BobTheDonkey
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2009
- Messages
- 4,501
Sigh. OK, you'll never say anything negative about the Republicans. Good thing to know.
Took you this long to figure that out?
Sigh. OK, you'll never say anything negative about the Republicans. Good thing to know.
Okay, let's look at the facts. You say it's a bust. 110 Republican representatives disagree with you. If they were saying it was a bust too, you'd be first in line to cite their condemnation.Who is claiming that GOP representatives are above hypocrisy? Let's just stick to the facts and get the politics out of it. The Stimulus has been a bust.
OK, you'll never say anything negative about the Republicans.
Okay, let's look at the facts. You say it's a bust. 110 Republican representatives disagree with you.
Any other false claims you want to toss out since your participation in this debate has now decended to that level?
I believe you have the power to decide where the debate goes from here.
No, actually the power is in your court since you've chosen to ignore most of the material I've posted to you.
7/9/2010
Billions of dollars in federal aid delivered directly to the local level to help revive the economy have gone overwhelmingly to places that supported President Obama in last year's presidential election.
… snip …
Counties that supported Obama last year have reaped twice as much money per person from the administration's $787 billion economic stimulus package as those that voted for his Republican rival, Sen. John McCain, a USA TODAY analysis of government disclosure and accounting records shows.
Obama casts Republicans as party of the rich
8 of the top 10 wealthiest members of Congress are Democrats
28 of the top 50 richest members of Congress are Democrats
Who's the richest?
1. Sen. John Kerry (D) … snip …
2. Rep. Darrell Issa (R) … snip …
3. Rep. Jane Harman (D) … snip …
4. Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D) … snip …
5. Sen. Mark Warner (D) … snip ...
6. Rep. Jarred Polis (D) …snip …
7. Rep. Vern Buchanan (R) … snip ...
8. Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D) … snip ...
9. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) … snip ...
10. Rep. Harry Teague (D) … snip …
July 9, 2010
Stimulus Failure
In the world’s leading economy, 8 million jobs have been lost. The US government disappeared almost a million jobseekers from the unemployment lists in the last two months to try to make the numbers look better. Still, fewer people have jobs now than when the stimulus began. Those workers with jobs earn less than they did then. And those who lose their jobs wait longer than ever to find a new one. Housing is sinking again, too, with nearly half of all the mortgaged houses already worth less than their mortgages. Illinois has stopped paying its bills. California is laying people off wholesale...
I don't have much time to respond. But here we go:
2009-02-02: Advance 2008 Q4 Report: GDP at -3.8% (http://www.forbes.com/feeds/afx/2009/01/30/afx5987590.html)
2009-02-07: Stimulus Passed (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_Stimulus_Act_of_2008)
2009-02-27: Second 2008 Q4 Report: GDP revised to -6.1% (http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/national/gdp/2009/pdf/gdp408p.pdf)
And sometime shortly there after, it was revised down further to -6.3% (http://useconomy.about.com/od/economicindicators/a/GDP-statistics.htm)
Pretty big difference.
To understand why this recession is different, you need to look at the big picture:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=527&pictureid=3334[/qimg]
This graph depicts quarterly GDP, private investment, government spending and exports between 1970 and 2010. I didn't bother to add unemployment, because it wasn't immediately obvious how to do so, and we all know that losing 0.5 million jobs a month is pretty terrible.
This is the same graph from 1975 to 1985, so that you can get a bit better detail:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=527&pictureid=3335[/qimg]
To refer to our current situation as just another recession is a big mistake. I think these graphs pretty well demonstrate such. I think these graphs also demonstrate that for as bad as things got, and especially how quickly they were getting worse, we're not doing too bad.
Slight nitpick: Could you replot the data on a log-scale for the y-axis, so that proportional changes are the same throughout?
LOL! Now you're asking him to prove that I'm right.![]()
I am pleased that I interest you so much.So ideogram
Surely you don't expect everyone to forget that Republicans consistently advocate reducing taxes on the rich.Obama casts Republicans as party of the rich
The Stimulus FAILED and more of the same isn't going to help. It is just going to make matter worse.
And in a true sign of desperation to pull attention away from the Stimulus failure, Obama is now spouting blatant hypocrisy like this ...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100717/pl_nm/us_obama_republica
Here are the facts …
http://nakedlaw.avvo.com/2010/07/top-10-richest-us-lawmakers/
The hypocrisy is even more evident when you look at Obama. He's NEVER worked in private enterprise. He's been on the government dole all his life. And he's now VERY wealthy and STILL living off our dime.
STILL living off our dime.
[...]
You are so proud of your "facts", but you refuse to acknowledge basic well-known facts, such as that the Republicans have lost all credibility as the party of fiscal responsibility. Of course you don't want to talk about the fact that Bush also signed a stimulus bill.
You can snow me with more "facts" than I have time to respond to, but cherry-picking facts is just another way to lie.
I see the article you linked to says the total aid involved is $17 billion, out of $787 billion total, or about 2%.
Surely you don't expect everyone to forget that Republicans consistently advocate reducing taxes on the rich.
The Reagan tax cuts, like similar measures enacted in the 1920s and 1960s, showed that reducing excessive tax rates stimulates growth, reduces tax avoidance, and can increase the amount and share of tax payments generated by the rich. High top tax rates can induce counterproductive behavior and suppress revenues, factors that are usually missed or understated in government static revenue analysis. Furthermore, the key assumption of static revenue analysis that economic growth is not affected by tax changes is disproved by the experience of previous tax reduction programs. There is little reason to expect static revenue analysis to evaluate the economic or distributional effects of current tax reform proposals much better than it evaluated the Reagan tax program 15 years ago.
The Historical Lessons of Lower Tax Rates
There is a distinct pattern throughout American history: When tax rates are reduced, the economy's growth rate improves and living standards increase. Good tax policy has a number of interesting side effects. For instance, history tells us that tax revenues grow and "rich" taxpayers pay more tax when marginal tax rates are slashed. This means lower income citizens bear a lower share of the tax burden - a consequence that should lead class-warfare politicians to support lower tax rates.
Ten Myths About the Bush Tax Cuts
Again, bad predictions doesn't mean the stimulus will make things worse.
but you refuse to acknowledge basic well-known facts, such as that the Republicans have lost all credibility as the party of fiscal responsibility.
July 2, 2010
Voters trust Republicans more than Democrats on nine out of 10 key issues regularly tracked by Rasmussen Reports.
The latest national telephone survey of Likely Voters shows voters trust Republicans more by a 48% to 39% margin on the economy, an issue that has consistently been the most important among voters for several years.
Your first link is broken
but if it's a statement like any other's made by Obama on the Republican party, it isn't a criticism of their members of congress for having money, but for serving the interests of the rich above those of the poor and middle class, and any trickle down republican will openly admit to that.
Quote:
STILL living off our dime.
is just ludicrous. Are you referring to his salary for being President?