Lyion wrote:It's funny that lowering the 'growth' is considered cuts.. and only way down the line...We're still borrowing 40 cents of every dollar we spend which is the crux of the problem and the big issue the 'Tea Party' has that most seem to ignore. How long can we do that without causing massive inflation or running out of borrowing power?
Anyways, my responses:
1. It was a quick and easy politically expedient compromise. I dislike it, but less than other options.
2. Most economists say tax increases hurt economic growth. I'd personally love a flat tax or changes so corporations and billionaires have some sort of AMT.
3. /shrug. The other side says the same thing, I think.
4. The 'Tea Party' helped the GOP win the 2010 election. We'll see what happens in 2012.
5. The problem was not hardball, it was the fact they should have started this debate last year, especially with the huge spending and lack of a real budget.
6. Most of Wall Street are bipartisan. Even if they had soaked the rich with new taxes, without changing the code they still would be paying next to nothing.
7. Almost 1/2 of America does not pay taxes, so it's tough to say our whole country is invested in the tax debate, isn't it?
8. word.
9. See 8.
10. I remember 1978. Today is nothing compared to then. The cycle will turn back provided we do not bankrupt our country with entitlements and wars.
my counter-responses:
1. agreed, it could have been worse
a. but is it even constitutional?
b. the automatic triggers put in place as motivation for bipartisan supercongress compromise is supposedly split 50/50 between defense and domestic spending, which just so happens to be the exact ration of dems to reps on the supercongress. i don't really envision them producing a reasonable compromise too far off from 50/50 defense/domestic, do you? seems a bit honorific
c. wouldn't the members of said supercongress be at great political risk? in the current climate of mudslinging, whichever unlucky 12 saps get singled out to sit on this thing will have HUUUUGE targets on their backs
2. fair enough, but we were mere days away from seeing what happens when a govt doesn't have ENOUGH tax revenue
3. what i see coming from the other side is "hooray, we stood tough and succeeded in accomplishing major spending cuts without raising taxes"
4. i am afraid. i generally think of the GOP as a thieving cabalistic old boy network of rich white oppressors, but jesus christ the TP makes them look like humanitarians in comparison. i foresee more TP zealotards in 2012, regardless of what happens in the POTUS election
5. no it wasn't exactly hardball, you're right - but the aforementioned pack of rabid TP mad(wo)men handily prevented him from agreeing to any compromise that seemed even remotely centrist, especially anything that did not at least allow for the advancement of a discussion on a balanced-budget constitutional amendment (which is FUCKING LOONY)
6. i addressed this complaint to both parties, though i can see how you inferred otherwise - politicians on both sides cater less and less to their constituency and more and more to their campaign contributors
7. even if it's true that only half of americans pay taxes, ALL americans are affected by how those taxes are spent. you are correct - it IS tough to say our whole country is invested in the tax debate - but because we're a country of ignorant morons, not because not everyone actually
pays taxes
8. it makes me :facepalm:
9. imo we should cut defense spending by closing military bases around the world. we can't afford to be the world's cops anymore, and the jury's out as to whether we should've been in the first place
10. things are generally cyclical, yes - but i still think starving our govt pushes us in the wrong direction