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The democrats dont want to cut non-defense spending and instead would rather increase taxes. Before the recession that figure was $2.5 trillion.Just going back to 2002 spending levels[$2.6 trillion] would be a step in the right direction.The 2012 budget is at $3.7b.
 
High speed rail? What other useless stuff is being "fenced off" from spending cuts?

http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/2011/07/federal-expansion-real-issue-debt-ceiling-debate

Federal expansion the real issue in debt ceiling debate
By: Michael Barone | Senior Political Analyst Follow Him @MichaelBarone | 07/16/11 8:05 PM

The nation's first high-speed train, Amtrak's Acela Express. In negotiations on the debt limit President Obama has fenced off several programs from any cuts at all. One is, astonishingly, the $53 billion he wants to spend on high-speed rail projects. To call high-speed rail a "boondoggle," as does House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, is to engage in considerable understatement, writes Examiner Sr. Political Analyst Michael Barone. It's hard to keep up with all the arguments and proposals in the debt limit struggle. But what's at stake is fundamental.
The bedrock issue is whether we should have a larger and more expensive federal government. Over many years federal spending has averaged about 20 percent of gross domestic product.

The Obama Democrats have raised that to 24 or 25 percent. And the president's budget projects that that percentage will stay the same or increase far into the future.

In the process the national debt as a percentage of gross domestic product has increased from a manageable 40 percent in 2008 to 62 percent this year and an estimated 72 percent in 2012. And it's headed to the 90 percent level that economists Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart have identified as the danger point, when governments face fiscal collapse.

This is a level of spending as a share of the economy Americans haven't seen since World War II. It seems more like Europe than like the America we have known.

President Obama insisted in his somber press conference Friday that he is willing to reduce federal spending from these levels. But he remained vague on specifics and intransigent in his demand that any debt limit deal include "revenue," which translated into English means tax increases.

Mainstream media has pummeled Republicans for pushing spending cuts and refusing to support tax increases in connection with raising the debt limit.

But Republicans had a mandate from the voters in November 2010 to advance such policies. In contrast, it's not at all clear that voters in November 2008 gave Obama and the Democrats a mandate to increase non-defense discretionary spending by 24 percent (84 percent if you count the stimulus package) in 2009 and 2010.

In negotiations on the debt limit Obama has fenced off several programs from any cuts at all. One is Obamacare, even though majorities in polls continue to favor its repeal.

Another is, astonishingly, the $53 billion he wants to spend on high-speed rail projects. To call high-speed rail a "boondoggle," as does House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, is to engage in considerable understatement.

These projects include $715 million for construction of 100 miles of track between the small towns of Borden and Corcoran in California's Central Valley.

They include a train from Iowa City, Iowa, that will take longer to get to Chicago than already existing bus service and a train from Minneapolis to Duluth, Minn., that will average 69 miles per hour -- about what you could average on the parallel Interstate 35.

Obama has rhapsodized about the pleasure of walking to a train station and taking a high-speed rail trip to another city. But the great majority of Americans don't live within an easy drive of a train station.

He has called high-speed rail an "investment" in cutting-edge technology. But it's hardly cutting edge: Japan debuted its bullet train in 1964 and France inaugurated its TGV in 1981.

As for investment, Oxford professor Bent Flyvbjerg analyzed results from dozens of rail projects in 20 countries over the last 70 years. He found that 75 percent ended up costing at least 24 percent over projections and 25 percent exceed projections by more than 60 percent.

No wonder the governors of Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida have turned down federal money for rail projects that parallel interstate highways. They realized that their taxpayers would get stuck for inevitable cost overruns and operating deficits.

A high-speed rail line might make sense in the densely populated Northeast corridor between Washington and Boston, and as a Washingtonian who travels frequently to Manhattan I would love a faster train than the current Acela. But these projects make no sense in most of the rest of America.

High-speed rail is not the biggest item in the budget. But it's emblematic of the Obama Democrats' theory that government spending can stimulate the economy.

That theory has been pretty well demolished by the fact of 9.2 percent unemployment. The clear signal from both economic markets and political polls is that we should cut federal spending back from 25 percent of GDP toward 20 percent.

It's not clear how far the Republicans can move toward this goal in the debt limit battle, or whether they can move any distance at all. But it's worth trying if only to clarify the choice before voters next year.

Michael Barone,The Examiner's senior political analyst, can be contacted at mbarone@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears Wednesday and Sunday, and his stories and blog posts appear on ExaminerPolitics.com.



Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/2011/07/federal-expansion-real-issue-debt-ceiling-debate#ixzz1SURcI5NS
 
High speed rail is a waste of money.Hell low speed rail didnt last in Canada which is a damn shame.One summer I took the train from Prince Rupert to TO. It took 5 days and was alot of fun.
 
It is hard for people to know and understand the problem when the Legacy Media is distorting the message (and more people still get their information from the legacy media than via New Media). Once again we see that the real cause and effect chain was due to Regulatory failure rather than market failure; markets simply followed the flawed or perverse incentives:

http://pajamasmedia.com/andrewklavan/2011/07/17/how-network-news-helped-bring-about-the-crash/?print=1

How Network News Helped Bring About the Crash

Posted By Andrew Klavan On July 17, 2011 @ 12:00 am In Uncategorized | 34 Comments

When we seek out the causes and culprits of our current economic crisis, there is one area in need of reform that should not be overlooked:  the mainstream news media.  It is not too much to say that the people in the NBC, ABC and CBS news operations were major contributing factors to the crash of 2008 and are helping to pave the way to future economic troubles now.

In the book Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon [1], authors Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua Rosner tell how, in the early nineties, faulty or skewed studies by ACORN and other groups fed the idea that there was pervasive racial bias by mortgage lenders, with blacks and Hispanics being unfairly rejected for loans.  “The findings lit up the media, confirming many people’s suspicions about banks’ lending practices,” the authors write of one such study.  In fact, properly interpreted, the data suggested that banks were making their loans not on the basis of race but on the basis of credit-worthiness.  But as the misinformation confirmed left-wing ideas, the media pressure was on for a government fix.

To put it in simplified but not inaccurate terms, what happened as a result was this:  The Clinton administration essentially gave orders to lenders to give unwise loans to people based on their race.  Those orders required banks to adopt bad lending practices.  The dangerously easy credit made house prices rise.  And unscrupulous sharks on Wall Street and elsewhere rushed in to make a profit off the housing bubble by luring investors into funding the crummy mortgages.  Thus the poison of the government-mandated bad loans flooded the system.  When housing prices inevitably fell, the system collapsed.

At the center of all this were Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, dishonestly run lenders with government backing and a mandate to make housing somehow affordable to those who couldn’t afford it.  You can watch videos here [2] and here [3] to see Republicans, including George W. Bush and John McCain, warning of the coming disaster and calling for regulatory legislation to bring the madness at Fannie Mae under control.  The videos also show Democrats — most especially and most perfidiously Congressman Barney Frank of Massachusetts — repeatedly claiming nothing is wrong.

If our mainstream news media had not been so politically one-sided, all of this might have been prevented.  The reports that falsely claimed racial discrimination in lending could easily have been debunked.  The entire premise of giving loans to people who couldn’t afford them might have been questioned.  And the warnings of honorable men like Bush and McCain would have been given at least equal weight with the po-faced distortions of the awful Frank.  It was the left-wing assumptions of the news media that prevented proper reporting and created at least some of the pressure on politicians to act irresponsibly — and then provided them with the cover of silence when they did.

Look.  The chief political correspondent of ABC News is George Stephanopoulos, a former Democrat operative who says Barack Obama’s Mr. Bean presidency is going “remarkably well.” [4] NBC anchorman Brian Williams [5] once implied Jimmy Carter was the greatest American president of all time and suggested the founding fathers were essentially terrorists.  And CBS has just replaced the leftist Katie Couric with Ted Baxter lookalike Scott Pelley [6], who once called Mahmoud Ahmadinejad “incorruptible” and compared global warming skeptics to holocaust deniers.

These are not fair brokers of information — and I’m willing to bet that none of them steps out from behind the camera to find a phalanx of conservative staff members waiting to question their assumptions or challenge their “facts.”  No, they work in an echo chamber of agreement where opinions are more likely to become radicalized and important stories that challenge leftist assumptions simply become invisible.  For the reasons given above, this echo chamber is partially to blame for our current economic troubles, and is currently contributing to future woes by skewing the story of the debt ceiling [7] negotiations against Republicans rather than telling it from both sides.

All it would take to reform a news industry that is collapsing under the weight of its own bias would be for them to change hiring practices and work to bring in new voices and new minds.  There are plenty of brilliant right wing writers and reporters out there.  Hire some of them.

For the good of the country and for the sake of the truth, the mainstream news media needs to reform.

Article printed from Klavan On The Culture: http://pajamasmedia.com/andrewklavan

URL to article: http://pajamasmedia.com/andrewklavan/2011/07/17/how-network-news-helped-bring-about-the-crash/

URLs in this post:

[1] Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0805091203/pajamasmedia-20

[2] here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs&feature=related

[3] here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMnSp4qEXNM&NR=1

[4] “remarkably well.”: http://www.mrc.org/biasalert/2011/20110714075827.aspx

[5] Brian Williams: http://www.mrc.org/Profiles/Williams/Williams_date.asp

[6] Scott Pelley: http://www.mrc.org/static/profiles/ScottPelley/NewEveningNewsAnchor.aspx

[7] skewing the story of the debt ceiling: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/ken-shepherd/2011/07/15/media-mash-debt-ceiling-edition
 
>The democrats dont want to cut non-defense spending and instead would rather increase taxes.

The Democrats are hoping that the tax take can be increased up to around 24% of GDP.  In effect, it is blackmail of the taxpayers: having raised public spending, their ultimatum is "pay, or else...".  It is simply the polar opposite of reducing taxation and delivering the ultimatum "cut spending, or else...".
 
So why the talks are going nowhere:

http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/deficit-negotiations-collapse-%E2%80%94-are-progressives-cheering/?print=1

Deficit Negotiations Collapse — Are Progressives Cheering?

Posted By Richard Pollock On July 22, 2011 @ 5:25 pm In economy,Uncategorized,US News | 29 Comments

Now that it is clear that a possible deal between Republicans and the White House has collapsed, Democrat activists are breathing easier tonight. They may even be breaking out the champagne.

Throughout the week progressives were panic stricken that a deal was close at hand. Over the week they launched a political campaign to torpedo any White House deal. They may have succeeded tonight.

This outcome reflects the point of view espoused by Mother Jones’ Washington bureau chief David Corn. Yesterday he predicted [1]: “It may well be that for Obama the best political outcome is no deal.”

As talks broke down late today, House Speaker John Boehner (D-OH) pointed an accusing finger at the president [2], saying the White House upped its demands by insisting on $400 billion in new taxes.

In the last 24 hours there has been widespread fear among Democrats that the president was poised to surrender to Republicans on spending, entitlements, and taxes.

Nearly giving up on the White House, stricken progressive groups this week launched a counter campaign called an “Emergency Call-in Day.” [3]

Activist groups hoped to generate tens of thousands of calls into Congress on Friday. They saw the House and Senate as a last ditch firewall to any bad White House deal. The ad hoc coalition said they were “demanding that they reject the terrible deal being reportedly negotiated by the White House,” according to the organizers. The group consists of MoveOn.org [4], the AFL-CIO, CREDO Action, Democracy for America, PCCC [5], AFT [3], Campaign for America’s Future, and Change Nation.

Moveon.org director Justin Rubin is quoted in The Nation today as saying [6]: “The Democratic base did not work night and day to elect Democrats so that they could cave to Tea Party extremists.”

Across the board Democrats still seem dispirited and alarmed.  They have staked out “no-no-no” positions on virtually all proposals that are circulating in Washington. This campaign indeed may have resulted in the retreat by the president.

Democratic fears spilled over to hysteria on Thursday when the Washington Post erroneously reported a deal that would cut federal spending by $3.7 trillion over ten years and contain no new taxes.

Both the White House and Boehner said no deal had been cut. But it still triggered a congressional revolt among Democrats on the Hill. Politico reported yesterday [7] that reports of the deal sparked “a fierce, angry, even screaming reception at the Senate Democratic Caucus” with Jack Lew, President Obama’s budget chief.

Washington Post blogger Felicia Sonmez wrote that “House Democrats and liberal groups were livid” about outlines of the deal.

Politico’s Mike Allen, in an e-mail this morning, reported that the White House stances “infuriate Senate Democrats, who complain that the president’s chief of staff, Bill Daley, is too quick to make concessions to Boehner.”

SEIU union President May Kay Henry has called reports of a deal with Republicans “morally wrong.” She told The Nation that with most of the the deals publicly floated “Medicaid will be eviscerated, access to healthcare for millions of Americans will be gutted.”

Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD) steamed that [8] “t would concern me greatly if these folks – the tea party group – have been able to convince the president to go along with a deal that basically gives them everything they want.”

Corn also warned [1] that “House Democrats are poised to go ballistic [9] should Obama reach an agreement with Republicans to squeeze the entitlement programs.”

Unions are taking aim at the “Gang of Six” proposal being crafted by three Senate Democrats and three Republicans. They bought a full a page ad [10] around the nation denouncing it. Earlier in the week President Obama praised the Gang of Six proposal, which would cut Medicare and Social Security. The ad says that the compromise “is bad for working families.” It was paid for by the AFL-CIO, the National Education Association, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the Food and Commercial Workers Union, and SEIU.

MoveOn.org director Justin Rubin called upon Democrats in Congress to stop the Gang of Six deal. He called it a “total non-starter and Democrats in Congress should rule it out immediately.”

The level of discouragement among liberal Democrats became clearer when today CNN  released its latest public opinion poll that showed President Obama’s  approval rating fell to 45%.

CNN’s pollsters said the continuing downward spiral for the president was  “driven in part by growing dissatisfaction on the left with the president’s track record in office.”

The news organization did not publish it anywhere on its CNN home page. It was buried on a separate web site at its specialized CNN Politics page [11].

CNN Polling Director Keating Holland explained that one major source of the dissatisfaction are reports that the president will concede to Republicans on entitlements: “It’s likely that this is a reaction to some of Obama’s recent actions, including his willingness to discuss major changes in Social Security and Medicare as part of the debt ceiling negotiations,” he concluded.

The president’s retreat means he is throwing the dice that public opinion will support the White House if there is no deal.

No one still knows what kind of plan will emerge. But if Democratic insiders who have an ear into the White House are clanging alarm bells, it’s possible Obama, hoping for a second term, may have been close to securing a Grand Bargain with congressional Republicans.

But it was not to be. Apparently he believes that it is more important to secure his own base rather than continue to see the continued slide in popularity among his supporters.

In the end, the nation loses.

Boehner did not announce the collapse in talks until the stock market closed.  If there is no more movement over the weekend, expect a massive sell off on Wall Street.

Article printed from Pajamas Media: http://pajamasmedia.com

URL to article: http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/deficit-negotiations-collapse-%e2%80%94-are-progressives-cheering/

URLs in this post:

[1] predicted: http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/07/barack-obama-debt-limit-standoff

[2] pointed an accusing finger at the president: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0711/59689.html#ixzz1SsPdeEO4

[3] “Emergency Call-in Day.”: http://action.aft.org/c/44/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2518

[4] MoveOn.org: http://pol.moveon.org/bad_debt_deal/?rc=homepage.topbar

[5] PCCC: http://act.boldprogressives.org/sign/poll_budget_swingstates/?source=bp

[6] saying: http://www.thenation.com/blog/162217/unions-moveon-warn-obama-not-cave-secret-negotiations-house-gop

[7] Politico reported yesterday: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0711/59623.html

[8] steamed that: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/2chambers/post/democrats-fuming-at-reported-obama-boehner-debt-limit-compromise/2011/07/21/gIQAlJdVSI_blog.html

[9] ballistic: http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/07/pelosi-medicare-and-social-security-cuts-will-compromise-vote-on-debt-limit-bill.php

[10] full a page ad: http://www.politico.com/static/PPM191_110721_budget.html

[11] CNN Politics page: http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/07/22/cnn-poll-drop-in-liberal-support-pushes-obama-approval-rating-down/?hpt=po_t2
 
                                          Shared with provisions of The Copyright Act

U.S. debt talks collapse in anger, recrimination
Sheldon Alberts/Postmedia News 22 July
http://www.canada.com/news/debt+talks+collapse+anger+recrimination/5147369/story.html#ixzz1StX6G9Ih
exerpt:
Obama and others have warned the country will miss interest payments on its debt and may not be able to cut more than 70 million cheques in August to seniors, members of the military and others if the debt ceiling is not raised.


The U.S. president said he had offered Republicans more than $1 trillion in cuts to discretionary spending — both on domestic programs and U.S. defence — and another $650 million in cuts to entitlement programs.
                  ____________________________________________________________________

Trouble in the butts :facepalm:
 
Obama and others have warned the country will miss interest payments on its debt and may not be able to cut more than 70 million cheques in August to seniors, members of the military and others if the debt ceiling is not raised.

"may not be able": Well, not a complete lie by the President. He could have said no cheques could be cut.
 
I'm not sure I fully or accurately understand what Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, supported, I think, now, by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker John Boehner, proposes but it looks to me as though he proposes to violate the US Constitution and threaten 750 years of constitutional history in order to secure a very slight political advantage in 2012.

(See Diane Francis' (National Post) commentary for the US Constitution issue.)

It was over 750 years ago, during the reign of Henry III in England, that we - our political ancestors - established the constitutional principle that the executive may propose new taxes but only the legislature can levy them. (See, e.g. Maddicott and Carpenter if you want to more fully understand that important issue.)

If I heard Boehner correctly, and I may have misunderstood, he said that he would support the McConnell (and Reid) proposal if President Obama cut spending and did not raise taxes. Now, I have no problems with Obama not raising taxes. Not doing something about tax increases is almost always acceptable. And, despite being elected with a national mandate and, therefore, accountable to the people, tradition (and the Constitution itself, I think) say that, while the President may propose taxes, only the Congress can levy them. I think that the President can, by fiat, alter some tax collection regulations to improve the efficiency of how taxes are collected and such measures might bring in a few billions or even tens of billions of new revenue. Cutting some expenses should, also, be within the POTUS remit - I think that a cabinet secretary can say, to his or her department, "spend $n billion less on these projects - ones which are not explicitly ordered by the Congress. But any wholesale cuts to programmes or increases in taxes must, in my opinion be approved by the Congress.

I recognize that, in the main, the US Congress (House and Senate) is populated by third rate party hacks, devoid of guts, brains and principles - all parties, including the Tea Party (some of whom are monumentally stupid), Democrats (most of whom are totally irresponsible) and Republican (too many of whom are cowards), are too blame, but they do have responsibilities, under their Constitution. I'm not sure if they don't understand or just don't care about their own country.
 
>may not be able to cut more than 70 million cheques in August to seniors, members of the military and others if the debt ceiling is not raised.

Two points about that have been repeated, perhaps not strongly enough, by commentators over the past few days.

1. It is difficult to interrupt the processes by which transfers to individuals are executed (eg. direct deposit, printed and mailed cheques).

2. For the transfers to individuals which originate in the agencies with "trust funds", the agencies can redeem their special bonds (aka intragovernmental IOUs).  The treasury extinguishes the obligation (debt) to the agency in the amount "X" and is able to issue new public debt in the amount "X" without violating the debt ceiling.
 
The Canadian experience in context:

http://princearthurherald.com/archives/6040

Interview with Chris Edwards, Director of Tax Policy at the Cato Institute

Posted on July 24th, 2011 by Eleanor Vaughan in Interview

In 1994, Canada was facing the same fiscal situation the U.S. today: fears of debt defaults, credit downgrades, and even I.M.F. intervention. Yet, Canada successfully turned around its economy, and today has lower unemployment and higher growth than the United States. I sat down with Chris Edwards, Director of Tax Policy Studies at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C., to talk about what the United States could learn from Canadian economic policy.

Vaughan: Americans often stereotype Canada as the socialist North, a land of big government and high taxes. Is this characterization true today?

Edwards: Twenty years ago that was true, but today there’s increasing realization that Canada’s economy has reformed. The Canadian economy fundamentally changed direction in the 1990s under—oddly—a left-of-center Liberal government. They cut spending, privatized a bunch of stuff including air traffic control, cut the corporate tax rate, instituted Canada Tax-Free Savings Accounts, decentralized spending power to the provinces, and partly funded the social security and retirement system. These were all great, extremely successful reforms. Total spending as a share of GDP is now about the same in Canada and the U.S. Canada is no longer the hopeless welfare state that Americans wrote it off as a decade ago.

Chris Edwards advises that the United States has many lessons to learn from Canada in its effort to turn around its economy.

Vaughan: Policymakers here in Washington are very concerned with the high, stagnant unemployment rate. But while American unemployment hovers at a worrying 9.2 per cent, Canadian unemployment is at a healthier 7.4 per cent and falling. What accounts for the difference in these numbers?

Edwards: Keynesian economists say that the big stimulus package prevented the American economy from really losing jobs in the 2008 recession. In reality, the stimulus bill didn’t help the American economy: the U.S. has incurred its biggest deficit since WWII to pay for its stimulus package, while experiencing the worst recovery of its ten economic downturns since WWII.

Most normal people put two and two together and conclude that Keynesian economics simply don’t work. But remarkably, Keynesian economists in the United States—particularly Obama’s advisors—persist, saying the stimulus wasn’t big enough.

But, Canada shows that if you have a sensible budget policy, focus on tax reform, don’t pass invasive regulatory bills, then the economy will grow. You don’t need a stimulus package to ensure recovery. If governments don’t stomp on them, market economies grow by themselves. Policymakers need to learn that the proper response to a recession is to leave the economy alone, let markets adjust, let prices and wages adjust, and then watch economic recovery take off.

Vaughan: In the ongoing U.S. budget talks, there’s been much talk of spending cuts. Could you explain the difference between the way most folks think about a spending cut versus the way Washington defines a spending cut?

Edwards: Most of the U.S. budget is on auto-pilot, increasing automatically every year due to commitments made to programs like Medicare & Medicaid. So, unless a Congress passes a law drastically cutting spending levels, spending just keeps increasing. Washington defines spending “cuts” as trimming increases in spending. Spending is still growing, just at a slightly slower speed. Even with cutting $4 trillion over ten years, federal spending will still continue to rise enormously in the coming decade. What’s being proposed are not real cuts, they’re just modest reductions in spending increases.

Vaughan: Given the size of the U.S. debt, currently about $14.7 trillion, are taxes increases inevitable?

Edwards: Tax increases are looming in the future, unfortunately. Income tax rates are already so high that if you increase them any more, the tax base is going to start disappearing. So, the big battle in the future is likely to be over whether the United States should adopt a V.A.T. (value added tax), as a new way to raise revenue. Every European country—and Canada—has already imposed a V.A.T. Liberals are going to push for a V.A.T. in the future, but I don’t think the public will ever let them do it.  This kind of tax would hurt ordinary people too much.

Vaughan: At 15 per cent, the Canadian federal corporate tax rate is almost 25 per cent lower than that of the United States, which is the worst among developed nations.  Should the United States cut its corporate tax rates to encourage economic growth?

Edwards:  Yeah, in my book “Global Tax Revolution“ I argue exactly that. The U.S. has the highest corporate tax rate in the world, tied with Japan at 40 per cent (if you include state taxes). It’s idiotic: America is shooting itself in the foot. Meanwhile, Canada is phasing in corporate tax cuts. Next year, the average combined federal-provincial rate in Ontario will be 25 per cent. So, if you’re Toyota or Honda or Mercedes-Benz: do you want to invest in Ontario with a 25 per cent tax rate or in Michigan or Ohio where the rate is 40 per cent? It’s a no-brainer.

For international companies who want operations in North America, there’s little reason to go to the United States any more. Canada’s got an excellent immigration policy, high-skilled workers, low corporate taxes, and a sensible and stable government. More and more international investment is going to be moving from the United States into Canada. Canada is going to be a great place to invest.

Vaughan: But it wasn’t always that way. Back in 1994, Canada faced the same kind of fiscal mess that the U.S. faces today: the possibility of default, mounting debts, credit downgrades, and a slowing economy. Canada managed to turn around its economy only through enormous political will. Is it possible for the United States to do the same, given the partisan squabbling that seems to dominate Washington?

Edwards: In the United States, it’s going to be a lot more difficult. The American constitution makes it much more difficult to implement reform than it is under the British parliamentary system. In the parliamentary system, a majority prime minister essentially becomes a dictator. In the American system, power is extremely divided between—but also within—the House, Senate, White House, and courts. When each individual Congressman holds so much power, it’s very difficult to implement meaningful economic reform.

Vaughan: What lessons could the United States learn from Canadian fiscal policy?

Edwards: Politicians need to have spines, the courage to do the right thing. Far too many Republicans want to cut spending, but they simply don’t have the guts to do it because they fear the electoral consequences. Under Prime Minister Jean Chretien, Canada chopped the federal budget by 10 per cent in two years in the mid-1990s. That would be like the United States chopping $400 billion out of its budget in two years, which American politicians regard as impossible. But the Liberal government did it in Canada and went on to win many elections. What Americans should learn from Canada is that cutting spending is not bad politics.
 
John Galt makes his entrance:

http://www.davidmcelroy.org/?p=1586

I’m just quitting’: A scene right out of ‘Atlas Shrugged’ in Birmingham
by David McElroy

If it had been a scene in “Atlas Shrugged,” the guy would have disappeared into the secrecy of Colorado with a shadowy figure who we would later learn to be John Galt. In real life, the story will probably be more complex. But I wonder how long it’s going to be before businesspeople really do start walking away and deciding it’s not worth doing business in America today. Or it it already happening and we just don’t know it?

The man you see in the picture at the right is named Ronnie Bryant. He operates coal mines in Alabama. I’d never heard of him until this morning, but after what I saw and heard from him, I’d say he’s a bit like a southern version of Ellis Wyatt from Ayn Rand’s novel. What I saw made an impression on me.

I was at a public hearing in an inner-city Birmingham neighborhood for various government officials to get public input on some local environmental issues. There are several hot topics, but one of the highest-profile disputes is over a proposal for a coal mine near a river that serves as a source of drinking water for parts of the Birmingham metro area. Mine operators and state environmental officials say the mine can be operated without threatening the water supply. Environmentalists claim it will be a threat.

I’m not going to take sides on that environmental issue, because I don’t know enough to stake out an informed opinion. (With most of the people I listened to today, facts didn’t seem to matter as much as emotional implications.) But Ronnie Bryant wasn’t there to talk about that particular mine. As a mine operator in a nearby area, he was attending the meeting to listen to what residents and government officials were saying. He listened to close to two hours of people trashing companies of all types and blaming pollution for random cases of cancer in their families. Several speakers clearly believe that all of the cancer and other deaths they see in their families and communities must be caused by pollution. Why? Who knows? Maybe just because it makes for an emotional story to blame big bad business. It’s hard to say.

After Bryant listened to all of the business-bashing, he finally stood to speak. He sounded a little bit shellshocked, a little bit angry — and a lot frustrated.

My name’s Ronnie Bryant, and I’m a mine operator. I’ve been issued a [state] permit in the recent past for [waste water] discharge, and after standing in this room today listening to the comments being made by the people…. [pause] Nearly every day without fail — I have a different perspective — men stream to these [mining] operations looking for work in Walker County. They can’t pay their mortgage. They can’t pay their car note. They can’t feed their families. They don’t have health insurance. And as I stand here today, I just … you know … what’s the use? I got a permit to open up an underground coal mine that would employ probably 125 people. They’d be paid wages from $50,000 to $150,000 a year. We would consume probably $50 million to $60 million in consumables a year, putting more men to work. And my only idea today is to go home. What’s the use? I don’t know. I mean, I see these guys — I see them with tears in their eyes — looking for work. And if there’s so much opposition to these guys making a living, I feel like there’s no need in me putting out the effort to provide work for them. So as I stood against the wall here today, basically what I’ve decided is not to open the mine. I’m just quitting. Thank you.

I have no idea what Bryant will actually do. He might have made a quick emotional decision based on anger at feeling blamed for things that are frequently just normal health issues of life. He might reconsider and go ahead with his project.

The only thing I’m sure of is that what I saw today is a broken process and a sham. We all want a decent environment in which to live, but when various people at a public meeting — including federal officials and community members — talk about “environmental justice” and make it clear that their intent is to make it harder for businesses to operate, well, I can see why a businessman would decide to quit. I consider myself an environmentalist — because I want to live in a safe, secure, clean world — but what I saw isn’t reasonable concern for the environment as much as it’s an ideological agenda.

We need reasonable people to talk about how to balance various people’s property rights. (You have the right to use your property as you please, but I have a right not to be injured by it.) Even though we need a discussion, the modern equivalent of a kangaroo court that I observed today isn’t the way to go about it. It was more like a prelude to a lynching of business. If I were a businessperson or investor, I wouldn’t put the money or effort into opening new industry in this country today. I’d take my investment and jobs to somewhere they were wanted.

As Ronnie Bryant asked, “What’s the use?” Maybe Atlas really is starting to shrug.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
I'm not sure if they don't understand or just don't care about their own country.

Agreed

Thucydides said:
My name’s Ronnie Bryant, and I’m a mine operator.............I’m just quitting.
Thank you.

His action seems reasonable to me.

Thucydides said:
Vaughan: What lessons could the United States learn from Canadian fiscal policy?

Edwards: Politicians need to have spines, the courage to do the right thing. Far too many Republicans want to cut spending, but they simply don’t have the guts to do it because they fear the electoral consequences. Under Prime Minister Jean Chretien, Canada chopped the federal budget by 10 per cent in two years in the mid-1990s. That would be like the United States chopping $400 billion out of its budget in two years, which American politicians regard as impossible. But the Liberal government did it in Canada and went on to win many elections. What Americans should learn from Canada is that cutting spending is not bad politics.

American Impossibilism
:nod:
*impossibilism:
a defeatist attitude; the belief that all things are impossible.


 
The Fed Audit: "U.S. provided a whopping $16 trillion in secret loans to bail out US and foreign banks"
by Senator Bernie Sanders Global Research, July 23, 2011
Article Link

The first top-to-bottom audit of the Federal Reserve uncovered eye-popping new details about how the U.S. provided a whopping $16 trillion in secret loans to bail out American and foreign banks and businesses during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. An amendment by Sen. Bernie Sanders to the Wall Street reform law passed one year ago this week directed the Government Accountability Office to conduct the study. "As a result of this audit, we now know that the Federal Reserve provided more than $16 trillion in total financial assistance to some of the largest financial institutions and corporations in the United States and throughout the world," said Sanders. "This is a clear case of socialism for the rich and rugged, you're-on-your-own individualism for everyone else."

Among the investigation's key findings is that the Fed unilaterally provided trillions of dollars in financial assistance to foreign banks and corporations from South Korea to Scotland, according to the GAO report. "No agency of the United States government should be allowed to bailout a foreign bank or corporation without the direct approval of Congress and the president," Sanders said.

The non-partisan, investigative arm of Congress also determined that the Fed lacks a comprehensive system to deal with conflicts of interest, despite the serious potential for abuse.  In fact, according to the report, the Fed provided conflict of interest waivers to employees and private contractors so they could keep investments in the same financial institutions and corporations that were given emergency loans.

For example, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase served on the New York Fed's board of directors at the same time that his bank received more than $390 billion in financial assistance from the Fed.  Moreover, JP Morgan Chase served as one of the clearing banks for the Fed's emergency lending programs.

In another disturbing finding, the GAO said that on Sept. 19, 2008, William Dudley, who is now the New York Fed president, was granted a waiver to let him keep investments in AIG and General Electric at the same time AIG and GE were given bailout funds.  One reason the Fed did not make Dudley sell his holdings, according to the audit, was that it might have created the appearance of a conflict of interest.

To Sanders, the conclusion is simple. "No one who works for a firm receiving direct financial assistance from the Fed should be allowed to sit on the Fed's board of directors or be employed by the Fed," he said.

The investigation also revealed that the Fed outsourced most of its emergency lending programs to private contractors, many of which also were recipients of extremely low-interest and then-secret loans.

The Fed outsourced virtually all of the operations of their emergency lending programs to private contractors like JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo.  The same firms also received trillions of dollars in Fed loans at near-zero interest rates. Altogether some two-thirds of the contracts that the Fed awarded to manage its emergency lending programs were no-bid contracts. Morgan Stanley was given the largest no-bid contract worth $108.4 million to help manage the Fed bailout of AIG.
More on link
 
GAP said:
The Fed Audit: "U.S. provided a whopping $16 trillion in secret loans to bail out US and foreign banks"
by Senator Bernie Sanders Global Research, July 23, 2011
Article Link

....
Among the investigation's key findings is that the Fed unilaterally provided trillions of dollars in financial assistance to foreign banks and corporations from South Korea to Scotland, according to the GAO report. "No agency of the United States government should be allowed to bailout a foreign bank or corporation without the direct approval of Congress and the president," Sanders said.

....More on link

Message to Sanders:

Feel free to return the world to the Gold Standard and relinquish authority over the direction of the international monetary system. 

You own the responsibility because you demanded the authority and the budget when your diplomats insisted that the governors of the Bank of England give up their authority over the Gold Standard based system in 1944.  You cemented your position when President Nixon refused to accept any discipline on the Dollar by completely cutting the Dollar from Gold.

You bought it.  You broke it.  Your problem.
 
And the Globe and Mail gets it right, on the editorial page:

tueedcar26co1_1301512cl-8.jpg

Reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail
http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/archive/01301/tueedcar26co1_1301512cl-8.jpg

Canada will get sideswiped when, not if the US cannot manage its own debts. Many, almost certainly most of you - Army.ca readers, will pay part of the price through higher prices and reduced exports which will mean lower tax revenues which will mean fewer public 'services.'

The USA has spent itself into the status of deadbeat.

Next:

chinese-dollar.jpg

A new global reserve currency?
 
E.R. Campbell said:
all parties, including the Tea Party (some of whom are monumentally stupid), Democrats (most of whom are totally irresponsible) and Republican (too many of whom are cowards), are too blame, but they do have responsibilities, under their Constitution. I'm not sure if they don't understand or just don't care about their own country.

Negative and positive attributes are evenly distributed in large populations so neither party has a lock on any of them. All your doing here is judging others based solely on your own opinion of yourself. I am smart, I think X, therefore people who think Y are dumb.  I think the responsible thing to do would be X, others don't agree therefore they are irresponsible. In the same situation I would step forward and act, those who don't step forward and fail to act are cowards.  This is a very polarized and unyielding position to take. It's also where politicians want their base as it's surrounds them in an almost impenetrable wall of hubris blocking out conflicting opinions. Both sides are doing what they think best from various points of view evenly distributed across parties for smart, stupid, venal, honest, crooked, deceitful, inspired, selfish etc reasons. It would be less polarizing and more productive if we gave our opinion and reasoning on an issue and not just pronounce our judgment of people.

Do I have any proof? Sure - after my side gets in power they inevitably proceed to do things I consider stupid, irresponsible and cowardly. They didn't change once elected, I was just often distracted from actually thinking about the issues (X is a good idea, this is why) with empty speech praising how good my viewpoint was and therefore how bad those with other viewpoints are.

Same thing for the government / business divide. Nether side has a lock on any positive or negative attributes. Neither should be only trusted or only condemned.
 
Fair comment, DBA, if a bit pointless.

You're right I am critical of US politicians and, to be fair, our own, too.

The potential impact of a US default puts all the political aspirations of Democrats, Republicans and Tea Partiers in the shade.

Now, the 'answers' to the US dilemma are quite simple:

1. Raise the debt ceiling – failure to do so will be an act of stupid, venal, political irresponsibility;
2. Cut spending – that is the root of the problem; and
3. Consider raising some revenue, too – to avoid politically painful cuts (have you seen the AARP advertisements?) and, symbolically, to 'punish' the rich and corporations. An 8:1 ratio of spending cuts to revenue gains is about right – cut $6.4 Trillion in spending (over ten years) and the executive can close $800 Billion in tax loopholes, but insist that $2 Trillion in cuts are made in the 2012 budget.

That's my plan, but it is, essentially, what has been proposed, over and over again, by Democrats, Independents and Republicans, in the USA over the past year.

The reasons that simple plan isn't on the table is that:

1. Some (at least two that I have read/heard about, and I said “some,” originally) Tea Party members are persuaded that a default is better than anything proposed, thus far, by Obama and/or Boehner. I remain very comfortable with my assertion that some Tea Party members are monumentally stupid.

2. Some, actually, it appears, many, maybe even most, Democrats would rather face default than visit the entitlements issue. I am comfortable considering that to be irresponsible – putting partisan political advantage ahead of the good of the country. So I remain comfortable with calling most Democrats irresponsible, too.

3. Some form of my 'plan' above could have been and should have been in place in May of this year. It is not because Obama and Boehner, mainly, are jockeying for political advantage in 2012. Now, that's fair enough – it is politics, after all. But, we have been told by both men, they got close to a deal that had all three components (raise the debt ceiling, cut spending, close some tax loopholes to raise revenue) but it failed because Boehner cannot bring his Tea Party members (some of whom are monumentally stupid, in my opinion) on side. He doesn't need them in order to do what's right but he, and others in the Republican leadership, are afraid of what Mark Williams, Sarah Palin et al might do to them if they abandon the Tea Party and embrace some Democrats. To me that shows a lack of courage: putting self interest ahead of the national interest. Thus, I am also comfortable in saying that there are too many cowards in the Republican Party.

So, of course, faults (and strengths) are evenly distributed across any significant segment of humankind but in this particular political case three faults – monumental stupidity, irresponsibility and cowardice – are, visibly, getting in the way of doing the right thing.

But, thanks for your observations.
 
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