RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
Okay, I'm not sure what your definition of "strong majority" is but that's just 2001.The Republicans did not have a strong majority in the Senate in 2001...
Okay, I'm not sure what your definition of "strong majority" is but that's just 2001.The Republicans did not have a strong majority in the Senate in 2001...
Some credit and blame should go to both the president and congress but (IMO) even more so to economic cycles outside of their control.Does Clinton get credit or is a president only to blame for deficits? Republicans had control of the House, the Senate and the presidency for 6 years, how did that work out?
A History of Surpluses and Deficits in the United States
I'm not sure about the "majority of Americans actually like it" part. I beleive ACA was a major reason the Repubs made gains.
While only 10 percent want to keep it as is it is, a plurality, or 49 percent, want to keep it in place but work to improve it. Just 29 percent said it should be repealed and replaced with a GOP alternative or nothing at all.
This thread of a discussion we are having is because I stated that Obama should get credit for the good things that have happened under his watch.
The 2009 deficit was Obama's first year in office. What did he do (or the Democrat Congress do) that warrants putting the blame on them for that $1559.6 Billion in deficits.
This is not responsive. What caused the deficits? We were waging two wars and spending much of the money off the books. Obama stopped that.
I addressed in my very first post. I'm only asking for consistency.And you haven't given an example of anything Obama did that facilitated good things happening on his watch.
I'm not going to respond. This is just assertion. I won't bother to ask you how you control for your bias. It's not the subject of this discussion.Even the 2009 stimulus, which I think had negative value compared to the opportunity cost, was basically dumped in the lap of Congress to hash out (and they did make a hash of it). Years later, Obama joked that he hadn't realized that shovel-ready jobs didn't really exist. He spent a lot of time giving speeches about health care reform, but in the end, he left it to Congress to hash it out, and once again, they made a hash of it. When it came time to implement it, he fouled that up. He threw away the military victory in Iraq, and he "surged" in Afghanistan for purely political reasons, with no resolve, or even a plan, to accomplish anything positive there. What has he done besides "getting" bin Laden, which involved approving a mission that 4 out of 5 Presidents in his position would have done too? The guy does nothing but fund-raise, play golf, and whine that his job is hard and people don't appreciate how smart and wonderful he is. He is probably the most narcissistic President AND the most incompetent President that I've ever seen in my lifetime. And, believe me, that's not easy to accomplish.
More assertion. You cannot re-run the model for Obama anymore than we can re-run the model for Bush or any president. Things could have been much worse if Bush had not lowered taxes. Things could have been much better if he had not. This isn't about your opinion and speculation. It's about a president making decisions and implementing policies. The proposition at issue is whether Obama did that and not whether you agree with his decisions. Nothing you've written is salient to my point.What did he do to rein in spending? Why did he insist on raising taxes in the middle of a weak economic recovery? Why did he implement programs to obstruct the foreclosure process and tighten mortgage credit, which has only had the effect of delaying the recovery in housing. There is little doubt in my mind that if Obama had done nothing, literally, during the last six years, the economy would be far stronger than it is.
President Bush figured out a way to keep spending off of the books. President Obama felt that was dishonest and stopped the practice.Obama stopped that? What could you possibly mean?
As we have noted here before, the U.S. military has largely paid for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through emergency spending measures, in effect keeping wartime costs off the books. In addition to masking skyrocketing budget growth at the Department of Defense, this process has allowed the services to treat budget supplementals as a piggy bank for new procurement. Members of Congress may have grumbled about poor oversight, but they have largely acquiesced.
Obama’s message? Not anymore.
It means dishonesty. Obfuscation. It matters because Bush was trying to hide his deficits while the debt was ballooning. The deficits do not paint an accurate picture.And what does it mean that spending was off the books, and why does it matter?
Just more assertion and irrelevant to this discussion. I completely disagree with your unfounded conclusions but I'm not here to debate those points. My purpose is to point out that most decisions by presidents will be controversial and a large segment of the population will disagree with those decisions. That you disagree says nothing as to whether or not President Obama, duly elected, has made decisions that he believes are the best course of action.He bugged out of Iraq, it's true, but the war was already over, and the cost of keeping 10,000 troops there would have amounted to a rounding error in the budget. And he upped the ante in Afghanistan for no reason except that he had claimed it was the "good" war during the 2008 campaign that had been neglected by Bush.
Agreed. Thank you. This IMO is the most intellectually honest of opinions.Some credit and blame should go to both the president and congress but (IMO) even more so to economic cycles outside of their control.
<snip>
President Bush figured out a way to keep spending off of the books. President Obama felt that was dishonest and stopped the practice.
Obama: No More War Spending Tricks
It means dishonesty. Obfuscation. It matters because Bush was trying to hide his deficits while the debt was ballooning. The deficits do not paint an accurate picture.
Your sources, again, are missing. I'm not really interested in echo chamber rhetoric nor am I interested in having to point out time and again that someone's sources are missing only to be ignored. Most importantly, I'm not here to be patronized or condescended to.< argument by assertion snipped >
If you understood this stuff...
Okay, I'm not sure what your definition of "strong majority" is but that's just 2001.
Fixed for accuracy.You are very, very confused. First, it is not possible to "hide" deficits. The spending on the war appeared in the deficit and the debt numbers. It just didn't appear as part of the base defense budget; instead, it appeared as supplemental spending. Second, to the extent that the defense department allocated run-of-the-mill operating and procurement expenses to the supplementals, it was Bush himself who was hurt by that. It made his "war of choice" look more expensive than it really was. Third, it was Obama who had a nefarious and dishonest reason for changing the accounting. Obama wanted to lump war spending in with base defense spending so that he could claim enormous savings when the war ended. I remember analyzing one of his early budgets (probably the fiscal 2011 one, released in early 2010) where Obama claimed to include $2T of deficit reductions. $1T of that consisted of $100B/yr allocated to the war in Iraq for the following 10 years which he was going to save by winding down the war in Iraq within the next year. The whole thing was a dishonest trick. If youunderstood this stuff, were a rabid partisan you would actually be criticizing Obama for deceit and praising Bush for transparency.
I've asked you before what you are talking about? What do you mean not the same kind of control? And you are wrong, I've already demonstrated that it was not two years. At most it was 4 months.And the fact is that no matter how you slice it Bush never had the kind of majority that Obama had for his first two years.
BTW: Your sources are missing. I provided a precise time line of how many seats the Dems had at every juncture. You simply make assertions. Could you support your claims?No, it's not just 2001. It's 7 months of 2001 and all of 2002. So now your six years of complete Republican control is down to 4 years and 5 months.
Jim Jeffords is a single legislator. How does that take away from "strong" Republican majorities? Or does that only apply when the Democrats are in control?
No, it's not just 2001. It's 7 months of 2001 and all of 2002. So now your six years of complete Republican control is down to 4 years and 5 months.
And the fact is that no matter how you slice it Bush never had the kind of majority that Obama had for his first two years.
This thread of a discussion we are having is because I stated that Obama should get credit for the good things that have happened under his watch. The 2009 deficit was Obama's first year in office. What did he do (or the Democrat Congress do) that warrants putting the blame on them for that $1559.6 Billion in deficits.
You seem to be saying that the deficits are because of Democrat spending. You have not at all addressed the banking collapse and the bail out of the banks.
Yes but I do think economic policy does affect economic cycles. The problem is that such effects may take years to occur and may difficult to impossible to tease out from all the other factors. Thus, looking at what happened to various economic indices at some point in time and ascribing the changes to the sitting President is an exercise in finger-pointing.Some credit and blame should go to both the president and congress but (IMO) even more so to economic cycles outside of their control.
Republicans barely put up a fight except for netting picking up a clear majority in the Senate and expanding their majority in the House, you mean?I just noticed that Al Franken easily won re-election in Minnesota. What a difference one term makes. Republicans barely put up a fight.
Well yeah, that's what he meant, because that's what he said. But we understand how important it was for you to make a feel good statement about something elseRepublicans barely put up a fight except for netting picking up a clear majority in the Senate and expanding their majority in the House, you mean?
Republicans barely put up a fight except for netting picking up a clear majority in the Senate and expanding their majority in the House, you mean?
Franken may have kept his seat with no trouble, but I guess probably for the next two years the Republicans will be looking at him across the aisle and thinking the best revenge is living well.