Showing posts with label Democrats Deficit spending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democrats Deficit spending. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2011

America Is On Fire. So What Is Obama Doing Today?

46-Year-Old Political VirginWhile Republicans in Congress are trying to put together a deal to cut spending and raise the debt ceiling you may be wondering what Obama is doing today. Not only is he not working hard to end this spending crisis and raise our national debt, but he is busy raising our miles per gallon on our cars. This shows you how out of touch this guy is. He can't come up with a plan of his own other then talking about what he wouldn't sign. Could we have picked a bigger idiot then this guy to run our country? It's as if he doesn't give a shit about anything that effects everyone in this country. If he was a CEO of a company he would have been canned a long time ago. We need a leader now more then ever and all he and the Senate have done is stir the pot and run away. His actions and words show us all how little he truly cares about us and the economy.
 
Last night on C-Span a Democratic Party Congressman begged Congress to push this debt crisis past 2012 so that the next president can deal with it. He did say that he hopes it's Obama for 4 more years. But our debt and spending is just politics to the Democratic party. It is doing the easy thing to do nothing and keep spending like tomorrow will never come. Democrats know their time is limited and that the next guy will have to do the hard thing. And those same pussy Democrats will be all over those doing the hard work in the near future. We have see the cloth that these Democrats are cut from. We have seen that they are willing to screw the next generations so that they don't have to do the hard thing. Their spending has put us in this predicament and it is their lack of constitution and backbone that will harm this country in the future.
 
We will be dealing with this again if we don't do something now. I don't think screwing the next generation with our debt is the right thing to do. But the Democratic Party has no problem screwing them over and stealing their future for the mindless spending they have done. The future of this country doesn't look good thanks to the Democratic Party that has run this country into the ground faster then ever before in our history.
 
The country voted for a community agitator and that is just what we got. The Democrats have the WH, the Senate and half of the House and the Republicans are the only ones doing any work in Washington.
We conservatives told you that the Democrats would put us in this position and they have. So don't be suprised when it happens. The Obama budget puts us another $10 Trillion in debt over the next 10 years. Since he took office the national debt has gone from $10 trillion to $15 trillion and rising. Doesn't that make things worse?

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Democrats Keep Spending And Then Blame The Republicans. BWAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHA. What a bunch of buffoons

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama's proposed budget predicts the national deficit will crest at a record-breaking $1.6 trillion in the current fiscal year, then start to recede in 2011 to $1.3 trillion, a congressional official said Sunday.
Still, the administration's new budget to be released Monday says deficits over the next decade will average 4.5 percent of the size of the economy, a level which economists say is dangerously high if not addressed, said the congressional official. The official was not authorized to discuss the budget before its public release.
Details of the administration's budget headed for Congress include an additional $100 billion to attack painfully high unemployment. The proposed $3.8 trillion budget would provide billions more to pull the country out of the Great Recession while increasing taxes on the wealthy and imposing a spending freeze on many government programs.
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the administration believed "somewhere in the $100 billion range" would be the appropriate amount for a new jobs measure made up of a business tax credit to encourage hiring, increased infrastructure spending and money from the government's bailout fund to get banks to increase loans to struggling small businesses.
That price tag would be below a $174 billion bill passed by the House in December but higher than an $83 billion proposal that surfaced last week in the Senate.
Gibbs said it was important for Democrats and Republicans to put aside their differences to pass a bill that addresses jobs, the country's No. 1 concern. "I think that would be a powerful signal to send to the American people," Gibbs said in an appearance on CNN's "State of the Union."
Job creation was a key theme of the budget President Barack Obama was sending Congress on Monday, a document designed, as was the president's State of the Union address, to reframe his young presidency after a protracted battle over health care damaged his standing in public opinion polls and contributed to a series of Democratic election defeats.
Obama's $3.8 trillion spending plan for the 2011 budget year that begins Oct. 1 attempts to navigate between the opposing goals of pulling the country out of a deep recession and dealing with a budget deficit that soared to an all-time high of $1.42 trillion last year.
The Congressional Budget Office is forecasting that the deficit for the current budget year will be only slightly lower, $1.35 trillion, and the flood of red ink will remain massive for years to come, raising worries among voters and the foreign investors who buy much of the country's debt.
On the anti-recession front, congressional sources said Obama's new budget will propose extending the popular Making Work Pay middle-class tax breaks of $400 per individual and $800 per couple through 2011. They were due to expire after this year.
The budget will also propose $250 payments to Social Security recipients to bolster their finances in a year when they are not receiving the normal cost-of-living boost to their benefit checks because of low inflation. Obama will also seek a $25 billion increase in payments to help recession-battered states.
Obama's new budget will set off months of debate in the Democratically controlled Congress, especially in an election year in which Republicans are hoping to use attacks against government overspending to gain seats. Obama has argued that he inherited a deficit of more than $1 trillion and was forced to increase spending to stabilize the financial system and combat the worst recession since the 1930s.
Obama's new budget was expected to repeat many of the themes of his first budget. But in a bow to worries over the soaring deficits, the administration is proposing a three-year freeze on spending for a wide swath of domestic government agencies. Military, veterans, homeland security and big benefit programs such as Social Security and Medicare would not feel the pinch.
The freeze would affect $447 billion in spending and is designed to save $250 billion over a decade. However, it would not fall equally on all domestic agencies. Some would see budget cuts to free up spending for programs the administration wants to expand such as education and civilian research efforts.
NASA's mission to return astronauts to the moon would be grounded with the space agency instead getting an additional $5.9 billion over five years to encourage private companies to build, launch and operate their own spacecraft for the benefit of NASA and others. NASA would pay the private companies to carry U.S. astronauts.
Obama's budget repeats his recommendations for an overhaul of the nation's health care system, the fight that dominated his first year in office. It proposes to get billions of dollars in savings from the Medicare program and again seeks increased taxes on the wealthy by limiting the benefits they receive from various tax deductions. Both ideas have met strong resistance in Congress.
Gibbs insisted Sunday that the president's push for health care was "still inside the 5-yard line," but Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, also appearing on CNN, said the public was overwhelmingly against the bill and the administration should "put it on the shelf, go back and start over."
In addition to the freeze on discretionary nonsecurity spending, Obama is proposing to boost revenues by allowing the Bush administration tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 to expire at the end of this year for families making more than $250,000 annually. Tax relief for those less well-off would be extended.
The new Obama budget will also include a proposal to levy a fee on the country's biggest banks to raise an estimated $90 billion to recover losses from the government's $700 billion financial rescue fund. Those losses are expected to come not come from the bank bailouts but from the support extended to General Motors and Chrysler and insurance giant American International Group as well as help provided to homeowners struggling to avoid foreclosures.
Also on the deficit front, the president has endorsed a pay-as-you-go proposal that passed the Senate last week. It would require any new tax cuts or entitlement spending increases to be paid for, and he has promised to create a commission to recommend by year's end ways to trim the deficits. However, a legislatively mandated panel was rejected in a Senate vote last week. Republicans opposed establishing the panel because it might recommend tax increases to close the deficit.