Moderator: Andrew
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

Seven Wishes wrote:
The marginal rate - before exemptions and loopholes - on every dollar over $1 million is 33%, the lowest rate in history.
Seven Wishes wrote: And Donna, this is the first time there has actually been ANY debate about the debt ceiling being raised. EVER. It's always been a simple up or down vote on a one page bill and has NEVER been denied or altered.
Seven Wishes wrote:A quick lesson on the "trickle down" theory that has been thoroughly refuted as viable. History has shown it simply does not work. Hoover tried the “trickle down” theory, and it led to the Great Depression - often called the Republican Depression because it was their financial philosophy that led to the collapse of the economy. Tax cuts for the rich did not work and things got worse. You can see the same problem repeat itself nowadays, due to the deregulation of the financial industry.
Seven Wishes wrote:Roosevelt got into office, raised taxes on the rich, created jobs for the poor and turned things around.
Seven Wishes wrote:Reagan employed Hoover’s failed trickle down theory again in the ‘80s and again it did not work. The rich got richer, but the poor got poorer and the deficit more than tripled. Bush Sr. continued the failed policy of his immediate predecessor.
Seven Wishes wrote:Clinton took a more progressive approach by turning Hoover model upside down. Instead of making the rich richer in the hope that they would spend that money and thus create demand and therefore jobs, he created a tax environment that encouraged the creation of jobs directly. Revenues were up! Tens of millions of jobs and thousands of new millionaires were created while Clinton was in office - more so than than at any other time in our history.
Seven Wishes wrote:
So, what happened next? Dumbya immediately created a need to raise the debt level to pay for an unjustified tax cut in 2001. Predictably (and before 9/11) the nation lost jobs and there were fewer new millionaires. Not learning from his past mistakes, Bush pushed through yet more tax cuts in 2003, 2005 and 2006 -- all while expanding the military, the largest single component of the budget. He and his lap dog Republican Congress never learned from their mistakes. As a result, the national debt has increased an average of $1.5 billion per day since the beginning of 2002.
The facts also show that it most often takes a Democratic President to control and reduce spending. The truth is that the Republicans are the party of “borrow and spend”. They hate taxes, but love to spend; their solution is to put off paying till later for our security today. They prefer to see our children pay for their debt (although they accuse Democrats of the same even though the data proves them wrong). Neo-con economics ran up over an 9.5 trillion dollar debt in eight years.

Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Wrong actually Marginal rates on capital gains were lower in 1920's and before that. When rates were higher in the 1950's and 1960's the US had a global competitive advantage, (no Signapore, China, or Korea or Brazil to compete with.) We can't get away with those high rates today like we did then we have global competitors.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:and look where never standing up to and debating the debt ceiling got us - to the mess we are in right now.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Herbert Hoover believed in expansionist government. He reversed the Coolidge tax cuts and passed a massive tarriff wall and actually did advocate govt involvement in fixing the business cycle . these are things left democrats support.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:wrong Roosevelt would have lost the 1942 election unemployment was so high. The nation rallied behind the president only because of WWII. Roosevelt's new deal didn't fix the depression any more than Obama's stimulus programme fixed our the current recession. The business cycle finally, after being distorted by Roosevelts intervention picked back up.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:No if anything Reagan returned to Coolidge's policies. His mistake was to allow Congress to spend too much without standing up to them.
Bush Snr raised taxes on a slowing economy to disastrous effect (what you think we should do)
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Clinton was not a progressive. Ever heard of triangulation or the southern leadership council? Clinton agreed to budget cuts , Welfare reform, and a capital gains tax cut in 1996- what you call trickle down. Clinton's economic policy was nearly the same as Reagans.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:the Obama debt is up 23% in two years, and most of that is from his Stimulus act and discretionary spending (things he signed in to law or chose to spend) In terms of ideology and policy Hoover= Roosevelt= Bush Sn = Bush Jr = Obama and none of em had a a praiseworthy economic track record.

Seven Wishes wrote:Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Wrong actually Marginal rates on capital gains were lower in 1920's and before that. When rates were higher in the 1950's and 1960's the US had a global competitive advantage, (no Signapore, China, or Korea or Brazil to compete with.) We can't get away with those high rates today like we did then we have global competitors.
Yeah, things went so well in the 20's when Hoover employed the trickle-up theory and lowered the rates. We only suffered the worst economic depression in the history of the world. Think before you post.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Herbert Hoover believed in expansionist government. He reversed the Coolidge tax cuts and passed a massive tarriff wall and actually did advocate govt involvement in fixing the business cycle . these are things left democrats support.
Seven Wishes wrote:Hoover's main legacy was lowering the very successful post-WWI higher marginal rates by 200% and leading the country, single-handedly, into a Great Depression.
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:wrong Roosevelt would have lost the 1942 election unemployment was so high. The nation rallied behind the president only because of WWII. Roosevelt's new deal didn't fix the depression any more than Obama's stimulus programme fixed our the current recession. The business cycle finally, after being distorted by Roosevelts intervention picked back up.
Seven Wishes wrote:Wrong yet again. FDR brought the Hoover-caused unemployment rate down from a staggering 21.7% to 12.9% in 1941. No way in HELL he would have lost tht election.
Seven Wishes wrote:
Not as good as your usual stout retorts. You didn't even bother to look at the actual facts this time. FartFinder must be rubbing off on you.

Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:
In fact you would have loved Hoover, he stood for everything which you support. He was our country's first whacked out leftie president . Christ Almighty, folks like you ought to be lobbying to have the idiots face chiseled into Mount Rushmore by now.
LOL This is only a third of your response Ive pointed out a few fundamental mistakesI'd continue, but its Friday, Miller Time , and I feel merciful. Maybe Ill send in Fact Finder to finish the job

Seven Wishes wrote:Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:
In fact you would have loved Hoover, he stood for everything which you support. He was our country's first whacked out leftie president . Christ Almighty, folks like you ought to be lobbying to have the idiots face chiseled into Mount Rushmore by now.
LOL This is only a third of your response Ive pointed out a few fundamental mistakesI'd continue, but its Friday, Miller Time , and I feel merciful. Maybe Ill send in Fact Finder to finish the job
"Fundamental mistakes." Really? That's your response?
Once marginal rates went back up (and BTW, he was pressured by a Democratic Congress to do so), the end of the Depression was in sight.
He was a tax-lowering spendthrift from Day 1. As I've already shown, it's Republicans who have the spending problems, and like a bratty child accused of stealing cookies before dinner, the party accuses the Democrats of doing just that when the raw, factual data shows just the opposite.
Hoover was a tried and true conservative. He's yours; you own him.
Oh, and way to avoid the other facts I posted. When the truth hurts, you neo-con / libertarian types just try to change the subject.


Super Economy reported, via Free Republic:
for the first time in history U.S debt was downgraded. The Left still denies that President Obama has a lot of responsibility for this situation, instead laying blame on Republican refusal to raise taxes on the rich.
As I have written previously, it is dishonest to give voters the impression that tax increases on the rich is a solution to the deficit. In the latest projection by the Congressional Budget Office, the ten year deficit is estimated at 13 trillion dollars. By contrast, Obama’s various tax increases on the rich will only bring in 1 trillion in the same period.
The 13 trillion dollar deficit which the President helped create and long terms entitlement deficits are the main reason why S&P downgraded U.S debt, not the 1 trillion in tax increases which Republicans prevented…
…Let me illustrate how much of a departure from history the Obama Presidency represents in terms of spending. I will graph non-defense federal spending as a share of GDP since 1975.
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


Seven Wishes wrote:Killing the Bush tax cuts would save FOUR TRILLION over ten years.
Seven Wishes wrote: Eliminating corporate tax loopholes would save another FOUR TRILLION.


hoagiepete wrote:Had the goodfortune of driving for 10 hours yesterday with Sirius. Listened to the pundants on CNN and Fox. It is amazing how the talking points are orchestrated (by both sides).
I loved how every D guest said Tea Party and Terrorist in the same breath. Different people, different channel, same comments. I'm sure the R's do the same, but associating Tea Party with terrorists is fuckin rediculous.
Another note, Clinton did have a good run, but if GW had the internet boom during his term, we'd be saying the same thing about him as they are saying about Clinton. Clinton was one lucky sob. He's no dummy, but very fortunate.

Gideon wrote:Slightly tangential in nature, but I feel inclined to ask as a political science student who is quite frankly miserable with the field: Does anyone here on either side of the party fence ever tire of the polarization?


Seven Wishes wrote:Simple solution. Get rid of the Tea Party, the ACLU, trial attorneys, and Faux, and you're off to a great start.


Seven Wishes wrote:hoagiepete wrote:Had the goodfortune of driving for 10 hours yesterday with Sirius. Listened to the pundants on CNN and Fox. It is amazing how the talking points are orchestrated (by both sides).
I loved how every D guest said Tea Party and Terrorist in the same breath. Different people, different channel, same comments. I'm sure the R's do the same, but associating Tea Party with terrorists is fuckin rediculous.
Another note, Clinton did have a good run, but if GW had the internet boom during his term, we'd be saying the same thing about him as they are saying about Clinton. Clinton was one lucky sob. He's no dummy, but very fortunate.
Wrong on every level. I was listening to CNN most of the day, too, and heard NO such association. Nice try.
And Clinton's fiscal policy was much more solid than Obama's or Bush's.
donnaplease wrote:Truthfully, Daniel, the people I blame the most are the press. There is no such thing as honest journalism anymore. I watch and listen to it from all sides, and I haven't found anyone who can report without slant. And then there are those like Chris Matthews, Rush, Olbermann, etc who try to convince us that they are not biased, but simply telling us what we need to know. It got so bad last week that Alex Bennett took several minutes giving the history of the words cun't and fuc'k because he was so disgusted with the financial negotiations. (They date back to medieval times, in case anyone cares...).
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


AR wrote:
I can debunk that myth Dan. Here I am in the same picture with him.![]()

Saint John wrote:AR wrote:
I can debunk that myth Dan. Here I am in the same picture with him.![]()
Holy shit, that's great!![]()
Well played, sir.
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


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