Can you find me a recording of any Democratic officeholder saying they're "for Big Government"? I don't think even Bernie Sanders is on the record with something like that. Fox News saying what democrats think is not what democrats think.
Which Democratic spending initiatives are contributing to the current deficit? The Democratic war in Iraq, or the Democratic Homeland Security Dept? The Democratic Medicare Part D? You can argue the stimulus but that spending was all temporary and is gone by next year. The healthcare bill reduced gov't healthcare spending (and the tea party ran against it on a obama-is-taking-away-your-medicare scare campaign, I remember the attack ads, irony is not dead).
1999 wasn't that long ago. We had a surplus. The ideological split is mostly the result of opportunism by Tea Party commentators/legislators and the complete illegitimacy of any Democratic president in the eyes of about 50% of Republicans. Democrats will bend over backwards to not be perceived as ideological, as we saw last week.
> Which Democratic spending initiatives are contributing to the current deficit? The Democratic war in Iraq, or the Democratic Homeland Security Dept? The Democratic Medicare Part D?
With all of those repub approved initiatives, the last deficit under a repub congress was $160B/year and the trend was downwards.
The deficit jumped to $460B when the Dems took Congress (and Bush was still president).
Speaking of Medicare Part D, care to name three congressional Dems who objected to it on the basis that it cost too much? It's easy to find those who objected because it cover more, that is, cost more.
And, wrt Homeland Security, feel free to identify Dems who want to spend less on it. The vote on unionization will help you identify those who wanted to spend more.
> You can argue the stimulus but that spending was all temporary and is gone by next year.
Obama and the CBO disagree. They both project >$1T/year deficits for the forseeable future. (They disagree on how much over $1T.)
> The healthcare bill reduced gov't healthcare spending
Umm, no. The claim was the overall cost of healthcare would go down, but that govt spending would go up, being paid for by additional taxes and $500B in medicare "savings". (The scoring "worked" because the taxes started before the benefits.)
The medicare "savings" consists of paying doctors less, the "doc fix". That's been on the plate several times, but each time Congress has pulled back because doctors have said that they won't accept medicare patients if they're paid less.
> The ideological split is mostly the result ... and the complete illegitimacy of any Democratic president in the eyes of about 50% of Republicans.
Ah yes, no Dems ever questioned BushMcChimpHitler's legitimacy or were at all ideological about him.
This kind of silly tribalism is the exact reason that nobody can get anything done. You're now saying ignore the votes, pay attention to how they talk about the votes? A bunch of points about actual actions, and you're so invested in being a Republican that you change the subject to how they talked about the actions?
Are you sure you're not being played for a sucker?
Yes, Democrats were more offended by the gross inefficiency of Medicare Part D than by the general idea of Medicare as a program. They voted against Part D. Republicans voted for it.
Having a projected deficit next year is hilariously orthogonal to the undisputed fact that stimulus spending ends this year.
And the point about Democrats questioning Bush's legitimacy is a great one. Here's someone who actually was arguably illegitimate for his first term, and what did Democratic officeholders and commentators do? Fall over themselves to disassociate themselves from the crazy hippies, and proclaim that we as a country need to move forward. There was no Democratic tea party, and frankly if the Republican tea party is honest about their concern with deficits, where were they prior to January 2009?
> You're now saying ignore the votes, pay attention to how they talk about the votes?
We agree that Medicare part D is bad. You claim that the fact that Repubs supported it and Dems didn't implies that Dems would have done better if they'd had their way. One problem with that argument is that it assumes that all alternatives are better. That's clearly false.
That's why I said that we should look at what the Dems wanted instead of Bush's Medicare Part D. What they wanted was 40% more expensive, so if you think that Bush's Medicare Part D is bad because of the cost ....
> Having a projected deficit next year is hilariously orthogonal to the undisputed fact that stimulus spending ends this year.
As I've pointed out, almost everyone else thinks that next year's deficit, post-stimulus, will be over $1T and that the same is true the year after and for the forseeable future under current law. (There's some disagreement over whether the trend is $1.2T or $1.5T.)
If you're correct, why isn't Obama shouting your number?
1) Medicare Part D managed to spend a boatload of money while providing an absurdly small amount of care, most of it going straight to drug companies. I'm sure you could do worse if you actively tried, but you'd really have to try pretty hard.
2) And, the stimulus isn't contributing to that deficit, hence the comment about it being "hilariously orthogonal". It was also 1/3 tax cuts if you don't remember. Anyways, medicare Part D, the war in Iraq, the Bush tax cuts, and the near-doubling of military spending are contributing to that deficit, as well as tax base shrinkage due to recession. If we're counting relative to the last time we ran a surplus.
> Medicare Part D managed to spend a boatload of money while providing an absurdly small amount of care, most of it going straight to drug companies.
As I said, we agree that it's bad. You've yet to establish that the Dem's proposal, which was more expensive, was better.
> And, the stimulus isn't contributing to that deficit, hence the comment about it being "hilariously orthogonal".
You're the only one talking about the stimulus. I've pointed out that the post-stimulus deficit is >$1T, while the pre-Obama deficit was $460 and the last Repub Congress deficit was $160B, both with the bush tax cuts and more war spending and the recession hadn't kicked in then.
Bush owned the first > 1 trillion dollar deficit, that budget was passed while he was still president. If we're doing stupid technicalities.
But again, that's silly partisan point scoring and totally beside the point. Pulling one-sided stats with a total lack of intellectual honesty in order to try and claim my side's better.
You're actually arguing here, "but if we cherry pick from the peak of the housing bubble, my side looks great! Just don't look at the following year".
I don't blindly cheer for democrats like they're a football team, I try to objectively evaluate what's going on. If more republican football fans did the same, we might actually have a deficit reduction deal, or a plan to help the jobs situation.
> Bush owned the first > 1 trillion dollar deficit, that budget was passed while he was still president.
Yup, and Obama has gone deeper.
I'm not claiming that Bush was good - I've said that he's bad. I'm pointing out that Obama and the Dems have been worse.
> If we're doing stupid technicalities.
One "stupid technicality" is that the Obama and the Dems haven't been all that interested in passing budgets.
That's why I talk about spending.
> but if we cherry pick from the peak of the housing bubble, my side looks great! Just don't look at the following year".
You've repeatedly claimed that there will be a huge difference in spending after this year because the stimulus will be over. That makes a comparision with pre-recession reasonable.
Oh, now I get it, you're claiming that the current deficits are due to spending by the Obama administration?
Can you point out which spending? I'm under the impression that they're structural deficits created by Bush programs and exacerbated by the recession. But if you could point out some large Obama spending plan that passed, I'd change my mind.
This week, we found out that they scored the subsidies based on single people with no kids while the coverage goes to dependents as well, so the subsidies will cost a lot more than predicted.
Every week or so, there's another $100B or so of spending in the bill that we find out about that wasn't scored.
Pelosi was right - we had to pass the bill to know what's in it.
> And the point about Democrats questioning Bush's legitimacy is a great one. Here's someone who actually was arguably illegitimate for his first term, and what did Democratic officeholders and commentators do?
They, along with the rest of polite society, when some "brave artist" ranted about Bush's assassination.
> if the Republican tea party is honest about their concern with deficits, where were they prior to January 2009?
Actually, a lot of us were screaming about the bush deficits, ,which got a big boost in 2006, when the Dems took congress, something that you completely ignore.
However, as I point out, there is a difference between $160B deficits and $1T deficits.
Sure, you want to blame the economy, but even if that's the only cause, why is it reasonable to keep spending as if times are flush when they clearly aren't?
I think the point he is trying to make is that where were the Dems when these charges were run up, and I agree with the point. Why are we suddenly hitting the debt ceiling? Does noone in Washington have a calculator?
In the opposition? With a minority of votes, voting against this stuff? That's not good enough?
We aren't suddenly hitting the debt ceiling, we've been hitting it every year or two like clockwork for decades. It was raised over a dozen times during the Reagan administration, for example. Suddenly?
You won't find any Democrats using the phrase "Big Government" because it's a loaded, derogatory phrase. Nonetheless, the Democratic platform is generally in favor of spending on social services, like welfare, unemployment benefits, Social Security, and education, as well as generally favoring higher amounts of regulation for businesses and industries. Some of these positions are relative: keep the same amount of environmental regulations instead of reducing them, or cut education but by a smaller amount than oil subsidies. Some of them are contingent on the economic climate: avoiding cuts instead of increasing spending. But in general, yes, the Democrats do envision a larger government role in society (excepting defense/security) than Republicans do. They just don't come out and say so because that would be politically disadvantageous.
But in general, yes, the Democrats do envision a larger
government role in society (excepting defense/security)
than Republicans do.
How can you just toss "excepting defense/security" in a parenthetical like that?
I'll never understand how some people can be discussing the size of size of government and then essentially ignore military spending (of which much has little to do with defense or security) and governmental abuses of power for the sake of security theater.
NPR? Big government.
PBS? Big government.
Rendition and torture? Not so much. Belongs in a parenthetical.
Can you find me a recording of any Democratic officeholder saying they're "for Big Government"?
The ideological split is not between Democrats and Republicans. They are wings of the Washington, D.C. Nationalist Party. The Democrats are the emotionalist wing, the Republicans are the rationalist wing, but the motto of both wings is "We're from Washington, and we're here to help!"
1999 wasn't that long ago. We had a surplus.
Funded by a bubble.
The ideological split is mostly the result of opportunism by Tea Party commentators/legislators ...
The Tea Party is one public face of the decentralist sentiment that opposes the Washington, D.C. Nationalist Party. By their very nature decentralists do not organize national movements like the Tea Party until the situation is completely out of hand (as with the Regan Revolution). They give the centralists a real thrashing, spend a few years chainsawing the worst crap out of the government, then go back home. The centralists then start rebuilding power for the next showdown in another 30 years.
Which Democratic spending initiatives are contributing to the current deficit? The Democratic war in Iraq, or the Democratic Homeland Security Dept? The Democratic Medicare Part D? You can argue the stimulus but that spending was all temporary and is gone by next year. The healthcare bill reduced gov't healthcare spending (and the tea party ran against it on a obama-is-taking-away-your-medicare scare campaign, I remember the attack ads, irony is not dead).
1999 wasn't that long ago. We had a surplus. The ideological split is mostly the result of opportunism by Tea Party commentators/legislators and the complete illegitimacy of any Democratic president in the eyes of about 50% of Republicans. Democrats will bend over backwards to not be perceived as ideological, as we saw last week.