Moderator: Andrew




AlteredDNA wrote:How much did the two wars cost from 2003 to the end of 2008?
Lula wrote:AlteredDNA wrote:How much did the two wars cost from 2003 to the end of 2008?
TOTAL IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN war cost ,Afghanistan 2001-2 US$20.8 Billion,2003 US$ 14.3 Billion,2004 US$14.5 Billion,2005 US$20.0 Billion, 2006US$19.0 Billion 2007US$36.9Billion,2008 US$ 36.5Billion,2009 US$15.1 Billion total US$177.5 billion. In Iraq cost of war 2003 US$ 53.0 Billion, 2004 US$ 75.9 billion,2005 US$ 85.5 billion,2006 US$ 101.7 BILLION,2007 US$ 133.6Billion,2008 US$ 158.0 billion,2009 US$ 53.4 billion, Total US$ 661.1 billion . The total war costs could grow to $3.5 trillion by 2017, the committee estimated .the committee estimated $1.3 trillion in war costs by the end of 2008 for Iraq, and the remainder for Afghanistan. http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/policy ... mental_war.
https://forums.yaleglobal.yale.edu/thre ... eadID=1592
Lula wrote:AlteredDNA wrote:How much did the two wars cost from 2003 to the end of 2008?
TOTAL IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN war cost ,Afghanistan 2001-2 US$20.8 Billion,2003 US$ 14.3 Billion,2004 US$14.5 Billion,2005 US$20.0 Billion, 2006US$19.0 Billion 2007US$36.9Billion,2008 US$ 36.5Billion,2009 US$15.1 Billion total US$177.5 billion. In Iraq cost of war 2003 US$ 53.0 Billion, 2004 US$ 75.9 billion,2005 US$ 85.5 billion,2006 US$ 101.7 BILLION,2007 US$ 133.6Billion,2008 US$ 158.0 billion,2009 US$ 53.4 billion, Total US$ 661.1 billion . The total war costs could grow to $3.5 trillion by 2017, the committee estimated .the committee estimated $1.3 trillion in war costs by the end of 2008 for Iraq, and the remainder for Afghanistan. http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/policy ... mental_war.
https://forums.yaleglobal.yale.edu/thre ... eadID=1592

Budgetary treatment of Iraq & Afghanistan war expenses
Much of the costs for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have not been funded through regular appropriations bills, but through emergency supplemental appropriations bills. As such, most of these expenses were not included in the budget deficit calculation prior to FY2010. Some budget experts argue that emergency supplemental appropriations bills do not receive the same level of legislative care as regular appropriations bills. In addition, emergency supplemental appropriations are not subject to the same budget enforcement mechanisms imposed on regular appropriations. Funding for the first stages of the Vietnam War was provided by supplemental appropriations, although President Johnson eventually acceded to Congressional demands to fund that war through the regular appropriations process.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the President's FY2009 budget proposals would provide $188 billion in budget authority for FY2008. [40] CBO estimates that appropriations for operations in Afghanistan and Iraq since 2001 through February 2008 total $752 billion.[41] That would be approximately 4% of federal spending over the period.
Budget authority is legal authority to obligate the federal government. For many war-related activities there may be a long lag between the time when budget authority is granted and when payments (outlays) are made by the U.S. Treasury. In particular, spending on reconstruction activities in Iraq and Afghanistan has lagged behind available budget authority. In other cases, the military uses contracts that are payable upon completion, which can create long lags between appropriations and outlays.
In principle, the Department of Defense (DoD) separates war funding from base funding. In most cases, however, funds for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan use the same accounts as other DoD accounts. This raises challenges to attempts to achieve a precise separation of expenditures on operations in Iraq and Afghanistan from the base defense operations.

Don’t Blame Obama for Bush’s 2009 Deficit
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2009/11/ ... 9-deficit/
Posted by Daniel J. Mitchell
Some critics are lambasting President Obama for record deficits. This is not a productive line of attack, largely because it puts the focus on the wrong variable. America’s fiscal problem is excessive government spending, and deficits are merely a symptom of that underlying disease. Moreover, if deficits are perceived as the problem, that means both spending restraint and higher taxes are solutions. The political class, needless to say, will choose the latter approach 99 percent of the time. A higher tax burden, however, simply means that debt-financed spending is replaced by tax-financed spending, which is akin to jumping out of the frying pan and into the fire, or vice-versa.
In addition to being theoretically misguided, critics sometimes blame Obama for things that are not his fault. Listening to a talk radio program yesterday, the host asserted that Obama tripled the budget deficit in his first year. This assertion is understandable, since the deficit jumped from about $450 billion in 2008 to $1.4 trillion in 2009. As this chart illustrates, with the Bush years in green, it appears as if Obama’s policies have led to an explosion of debt.
But there is one rather important detail that makes a big difference. The chart is based on the assumption that the current administration should be blamed for the 2009 fiscal year. While this makes sense to a casual observer, it is largely untrue. The 2009 fiscal year began October 1, 2008, nearly four months before Obama took office. The budget for the entire fiscal year was largely set in place while Bush was in the White House. So is we update the chart to show the Bush fiscal years in green, we can see that Obama is partly right in claiming that he inherited a mess (though Obama actually deserves a small share of the blame for Bush’s last deficit since earlier this year he pushed through both an “omnibus” spending bill and the so-called stimulus bill that increased FY2009 spending).
It should go without saying that this post is not an argument for Obama’s fiscal policy. The current President promised change, but he is continuing the wasteful and profligate policies of his big-spending predecessor. That is where critics should be focusing their attention.

ohsherrie wrote:But the rethugs don't want to talk about that.
conversationpc wrote:ohsherrie wrote:But the rethugs don't want to talk about that.
I like it...I think we should all hereby refer to both major parties as rethugs and democrooks.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama

RedWingFan wrote:conversationpc wrote:ohsherrie wrote:But the rethugs don't want to talk about that.
I like it...I think we should all hereby refer to both major parties as rethugs and democrooks.
That makes absolutely no sense. The Democrats are as pure and clean as the wind driven snow!
Bill Clinton
Al Gore
Barney Frank
William Jefferson
Frank Dodd...etc...etc...etc.
slucero wrote:Get ready for a VAT tax folks (on TOP of current taxes)... because at the current run rate thats the only way to reduce the deficit and the national debt...
The_Noble_Cause wrote:slucero wrote:Get ready for a VAT tax folks (on TOP of current taxes)... because at the current run rate thats the only way to reduce the deficit and the national debt...
Never gonna happen.

conversationpc wrote:
A large majority of the dummies from either party are either corrupt or out for only their own interests.
slucero wrote:Its "on the table" with the Presidents fiscal commission and Volker and Bernanke are advocates of it... and the reality is the US has no way of reducing the deficit or long term debt without raising taxes... Geithner has even said so...
slucero wrote:Yer gonna have to do better than "never happen" because thats what was said about healthcare..
slucero wrote:thats a much better explanation.. thanks!
The_Noble_Cause wrote:slucero wrote:thats a much better explanation.. thanks!
I actually agree, a temporary VAT (with some exemptions on things like food) is probably what is needed. Bruce Bartlett, a brilliant economist who served under Reagan, has been saying the same thing for about a year now. Politically? I just don't see it happening.


7 Wishes wrote:As the divide between the rich and middle class (and poverty-stricken) continues to rise...as opportunities for the less forunate to reverse their fortunes abate...as more and more families not only need two full-time workers but also at least one second part-time job, and the fabric of the family continues to unravel...I find it ironic that the "family first" Gingrich disciples continue to advocate reducing taxes on the rich. It's a system guaranteed to fail - that trickle-down economics do not work is no longer open to debate. It's really an amazing double standard.

Rockindeano wrote:7 Wishes wrote:As the divide between the rich and middle class (and poverty-stricken) continues to rise...as opportunities for the less forunate to reverse their fortunes abate...as more and more families not only need two full-time workers but also at least one second part-time job, and the fabric of the family continues to unravel...I find it ironic that the "family first" Gingrich disciples continue to advocate reducing taxes on the rich. It's a system guaranteed to fail - that trickle-down economics do not work is no longer open to debate. It's really an amazing double standard.
Spot on post. I would love for any conservtive/republican here to respond to this and try to refute it. Seriously, I would love to hear it.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama


RedWingFan wrote:Rockindeano wrote:7 Wishes wrote:As the divide between the rich and middle class (and poverty-stricken) continues to rise...as opportunities for the less forunate to reverse their fortunes abate...as more and more families not only need two full-time workers but also at least one second part-time job, and the fabric of the family continues to unravel...I find it ironic that the "family first" Gingrich disciples continue to advocate reducing taxes on the rich. It's a system guaranteed to fail - that trickle-down economics do not work is no longer open to debate. It's really an amazing double standard.
Spot on post. I would love for any conservtive/republican here to respond to this and try to refute it. Seriously, I would love to hear it.
You ain't seen nothing yet. Wait til Bush's "tax cuts for the rich" end on Jan. 1st. Child tax credit cut in half, marriage penalty back in place. Watch the thrashing the middle class and the rest of the country takes then. Sure you guys will blame Bush for that too, because he couldn't make them permanent...ignoring the fact that Obama and the dems could.

Rockindeano wrote:7 Wishes wrote:As the divide between the rich and middle class (and poverty-stricken) continues to rise...as opportunities for the less forunate to reverse their fortunes abate...as more and more families not only need two full-time workers but also at least one second part-time job, and the fabric of the family continues to unravel...I find it ironic that the "family first" Gingrich disciples continue to advocate reducing taxes on the rich. It's a system guaranteed to fail - that trickle-down economics do not work is no longer open to debate. It's really an amazing double standard.
Spot on post. I would love for any conservtive/republican here to respond to this and try to refute it. Seriously, I would love to hear it.

donnaplease wrote:Rockindeano wrote:7 Wishes wrote:As the divide between the rich and middle class (and poverty-stricken) continues to rise...as opportunities for the less forunate to reverse their fortunes abate...as more and more families not only need two full-time workers but also at least one second part-time job, and the fabric of the family continues to unravel...I find it ironic that the "family first" Gingrich disciples continue to advocate reducing taxes on the rich. It's a system guaranteed to fail - that trickle-down economics do not work is no longer open to debate. It's really an amazing double standard.
Spot on post. I would love for any conservtive/republican here to respond to this and try to refute it. Seriously, I would love to hear it.
I'm gonna speak to one part of it. IMO that divide may continue to grow as more and more people become dependent on government programs to meet their needs. The incentive to work harder than the next guy to achieve that "american dream" has been part of what has made this country grow and thrive in the past.
I don't have the answers to make things a-ok for everyone, but I do feel like we're going down the wrong road. Social promotion in schools, welfare, universal healthcare... I just don't feel we have the accountability that we once had and it's making a negative impact on our society. Talk about a system guaranteed to fail.

Rockindeano wrote:I just knew you would cite "Universal Healthcare" as a problem with the divide in this country, lol. Too much. Let's not help 32 million of our brothers and sisters....what a ridiculous thing to do. Nevermind the question. You Cons just sadden me with your thought process.

Rockindeano wrote:
I just knew you would cite "universl Healthcare" as a problem with the divide in this country, lol. Too much. Let's not help 32 million of our brothers and sisters....what a ridiculous thing to do. Nevermind the question. You Cons just sadden me with your thought process.


Angel wrote:Clearly you don't understands the ramifications of Universal Healthcare well enough to continue the debate.
Return to Snowmobiles For The Sahara
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests