Hindmost
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2006
- Messages
- 3,307
Well the *expertise* of he and his economic advisors certainly wasn't in evidence back in May of 2009 when he held a major press conference to sell his health care proposals. He opened it with this prepared speech: http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2009/07/22/transcript_of_obama_prime-time.html?wprss=44 . And during that speech, he wanted to show how his agenda had already worked to make the US economic situation better … to reassure the public that his adminstration knew what it was doing with respect to health care. So he said the following (which presumably his economic advisors concurred with, since not one of them stood up anytime after the speech and said "sorry, Mr. President, but that's not quite right"):
The problem is that bold part is TOTALLY, COMPLETELY and ABSOLUTELY wrong. And why am I so sure? Because the Obama adminstration had to have been aware of the work the CBO had done on the budget and debt. Had to have been aware of a report they'd published in March. Here's the report: http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cach...rent+law+assumptions&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us and here's what it says on page 11:
Now surely YOU understand what that says. It says that the cumulative deficit WITH Obama's budget is $9.3 trillion, not $7.1 trillion as he claimed. It says that the cumulative deficit WITHOUT Obama's proposals would have been $4.4 trillion, not $9.3 trillion as he claimed. And it says that the President's budget proposals will increase the cumulative deficit by $4.9 trillion dollars (that's 9.3 minus 4.4 ... very simple math) over the next 10 years, not reduce it by $2.2 trillion, as Obama claimed. It's clear as day. Simple math.
And surely Obama and his economic advisors read that very important CBO report and did the math. You don't really want to claim they didn't, do you? Because I can prove that they did, based on other speeches and documents by the Obama administration during that time frame. So we are left with only four possibilities.
The first is that Obama just flubbed the speech. That he said $9.3 trillion, when he meant to say $4.4 trillion. But we know he didn't because he then went on to cite a $7.1 trillion figure (which, by the way, just happens to have been the published 10 year cumulative deficit projected by the Whitehouse at the time) and then subtract that from $9.3 trillion to arrive at the $2.2 trillion dollar savings that he boasted about. No, he clearly meant to say what he said and after the fact, noone at the Whitehouse tried to correct his numbers … say he misspoke.
The second is that Obama and his economic advisors couldn't understand that very clear English sentence in the CBO report. But surely they can. After all, Obama was President of the Harvard Law Review and his advisors no doubt come from equally prestigious Ivy League institutions. Surely you don't want to claim that they couldn't understand such a simple, well constructed, English sentence. No, I think it's safe to assume they can read.
The third possibility is that Obama didn't have the economic acumen to understand what was written in the CBO report. And as a result it confused him (all those billions and trillions, and percentages and economic "lingo") and as result he just totally, but accidently, misrepresented what it said when he wrote the speech. Mixed up the CBO's numbers with the OMB's numbers. Came to the wrong conclusion. That's possible ... but surely a speech as important as this one (which was announced far in advance of the speech) was prepared well in advance and reviewed by numerous members of his highly educated staff. Including his economic advisors. Surely they went over it with a fine tooth comb. So it's hard to imagine that Obama's comment doesn't reflect the *expertise* of his economic (and other) advisors as well. And do you really think all of them would also be confused by the billions and trillions, percentages and economist "lingo"? No, of course not.
So that leaves only one possibility. That Obama and his staff (including his economic *experts*) tried to deliberately mislead the American public because they wanted Universal Health Care and were willing to do or say anything to get it. And that's called lying. And as far as I'm concerned, economic *experts* willing to lie aren't worth a plug nickel. So yes, I'd offer this example as proof the President has less expertise and less economic expertise to "draw upon".![]()
I admire you ability to cherry pick stuff and use it rhetorically..you are much better than me.
Flashback....Reagan predicted he would reduce the federal deficit...no...increased govt spending.
http://finance.yahoo.com/taxes/article/110597/taxes-what-people-forget-about-reagan?mod=taxes-filing
Bush Senior predicted he would reduce the deficit.
Clinton predicted he would reduce the deficit...wait...he actually did.
2000-2001--CBO predicts budget surpluses for the next decade and then younger Bush gets elected...increased govt spending and doubles the deficit. (I don't think he was lying...just really dumb)
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/28xx/doc2819/AnalysisPresBud.pdf
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/dont-blame-obama-for-bushs-2009-deficit/
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=11094
I find it unbelieveable that you can't understand the intangibles that affect the economy with what occurred over the last few years. Any prediction has a very short half life. Did you predict the precipitous fall of almost all the US financial firms? I don't recall any specific post.
I will still bet against the republicans to keep my money safe.
glenn
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