Townhall...
Spending
Is Just Our Second-Biggest
Problem
By David Limbaugh
8/9/2011
Being
a disciple of Saul Alinsky might
not be so easy as it would appear. President Obama and his minions
obviously
can’t decide whom to scapegoat for the nation’s credit downgrade and
our
financial crisis.
One
thing is for sure: It’s not in
Barack Obama to accept personal responsibility for the consequences of
his
actions and policies. He still won’t own this economy and the exploding
spending
spiral, reminding us at every turn that our problems are a result of
what he
“inherited” from President Bush.
Instead
of seeking to soothe the
nation on word of the downgrade by Standard & Poor’s, Obama
played golf,
prepared for more campaign fundraisers and avoided the cameras -- for a
change.
But there can be little doubt he was strategizing about whom to blame
for this
unfolding catastrophe.
The
first and most obvious choice
would probably have been his treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner --
except
that to blame Geithner would have been tantamount to blaming himself;
Geithner
is Obama’s guy. Nix that.
So
why not blame Europe and the global
markets? Well, there was some of that, but that’s a bit too far from
home, so
to speak. An Alinsky-model target is usually more accessible and less
sympathetic -- you know, someone or some entity against whom one can
gin up
white-hot hate.
So
he settled on blaming S&P
itself -- the proverbial messenger -- and who else? The evil tea party
for the
debt ceiling impasse. Pathetic. Oh, yes, and for good measure, his
liberal
colleague Rep. Barney Frank threw in the military and said he hopes the
downgrade will force large military spending cuts.
An
unrepentant Geithner immediately
took the offense and insultingly attacked S&P for its decision
to downgrade
our credit rating. “I think S&P’s shown really terrible
judgment. And
they’ve handled themselves very poorly, and they’ve shown a stunning
lack of
knowledge about basic U.S. fiscal budget math.”
S&P’s
managing director, David
Beers, didn’t receive the slander sitting down. He said he had
“absolutely” no
second thoughts about the decision. He also said it was a gross
exaggeration to
suggest that the downgrade was mainly responsible for the market
sell-off,
pointing to the extreme volatility of the market in the period
preceding the
downgrade.
Consider
also the arrogance of this
administration for lecturing anyone else about his budgetary acumen.
We’ve not
experienced a financial train wreck in our national history so directly
traceable to the White House.
There
is no question Republicans bear
some degree of blame for all of this, but Obama (and his party) has
ratcheted
up spending to an entirely new level of profligacy. His deficits are
three
times those of his predecessor and 10 times the Bush deficit of 2007.
But
this spending orgy is only our
second-greatest problem, because spending -- discretionary and
entitlement --
is reversible if the political will exists to make it happen. The
greatest
problem we have is a stubborn, defiant lack of will on the part of
President
Obama and his Democrats to join Republicans in implementing the
reforms. This
nation is in quicksand because of its spending, but we’ve got a chief
executive
and his party preventing Republican reformers from extricating it.
Obama
has no idea how to govern or
lead -- beyond leading us into financial disaster. His forte is
campaigning and
propaganda. He still hasn’t presented a plan but has instead chosen to
generally call for more taxes on the “wealthy” and -- incredibly --
more
“stimulus” spending. For perspective, the Congressional Budget Office’s
latest
projected 10-year deficit is estimated to be some $13 trillion, whereas
Obama’s
vaunted tax on the rich would only bring in $1 trillion -- and this
assumes no
growth-smothering effects of raising rates.
But
Obama knows only class warfare and
blame projection. How convenient for Obama that the tea party forced a
debt
ceiling showdown on which he could blame the downgrade. But if it
weren’t for
the tea party’s efforts, we still probably wouldn’t have turned the
national
conversation to our spending and debt crises. Congress wouldn’t have
initiated
even the reductions in the rates of spending (euphemistically called
“cuts”)
that we’ve seen this past year.
The
debt ceiling showdown was a
positive development because it focused the national spotlight on our
debt
picture and the president’s refusal to join the problem-solvers instead
of
continuing as the problem-maker in chief.
More
and more Americans are coming to
realize that our three humongous problems -- runaway unsustainable
discretionary spending, insanely unsustainable and exponentially
exploding
unfunded entitlement liabilities, and a lifeless economy -- are mostly
Obama’s
fault. But more importantly, they are coming to see that our far
greater
problem is his (and his party’s) abject refusal -- as evidenced yet
again in
his disgraceful speech Monday -- to make the government live within its
means.
Read
it at Townhall
|