
Aren't you also deciding what their motives are?It's easy to win arguments if you get to decide what motivates them (even when it contradicts their own claims), and discount anything they say based on what you decide those motives are.
Aren't you also deciding what their motives are?
I don't give a damn about Ron Paul. The explosion of the deficit in 2009 is not a "trope", it's reality, and there's nothing irrational about being concerned about it.
It's easy to win arguments if you get to decide what motivates them (even when it contradicts their own claims), and discount anything they say based on what you decide those motives are.
I'm accepting what they say their motives are. I don't have the mind-reading talents Thai seems to have, so I'm stuck with the simplest and most obvious option.
Obama lowered taxes.
We pay for what government spends. The longer we wait to pay for it, the more we pay. Cutting taxes while increasing spending doesn't help the fiscal picture. You're not stupid enough to believe otherwise. Why do you demand anyone else should be?
Knowing where your memes originate is one of the first steps to realizing how irrational the memes are.
All you're doing is playing a repackaged version of the song and dance Paul-ites have been playing for years
The deficit was the biggest ever under Bush (and Reagan, and Bush Sr.)
So, frankly, I don't care about whether you give a damn, because you are not the end-all-be-all of the Tea Party and its supporters. All you have in defense is movable goalposts and no-true-teabagger arguments when challenged. When you come up with something substantial maybe we can catch up with some reasonable debate.
Because apparently almost the entire membership of the Tea Party has been during the entire previous administration.
So we've moved from "quadrupled the deficit" to "deficit threshold" to "percentage of GDP" as supposed reasons.
I'm willing to bet that I could go to any TP event and ask 100 folks what "GDP" is and what the current US GDP is in dollars, and I could guarantee that an overwhelming majority (and possibly every last one) will fail to provide a correct answer.
But you go ahead and keep shifting that goalpost.