Townhall...
Why
Getting Our Debt under Control is
So Important
By Mike Needham
7/25/2011
America
is at a crossroads. Will we
embrace American exceptionalism or will accept a slow, managed decline?
The
outcome of the 2010 elections signaled that our nation’s founding
principles
still resonate with Americans of all stripes. The current struggle over
whether
and how to raise our nation’s debt ceiling is another battle in the
long war
over what sort of country we leave our children and grandchildren.
The
debate has all but consumed
Washington and Americans all around the country. For decades, raising
the debt
ceiling was a foregone conclusion, perhaps just an opportunity for
political
posturing. That is the way President Obama and his allies in Congress
wanted it
to be this year, too.
Instead,
it has turned into a
mechanism to get our dilapidated fiscal house in order. If you’re
looking for a
sign of just how strong the Tea Party movement remains and how much the
freshmen in Congress have changed the tone in Washington, this is it.
To
understand the importance of this
debate, we must understand where our country is headed. We can see it
in
Europe, especially in Greece, Spain, Ireland and Portugal. European
countries
have long been held as a shining example of the left’s tax and spend
policies,
and look where they are now. Unless we act, our children and
grandchildren will
experience similar decline and unrest. Once you are able to look beyond
the
gimmick-riddled compromises emanating from Washington, our epic
struggle
becomes clear. Will we favor the invisible hand of the market, American
exceptionalism and freedom or the heavy hand of government, a managed
decline
and onerous burdens?
Of
course, America’s problems did not
start with President Obama, but they have certainly escalated during
his
tenure. All too often, politicians of all stripes see government as the
answer
to our problems. President Obama is the embodiment of that way of
thinking.
This
debate over our nation’s debt is
a debate over our future – an opportunity to reject the government
growth and
largess of the past. As we approach August 2nd, we as a nation have to
decide
whether we want to follow in the footsteps of our friends across the
pond or if
we want to save our country and our freedoms for our children and
grandchildren.
Mainstream
pundits will tell you this
is a battle that cannot be won. They’ll say conservatives have neither
the
leverage nor the ideas to triumph. They are wrong on both accounts. The
real
question is whether conservatives in Congress have the will to succeed.
President
Obama’s entire negotiating
position is based on the belief that Republicans will blink (and
history shows
that to be the case). When the government shutdown in 1995,
Congressional
Republicans caved and gave President Clinton what he wanted, and the
government
reopened. Years later we would learn that Mr. Clinton was just 24 hours
away
from caving himself, had written the language of a balanced budget and
was
prepared to act on it.
We
cannot repeat this failure again.
Imagine how different our country would look now if we had held the
line then.
President
Obama has already blinked in
this battle. First he wanted a clean debt limit increase, now he is
advocating
a “big deal.” Then he said he would not touch entitlements, now he has
agreed
to do so (although we can’t expect any substantive reforms from him).
Then he
claimed that he would veto any short-term debt increase, and just last
week he
has signaled that he is prepared to do just that.
Why?
Because the ideas that
conservatives in Congress are presenting, debating and passing resonate
with
the American people.
A
recent CNN poll shows that 66% of
the American people support Cut, Cap, and Balance and 74% support a
balanced
budget amendment. The President has threatened to veto Cut, Cap and
Balanced
and tersely dismissed the need for a Balanced Budget Amendment. Both of
these
are ideas that could get our country back on track.
Instead
of embracing these serious
proposals, the Obama administration retrenches behind closed doors,
leaking
rumors, negotiating secret deals and warns of “Armageddon.”
But
the President’s administration
says that forcing the government to live within its means will make it
unable
to keep its promises to the American people. How did we get to the
point where
we promise people things we cannot afford?
Now
is our generation’s opportunity to
set things straight. For too long, we’ve seen Washington take the easy
way out
– spend more money and pass the buck to the next generation. Heritage
Action
seeks to drive down federal spending and borrowing while protecting
America and
not raising taxes. Our children and grandchildren cannot afford the
status quo,
which is why any deal that fails to meet those conditions is a
non-starter.
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it at Townhall
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