Then it would have been about campaign finance illegalities, invasion of privacy, bribery, blackmail, treason and perhaps even murder (or at least the coverup of several possible murders).
Take it to the conspiracy theory forum.
Then it would have been about campaign finance illegalities, invasion of privacy, bribery, blackmail, treason and perhaps even murder (or at least the coverup of several possible murders).
FRIKKING BS YOU CAN'T. You tell them the funding for the next year is not getting signed unless that dog of a mandate is kicked out.The bill(s) for mandatory spending are already enacted, you can’t veto a bill once it’s already law.
FRIKKING BS YOU CAN'T. You tell them the funding for the next year is not getting signed unless that dog of a mandate is kicked out.
We create social programs to take care of needs that the market ignores.
Millions of elderly people were living on the streets before Social Security was created.
Four years ago, George W. Bush attempted to reform the entitlement program Social Security, warning that the system was accelerating into collapse and would soon run deficits. Democrats scoffed and claimed the Social Security system was solid and wouldn’t have problems for at least 50 years, as Harry Reid told PBS’ Jim Lehrer in June 2005. Just last year, the CBO — under the direction of Peter Orszag, now budget director in the Obama administration — claimed that the first cash deficits in Social Security would not come until 2019.
Now, however, the CBO has determined that Social Security will run cash deficits next year and in 2010, and by 2017 will be more or less in permanent deficit mode. Hot Air has exclusively obtained the summer 2009 CBO report sent to legislators on Capitol Hill but not yet made public, which shows that outgo will exceed income for the first time ever on an annual basis in 2010
Millions of people are now dying due to lack of private health care
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
I say that if we had devoted that 10 trillion dollars we spent on the WOP over the last 45 years to other things, our economy would be stronger than it is now and poverty rates would be lower than now.
You can say it all you like but you have no evidence to support your point of view.
So why are American workers the most productive in the world?
Why do we have the highest GDP in the world (or second if you count the EU as a single country)?
So increase revenues by raising taxes on the wealthy.
By the way, those 59-64 years that you seem to admire so much for the rapidly falling poverty had an upper tax bracket of 91%.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
It really comes down to what mechanisms exist for deciding what is smart spending as opposed to dumb spending. The free market (if left alone) has mechanisms (including recessions) for encouraging smart spending ... for encouraging growth which in the end is the only thing that will make us all wealthier.
Ah, but we're not talking about making people wealthier.
That's not government's role
, and the market takes care of that function just fine.
We're talking about taking care of basic needs like health care when the market chooses not to provide them.
Luckily universal health care happens to be an example of smart spending and it will help the economy as our overall health care costs as a nation will drop
Where do you think the m Imagine how the auto manufacturers could better compete with the Japanese if they weren't saddled with huge legacy health care costs.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Like I say, there are mechanisms and forces that encourage dumb decision making in government. And no mechanisms to really punish those who make such decisions.
On the contrary. The government is, at least theoretically, run by the people and is from time to time forced to answer to the people and be responsive to their needs and concerns.
That's why the Republican party is currently not in power. That's the punishment for 8 years of incredibly dumb decision making.
Corporate CEOs only have to answer to their shareholders, or nobody if the company is privately held.
Huh? Since when are you not allowed to sue the government?
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Private companies go out business when they aren't successful, long before they can impoverish a country.
They can at least screw over an entire state though before they go under. See Enron/California.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Just that when it comes to trillion dollar federal programs, we best be careful because those programs haven't really worked very well. It is hard to find success stories. Can you name any?
Name what, trillion dollar federal programs? No I can't, because the largest federal program, Social Security, only had a $544 billion budget in 2008.
Oh, did you mean successful social programs? That's easy. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, public education, etc. Can you show me any evidence that any of these programs are unsuccessful?
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Your wikipedia source chart shows that the "number in poverty" in 1964 (about 33 million) is less than the "number in poverty" now (about 37 million).
Oh god. Really now? REALLY!? You're going to compare poverty numbers rather than rates?
We haven't seen any increase in population in the interim?
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
To turn your question back on you, is there any evidence that the goals of Obama's spending programs (or the WOP, WOD, Medicare, Public Education) have been met? That what has been achieved is anywhere near worth the cost?
No, you got me there. I have no evidence of the success of any of Obama's programs since he's only been in office 9 months.
I always find these discussions amusing
And if you would be so kind as to address any of the other points you dodged:
Prior to SS, millions of elderly people were taken care of by families (who didn't have to pay prohibitive taxes) and by charity (which actually used to be much greater before the attitude became "let the government do it" because of all the high taxes) and via the elderly's own savings (which again they were able to accumulate due to lower taxes). Then government intervened making the elderly ALL more dependent on future transfer payments to support them. The program was sold via the concept they'd just be *investing* in their own future.
If conservatives get to say "everything changed after 9/11", then the left gets to say "everything changed after the crash".
I can't be bothered to wade through a scree of this post but the above stands out.
Here's whyBut if the United States succumbs to a fiscal crisis, as an increasing number of economic experts fear it may, then the entire balance of global economic power could shift. Military experts talk as if the president's decision about whether to send an additional 40,000 troops to Afghanistan is a make-or-break moment. In reality, his indecision about the deficit could matter much more for the country's long-term national security. Call the United States what you like—superpower, hegemon, or empire—but its ability to manage its finances is closely tied to its ability to remain the predominant global military power.
If we can't afford to stay on the world stage, we retract, and the UN becomes even more useless.But if the United States succumbs to a fiscal crisis, as an increasing number of economic experts fear it may, then the entire balance of global economic power could shift. Military experts talk as if the president's decision about whether to send an additional 40,000 troops to Afghanistan is a make-or-break moment. In reality, his indecision about the deficit could matter much more for the country's long-term national security. Call the United States what you like—superpower, hegemon, or empire—but its ability to manage its finances is closely tied to its ability to remain the predominant global military power.
Prior to SS, millions of elderly people were taken care of by families (who didn't have to pay prohibitive taxes) and by charity (which actually used to be much greater before the attitude became "let the government do it" because of all the high taxes) and via the elderly's own savings (which again they were able to accumulate due to lower taxes). Then government intervened making the elderly ALL more dependent on future transfer payments to support them. The program was sold via the concept they'd just be *investing* in their own future.
Care to actually provide evidence of revenue going down when teh top margianl rate was increased? Last time we increased the rate (under Clinton) tax revenue increased. Again, instead of just making wild guesses based on GOP talking points please back up what you say with evidence.(In regards to taxing the wealthy more BAC responded
But history has already shown that doesn't work. Revenues go down. Don't you folks ever learn?
The truth is that if most people had simply taken the money seized by the Social Security system and put it in very safe securities, they'd would have retired with more than they got from the system.
Hmm, is there any conflict of interest when it comes to investment counselors discussing retirement programs they have no control over? Anyway, no matter how "common" the belief is does not make it true. The CBO has said that even if no changes are made to SS between now and 2040 that SS payments would continue, but at a rdeduced rate starting around 2040. Expect to lose about 30% of the benefit. Not inconsequential but you would still receive 70% of what you initially thought you would get. Getting $0.70/$1.00 is a far cry from the scaremongering you and the "investment counselors" are saying when you say we will never see our money. I guess neither you nor they read CBO reports, eh?Investment counselors will tell you not to rely on it. It's common belief that those putting money in the system now will never see it. And you call that a success?
If you had bothered to actually look at elderly poverty rates you would find they decreased dramtically after SS was instituted. Please, educate yourself before you make statements like you did above that are based on what you "think" instead of actual evidence.
One of the most common arguments supporting Social Security is that it reduces poverty among the elderly. Last week, Barack Obama stated that, “Social Security has lifted millions of seniors and their families out of poverty. Without it, nearly 50 percent of seniors would live below the poverty line.” This is almost certainly untrue.
Social Security affects poverty among the elderly in two offsetting ways. While it reduces poverty by providing income to retired persons, it discourages private saving during the working years—ultimately decreasing the private assets people bring to their retirement. The net effect of this is increased poverty among the retired population.
To understand this conclusion, it is important to compare the rate of return on taxes paid that is generated by Social Security to the rate of return people could receive on their private saving. For those retiring in 2008, the average implicit real (inflation-adjusted) rate of return on Social Security taxes paid was slightly below 3 percent—and it is scheduled to decline to under 2 percent in the next forty years. In contrast, if people retiring in 2008 had invested the taxes they paid into Social Security in a balanced portfolio (60 percent stocks and 40 percent bonds), they would have received a return of 5.5 percent.
The difference between a 5.5 percent return and a 3.0 percent return may not sound like much, but in annual returns compounded over a lifetime, this difference has a huge influence on the income available during retirement. In fact, the annual retirement income provided by a 5.5 percent return is double than that provided by the 3.0 percent return of Social Security. Even more compelling, an investment in the stock market averages a 7 percent real return, which would mean an annual income of three times what Social Security provides.
In short, it is likely that we would have fewer poor among the elderly had they been free to invest their taxes in private assets.
While this simple comparison is compelling, it overlooks the huge hidden costs of this system. By reducing the incentive for workers to save privately for their own retirement, we reduce the economy’s saving and investment in productive assets. This means the economy grows more slowly as a result of Social Security and people end up with lower incomes even before they pay their taxes. When this cost is taken into account, the real return from Social Security to those retiring today is actually negative!
Poverty among the elderly is now nearly twice the normal rate. Traditionally, 10 percent of Americans over age 65 live below the poverty line, but the National Academy of Science has developed a new formula it hopes will replace the current nor, which has been in use for around 50 years -- and the results are astounding. This emerging approach to gauging the amount of older people living in poverty is beginning to gain clout with the White House.
The formula developed by the NAS estimates that 18.6 percent of Americans over 65 live below the poverty line: that's 6.8 million people. The traditional government formula, created in 1955, puts the elderly poverty rate at 9.7 percent (3.6 million people). The NAS claims that its methodology accounts for increases in the cost of medical treatment and other factors that the incumbent formula does not.