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FourScore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-17-10 08:31 AM
Original message
GOP to jobless: Drop dead
Edited on Wed Nov-17-10 08:43 AM by FourScore
GOP to jobless: Drop dead
Steven Pearlstein
Washingto Post Staf Writer
Tuesday, November 16, 2010; 10:54 PM

...The world has supposedly learned a thing or two about economics since Bryan's day, including the limits of clinging mindlessly to hard money during depressions and bouts of price deflation. But you'd never know it listening to the newly empowered and emboldened Republicans who have returned to Washington determined not just to reduce government's role in the economy, but to thoroughly emasculate it....

If you want a serious discussion about changing the structure or mandate of the fire department, the time to have it is not when the entire squad is out fighting a three-alarm blaze. That's exactly the situation with the Federal Reserve and the debate over the dual mandate. Only two weeks after the midterm election, it seems clear that the 2012 campaign has begun. For too many Republicans, the aim is to politicize policy, trash the institutions of government and intimidate anyone who might disagree with their radical ideology.

There's no better proof of that than the so-called debate over extending the Bush tax cuts on incomes above $250,000. Unable to defend more tax cuts for the rich, Republicans like to pretend that their real concern is for job creation, citing the fact that about half of all business profits now flow through partnerships and small corporations that are taxed at personal rates...

SNIP

...In fact, if Republicans were truly interested in reducing the deficit while stimulating private-sector job creation, they would have jumped to embrace the idea floated last week by Sen. Mark Warner, the centrist Democrat from Virginia: let high-end tax rates return to where they were during the Clinton years and use the $65 billion in additional income over the next two years for tax breaks for businesses that increase investments or hire new employees. After that, the extra revenue would go toward deficit reduction...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/16/AR2010111607468.html?hpid=topnews
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dkf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-17-10 08:41 AM
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1. This suggestion by Warner seems to imply permanent tax cuts for the middle class.
Doesn't look like people are serious about getting back to the tax structure that balanced the budget.
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