Lol, no doubt. He seemed so very sure of himself too.
You know, as much as I think the entire idea of the Federal Reserve printing our money and then loaning it to us with interest I would be scared shitless to hand the printing press to Congress.... I don't know bud, the devil that you know or the complete idiots that you know who owns?
I tend to judge a person views more by their actions than by their words. I'll admit that I haven't been keeping up as much but is there any decent Republican proposal for lowering the deficit/debt that isn't completely bogus and/or uses accounting scams?
Honest question, have any of then ran on seriously curtailing medicare/medicaid, social security (i'll give em a pass on social security) and the DOD? Or is it more of the same talking points that won't really have much of an effect?
Yeah, I would be terrified to hand the printing presses over to Congress. At the same time, I very much dislike the system where bankers create money, pay the overhead, loan it to the government, and keep the profit. It's like saying I can't be trusted with liquor, so I'm going to pay you to hold this gun on me and make me take a drink.
Republicans are definitely trying to lower spending to reduce the deficit, but right now they have devolved into only arguing for keeping the sequester cuts in place. That's good I suppose, but it's hard to see that it helps much. And if history under Bush is representative, even that lasts only as long as there is a Democrat President - although it's also possible that most people who stay in power in D.C. for six years inevitably morph into the party of big government regardless of the appended suffix. Basically the Republican position seems to be that they don't have to be fiscally responsible, just slightly less fiscally responsible than the Democrats. "I don't have to outrun the bear, I just have to outrun you." Going off a cliff Thursday week is obviously better than going off a cliff tomorrow, but as a plan to not go off a cliff it has little to recommend it. It's "maybe if we dig the hole a tiny bit more slowly a miracle will happen" versus "maybe if we dig the hole a lot more quickly a miracle will happen".
The Tea Party on the other hand definitely wants to cut spending and reduce the deficit, but all I've seen is a generalized demand, not a workable plan. Killing Obamacare is all well and good, but it sacrifices the people that Obamacare helps without really fixing the underlying situation. We owed in excess of our GDP before Obamacare, and we'll soon owe even more in excess of our GDP even were Obamacare Obolished.
Frankly at this point I'm not sure there can be a workable plan other than small cuts to everything, but even with that we have to remember that most of the federal government spending is on auto-pilot. We need fundamental entitlement reform, but with a crappy economy, stagnant or falling incomes, historically low employment, and reduced economic opportunity as jobs are out-sourced, automated away, or moved to low wage (usually illegal) immigrants it's hard to see how we do that without basically becoming a Third World nation. It's a good thing to force people to pull their own weight if they are able, but if there is no opportunity we just stop preventing current misery by buying future misery and begin causing current misery to avoid future misery. I see no sure way to once again produce more wealth than we consume, and no possible way without a lot of short-term pain, and no will in either party to take on that sort of challenge. Further, we Americans are simply spoiled; we want what we want without any risk or responsibility. Considering the stock market's volatility, I don't see us embracing such a sensible move as privatizing Social Security, and given that we already owe in excess of our GDP I don't see how we'd fund current payments even if we found the will. Social Security is one of our biggest line items; moving accounts to real wealth requires replacing that income stream.
Two things seem undeniable.
1) There are no good choices left.
2) The available choices are only going to get rapidly worse.