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 AMERICA NEEDS TO
STOP BIG SPENDING!

 "Stop Spending, Stop Spending, Stop Spending!"

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We need to live more prudently.... Wise in handling practical matters; exercising good judgment or common sense when it comes to money matters with the government.


Stop the "Stimulus" Spending Spree

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US economy: “living on borrowed time”

US economist and author Max Wolf says the American economy is a ticking time bomb, and there is no telling when it will go off. RT caught up with him in New York to talk about the subject in more detail.

While some are cheering that the American economy is in recovery, others believe it is too premature to say.

“We are all waiting to see the private sector – that is 80% of the US economy – pick up and start growing again. It has not done that yet,” Max Wolf explains.

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Obama’s Big Spending Days are Over

By Donald Lambro | November 4th, 2010


WASHINGTON
— The new conservative majority in the House and at least six more Republicans in the Senate gives the GOP de facto control of Congress and its agenda for the next two years.Nothing can be enacted without the approval of the GOP House, and the enlarged Republican caucus in the Senate has significantly strengthened Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s hand against a smaller, weaker and more fractured Democrat majority. With fewer (52 or 53) Democrats on his side of the aisle, Majority Leader Harry Reid faces a lot of narrow votes and, more than likely, losing ones. President Obama’s stalled tax-and-trade energy bill never went anywhere in the Senate because a bunch of Democrats from fossil-fuel-manufacturing states and the Republicans teamed up to block it. Now the votes are there to kill it.
 The Obama administration’s big-spending agenda is going to get the cold shoulder, too, when the president sends his budget plan up to Capitol Hill next year. If the voters spoke loud and clear on any issue, it was their belief that government has grown too big and spends too much.

After racking up nearly $3 trillion in deficits in just his first two years in office, with another $1 trillion-plus deficit in store for next year and the year after that, Republicans have made it clear that the days of Obama’s spending sprees have come to an end.

A chilling new budget analysis released last week by the Heritage Foundation reveals the extent of the fiscal crisis that looms over us in the coming decade.
“Soaring spending drives these dangerous deficits,” says the think tank’s chief budget analyst Brian Riedl.

“By 2020, federal spending is set to soar to 26 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP), after having averaged 20 percent after World War II.”

“If Congress does nothing and simply continues existing taxing and spending policies, annual federal deficits will grow, reaching a projected $2 trillion deficit in just 10 years — and even that assumes a return to peace and prosperity,”

Riedl says.
This is why a number of politically vulnerable Democrats, who will face the voters in 2012, will be lining up with Republican colleagues to vote for smaller budgets, too.With Republicans gaining more than 60 seats in the House, their largest majority since the Truman years, they are going to be able to drive the budget process in Congress, and Harry Reid won’t be able to block them in the Senate. Under the budget’s reconciliation rules, there is no filibuster requiring 60 votes to take up the measure that needs only a simple majority to pass it.But the immediate battle that looms over the remaining weeks of this lame-duck Congress will be the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts that are due to expire on Jan. 1 unless they are extended.
Obama and Democratic leaders want to keep cuts for the middle class, but let them expire for anyone making more than $250,000 a year.

The Republicans want the cuts permanently extended. Here, too, the results of the midterm elections will influence the outcome.
In his news conference

Wednesday, Obama said he is willing to seek compromise, but did not say where. Raising taxes on the “rich” has been a staple of his failed economic agenda, and he is not likely to change course easily.
But the large Republican gains in the elections, which were seen as a repudiation of his policies, have weakened his presidency and essentially ended his legislative agenda for the next two years. He no longer has the clout he once had on Capitol Hill.

Meantime, the political atmosphere has dramatically changed in Congress. Nancy Pelosi has lost the support of 30- some Democrats, and possibly many more, who say that this is no time to be raising taxes when economic growth is a feeble 2 percent and unemployment is stuck at nearly 10 percent for the foreseeable future.
 

Perhaps as many as half a dozen Democrats in the Senate are similarly opposed to raising the top income tax rates, including Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Evan Bayh of Indiana and Kent Conrad of North Dakota.
Other returning lawmakers, and those who face even tougher re-election prospects in the next election cycle, have heard the voters and read the gloomy economic data. The Democrats’ image is bad enough.

Do they want to make it worse by voting to raise income taxes on family-owned small businesses and on capital gains and dividends for retirees and investors in a down economy?
That’s what Obama, Pelosi and Reid — and the hardcore liberal base of their party — want them to do, even in the aftermath of their devastating defeat in this week’s elections.
In the end, a last-minute compromise, perhaps extending the tax cuts for one to two years, is always possible.

Obama is thinking about 2012, as is his party, when many more Senate Democrats will be up for re-election than Republicans.
They know that raising taxes in a recession will hand Republicans a deadly issue in the next election that will make Tuesday’s results look mild in comparison.

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Question: Where is the world's next major

financial crisis most likely to pop up?



Jim Hoge:  The financial system of market based economics invariably has periods of recession, periods of when people have overbought, undersold or whatever and that is going to happen again.  There is no question, but what just happened the last two years is much, much bigger than most market based slowdowns or recessions and it was based on some very big we might call fault line problems that have to be dealt with.  What I’m concerned…  And I think we will by the way, but there are two things to keep in mind.  This was so severe that our economic base that we’re now going to have to build back from has contracted dramatically.  It’s nowhere near as large as it was and we won’t get back to an economic base that big for at least 10 or 15 years.  Number two, I worry more than anything else that we’re about to make a huge strategic mistake economically and that is to think that we can turn around on a dime and through harsh taxes and harsh spending cuts reduce our deficits and not bring on a big second recession.  Timing is everything.  We are not ready to stop stimulus.  In fact, we need another stimulus program.  We are not ready to give up on spending money, on infrastructure problems that are really an investment, roads which are deteriorating dramatically, rails which are way behind other big countries, on education, so I hear the voices from sort of the conservative wing in congress saying it’s time right now to start slashing our budgets, not to raise taxes, but to cut spending very dramatically on everything from education to roads and bridges and I think that is a ticket for disaster.  Now I’m not a spendthrift who says let’s spend the kind of money we’re spending now forever, but we just simply have not come out of the recession enough.  We have not built and sustained economic growth again enough to begin that and when we do begin it we should be doing it gradually.  We shouldn’t try to solve the deficit problem in one fell swoop.  It’s going to take 10 years to do it and we can afford that as long as we get on the right track, but we’re not going to get on the right track if we don’t first pay attention to what needs to be done to regenerate growth in the economy, a solid growth based on real productivity and real innovation and I just hope that while he is in office the Obama Administration has the grit to stick to the job of rebuilding the economy and our capabilities, our productivity before trying to resolve to a great extent, the deficit problem.  That is later.  That is not for now. 

Recorded May 28, 2010

Interviewed by Jessica Liebman

 


 AMERICA NEEDS TO
STOP BIG SPENDING!


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Stop Big Government Spending – No Continuing Resolution

(Opinion from one of our support group members)

 

Now is the time to write your politicians and tell them no more continuing budget resolutions.
   Continuing budget resolutions allow big government politicians and bureaucrats to keep spending on our credit cards.

   For obvious reasons, big government people will lie and claim our government will shutdown - unless Congress produces a continuing resolution to allow the government to keep on spending all it wants to spend. 
   This claim sounds ominous, but it's a lie.  It is a little like saying your family will shut down if it cuts up overdue credit cards.  Limiting your ability to spend more than you have does not mean your family is going to starve to death while living on the streets.  If you cut up your credit cards you WILL need to cut out spending some money.  It's unlikely you will cut out the things you need to survive. 

   The Obama Administration is also not likely to cut off spending for people's survival, with spending continuing for things like the military, social security and Medicare.  Of course, to get a continuing spending resolution the politicians will threaten all kinds of dire consequences - but they cannot stop (and will not need to stop) spending on critical programs.
   The government takes in taxes and other revenues every day of the year.  It will still be able to spend this money on critical programs.  Even if the Obama Administrations decides to squander it on more foolish spending plans, the government will still be in business. 
   Despite the truth, expect lying socialist democrats, big spending statistic politicians in both parties and the lame stream media to start warning that Social Security and Medicare are in danger, and we must have an unlimited credit card during wartimes or the military won't be supported or paid.  These lying government people want to frighten you into believing that cutting up Big Government's credit card means the nation has no more money for critical needs - that's just not true.

 


 
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