Sanders writes: "We must address the deficit in a way that is fair and does not balance the budget on the backs of the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor - people who are already hurting."
Sen. Bernie Sanders gestures as he speaks at the California Democrats State Convention in Sacramento, Calif., April 30. (photo: AP)
Cut Deficit, But Not On Backs of Needy
03 October 12
es. We must address the very serious problem of a $16 trillion national debt and a $1 trillion federal deficit.
But at this pivotal moment in American history, it's essential that we understand how we got into this deficit crisis in the first place and who was responsible for it. More important, we must address the deficit in a way that is fair and does not balance the budget on the backs of the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor - people who are already hurting.
Let us never forget that when Bill Clinton left office in January 2001, this country enjoyed a healthy $236 billion surplus, and the projections were that this surplus would grow by a total of $5 trillion over a 10-year period.
What happened? How did we go from a significant federal budget surplus to a massive deficit? Frankly, it is not that complicated.
President George W. Bush and the so-called deficit hawks chose to go to war in Afghanistan and Iraq and put the funding for those wars on our nation's credit card. By the time the last wounded veteran is cared for, those wars will end up adding more than $3 trillion to our national debt.
During this same period, Bush and the "deficit hawks" provided huge tax breaks to the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans who were already doing phenomenally well. These tax breaks for the very rich will increase our national debt by about $1 trillion over a 10-year period.
In addition, Bush and the "deficit hawks" established a Medicare prescription drug program written by the pharmaceutical and insurance industries. This program, which is far more expensive than it should be because it prohibits the federal government from using its purchasing power to negotiate cheaper drug prices, was not paid for. As a result, about $400 billion will be added to our national debt over a 10-year period.
Further, as a result of the deregulation of Wall Street, and the greed, recklessness and illegal behavior of the major financial institutions, this country was driven into the worst recession since the 1930s, which resulted in a massive reduction in revenue coming into the federal government.
And now, as we approach the election and a lame-duck session of Congress, these very same Republican "deficit hawks," the folks who, to a significant degree, created the deficit crisis, are presenting some horrendous ideas about how we should get out of the mess that they caused. Sadly, they have been joined by some Democrats.
First, in order to cover the cost of the unpaid-for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, they want to make significant cuts to Social Security that will affect not only seniors but disabled veterans as well. They want to do this despite the fact that Social Security is funded by the payroll tax, has not caused the deficit and has a $2.7 trillion surplus. Their favorite approach to cutting Social Security is through a reformulation of the way cost-of-living adjustments are calculated through the creation of a so-called chained consumer price index. Enacting this policy would result in a $560-a-year cut in Social Security benefits for 65-year-olds once they turn 75 and about a $1,000-a-year cut when they reach 85. The chained CPI will also make substantial cuts to the benefits of more than 3 million veterans, with the largest cuts affecting young, permanently disabled veterans who were seriously wounded in combat.
Second, in order to cover the cost of tax breaks given to millionaires and billionaires, they want to increase the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67 and throw millions of families with children off of Medicaid.
Third, in order to cover the cost of the Medicare prescription drug program, they want to cut Pell Grants, student loans, nutrition and other programs vitally important to working families.
Fourth, at a time when the United States has the most unequal distribution of wealth and income of any major country and the gap between the very rich and everyone else is growing wider, their deficit-reduction plan calls for lowering the top tax rates for the rich to about 28 percent or even lower.
Fifth, while the United States military budget has virtually tripled since 1997 and we now spend nearly as much as the rest of the world combined on defense, they want to increase defense spending.
There are fair and sensible ways to reduce deficits, but balancing the budget on the backs of the weak and vulnerable while lowering tax rates for the rich and increasing military spending are not among them.
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The Repubs just want to hear the part of the truth that makes them look good, or, at least, doesn't make them look bad.
It's been written that we grow up when we don't need to be lied to anymore.
Anyone in the U.S. who wants to be lied to, wants to hear how astute and intelligent they are while listening to Romney and Ryan, to me, they are in denial of what is going on.
As with anyone who has a poor self-image, their favorite drug of choice, ego-stroking, can be very addictive. So many people seem to just lap it up.
I believe the dems are more discriminating than the Repubs, but I suspect there are those among us who buy into the "rock-star" mentality of politicians. That's why I like Bernie. No rock star here. Just the facts, people, just the facts.
Admittedly, I do not care what Romney says, I know enough about Romney to realize he is doing his etch-a-sketch routine and that his months of preparation have been all about setting up a false policy that tonight he just denied. He's lying.
Romney interrupting and ran all over the place but I heard Obama do nothing about it.
I heard a nervousness in Obama's voice I had never heard before, and his answers were very poor and disappointing.
When I got to my destination I was able to turn on the TV, and what I saw there was Obama looking downcast, eyes on the ground, at a loss for words, nervous and eyes darting looking shifty. Obama was terrible.
For someone who had been supposedly preparing for the debate for weeks, he looked like a deer in the headlights. Maybe that is what he gets for practicing with a .01% loser elitist, John Kerry.
Obama's performance was literally the worst performance I have ever seen since I started watching debates in the 70's with Carter-Reagan.
I think the basic problem with Obama is that you cannot fight the Republicans with Republican Lite philosophy, and that is what Obama seemed to be doing.
All of this is my round-about way of saying, I wish it had been Bernie Sanders up there, Sanders knows what to say and how to say it.
Obama is the bigger fool here for not taking this seriously and being able to stand up to Romney's non-verbal.
Romney won the non-verbal debate so definitively that the verbal stuff hardly mattered, including his lies.
He had a lot of help .... as in it takes a village ... a nasty old Republican village full of toxic waste, but he did not win that debate, his strategists and advisors did. Ironic, huh?
1. Lifetime health insurance for gov workers after 5 yr service.
2 Eliminate business loopholes that benefit the wealthy in ways that hurt US. Definitely close any tax incentives for exporting jobs....
3. Stop the tax credits for Charter Schools. They said it would be temporary. They are doing no better while harming public education.
4. Insist on military cuts, as Repugs agreed to in budget crisis
5. Make Big Pharma lower medicare costs -get competition
INCOME
1. Raise (temporary' tax cuts to Clinton era.
2. Raise ss contribution cap to $250,000 income. 'Mid. Class'
3. A hefty tax on ridiculous luxury goods.
4. A tax on non-work vehicles that are gas guzzlers.
Thats all I think of in one minute. I'm sure you all have more.
Thisis the underlying root problem that has contributed to all else that is bad in America.
One does not have to use theold soviet model either. Look at western Europe and Japan! Look at Shanghai in China! All success stories compared to the States.
Thank you!
On the other hand, I would not necessarily hold up as models either western europe as a whole (the scandanavian countries may be a better example overall) -- though i would certainly agree that their "welfare state" was far more developed and progesssive than the one in the US -- or Japan (where growth, such that it is has been due to holding down wages and benefits inlcuding retirement benefits...one of the reasons the Japanese have such a high rate of savings). And, while China's growth rates have indeed been high this has been for the most part based on the super expoltation of their own workers which is why there are now thousands of strikes each year (even though they are illegal) and estimates are that at least 20 million chinese workers lost their job in the global meltdown in 2008).
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