Tea partyers claim that because of the massive expansion of government due to healthcare bill, taxes on the working class (which are down for now) will eventually HAVE to go up. This seems to be the main source of their anger but its wrong because costs won't rise in the long term since the war will be over.We've spent 983billion on wars in the last 9 years. Healthcare is going to cost 940billion in the next 10 years (before you count revenue from new taxes and fines)So healthcare simply replaces the wars in the budget and government doesn't get bigger any way you look at it. Whats wrong with my logic?
4/16/2010 6:48:40 PM
I dont think you want my honest answer.But google baby boomers, entitlement spending growth, medicare/medicaid and SS solvency. Govt has already made a bunch of promises it cant keep or pay for, the new health care bill is simply one more. Or just look at the deficit spending numbers and the PROJECTIONS...You think the health care bill will be the only increase in spending it seems, that is where your logic here is mainly flawed.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GAO_Slide.pnghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Medicare_%26_Social_Security_Deficits_Chart.pngAnd sadly this chart is a little old, as SS is thought to go red much sooner bc of the recession.[Edited on April 16, 2010 at 6:57 PM. Reason : .][Edited on April 16, 2010 at 7:00 PM. Reason : .]
4/16/2010 6:54:17 PM
We aren't out of the wars yet.
4/16/2010 6:56:18 PM
^true. Sadly, I doubt we will send everyone home regardless. And its not like we will save 100% of those dollars anyway.
4/16/2010 6:59:16 PM
We also give Israel ~140billion of aid per year but people don't riot over that.[Edited on April 16, 2010 at 7:06 PM. Reason : 2003]
4/16/2010 7:05:47 PM
We still have bases in Germany. The US never pulls out completely, but going to just the tip will produce some savings in blood and treasure.Although we shouldn't count the chickens before they hatch. I'm still glad we're on a time-table to get out of Iraq, but I'd like to see something similar for Afghanistan too.
4/16/2010 7:06:09 PM
mamba, who is rioting now? Actually foreign aid is the number one thing people want to cut first. fyiA goal for Afghanistan would be the first thing I would want, not a mission statement. But I agree, its more than time to get everyone back.
4/16/2010 7:12:31 PM
4/16/2010 7:13:36 PM
^^You may like one of the senate candidates positions then. Elaine Marshall disagrees with the President on Afghanistan:
4/16/2010 7:18:53 PM
Well that is the thing that NEEDS to be cut, as its our biggest and fastest growing expense. Its also the hardest to cut as people dont want to cut their benefits while they are receiving it. Thats why we gotta overturn this lastest health care bill before it gets rolling. imo.The poll, i was referring to, was what people favored cutting. Aid was number one. If you said entitlements it would probably score higher than cuts in medicare or SS. You see what Im saying?Supplanter, I dont blame the president for trying what worked in Iraq in Afgh. But id like to see a definition of success vs a mission statement. If we are there to kill AQ, fine. Do it, get home. If we are there to change the culture... its going to be awhile. But thanks for the info, I agree with the position they make.[Edited on April 16, 2010 at 7:21 PM. Reason : .][Edited on April 16, 2010 at 7:22 PM. Reason : .]
4/16/2010 7:19:23 PM
Why does it "NEED" to be cut? Our currency and bonds still have lots of value. Why fix it if it ain't broke?
4/16/2010 7:23:02 PM
Cal Cunningham on the other hand advocates for a defining the mission in Afghanistan but has also said things in the debate like stay however long it takes to get the job done.
4/16/2010 7:37:25 PM
Another problem is we borrowed heavily for the war. Try paying interest. And wed have to borrow more if we swapped war for healthcare as you propose, which equals more interest which means more borrowing.
4/16/2010 8:00:43 PM
It doesn't matter anymore at this point. The problem is already past soluble.No nation has ever amassed, let alone repaid, a sovereign debt of even the same order of magnitude as we now have.There is not, and can not be, sufficient economic output within the nation to pay back what is now owed, denominated in actual wealth (such as the equivalent in gold or other goods with a tangible value).Eventually we must either default on the debt (as other nations suchas Argentina have done) or monetize the debt (print the money) as Zimbabwe has done. So far, the current Federal Reserve has pursued the latter path. In other words, if it is nominally paid back, it will be with paper currency with little material value.Either way, there will be a day of reckoning and it will be ugly.
4/17/2010 7:47:25 AM
you think there's a bill collector with more firepower than the US Army?
4/17/2010 7:58:41 AM
you don't need firepower to devalue currency.hell, all China has to do to is stop buying our debt.
4/17/2010 8:22:45 AM
4/17/2010 8:59:20 AM
4/17/2010 10:02:52 AM
4/17/2010 10:52:37 AM
we need to go ahead and print the money to pay it back
4/17/2010 11:01:16 AM
^ It has been argued and I found it convincing that inflation is harmful to both current economic efficiency and future productivity growth. So, no. ^^ American debt tends to be held either by foreigners or Americans, neither of which have demonstrated their historical willingness to hold treasuries in the face of adversity. Japanese debt tends to be held by japanese people, which have.
4/17/2010 11:45:07 AM
4/17/2010 11:49:04 AM
I'm surprised that mambatroll's obvious trolling is luring in so many people. Seriously, he's doing the worst trolling I have ever seen.
4/17/2010 1:26:21 PM
America just needs to make a lot of money on the Internet.
4/17/2010 2:36:13 PM
^ you mean like placing a toll on all those dump trucks, a la Ted Stevens?
4/17/2010 3:11:58 PM
4/17/2010 4:28:10 PM
Sure we don't owe that much, but it was obvious we are going to owe more, so using your logic, shouldn't investors have left US bonds, rather than running to them?
4/17/2010 4:49:14 PM
4/17/2010 8:14:01 PM
4/17/2010 10:52:36 PM
4/18/2010 11:31:04 AM
4/18/2010 12:01:24 PM
4/18/2010 4:19:41 PM
4/18/2010 5:29:42 PM
The U.S. Government had trouble borrowing both times it tried to do so in such large quantities. The government had trouble borrowing as much as it wanted to during the great depression, it had difficulty borrowing during WW2. As such, I said "neither of which have demonstrated their historical willingness to hold treasuries in the face of adversity." The only adversity we have seen were extreme examples, I recognize. But outside of these examples, the U.S. has not run up such large debt loads, so there is no evidence that investors are willing to hold such large quantities of American debt. The only evidence we have, the past year, is not evidence as our debt load is still rather paltry. So, as I said in another thread, the question is not of default this year, but in twenty years.
4/18/2010 6:13:38 PM
4/18/2010 7:17:28 PM
Trying to prove or refute economic theories based on events still in progress right now seems a bit like trying to confirm/deny global warming by saying "it's been especially hot/cold this year"...
4/18/2010 7:20:02 PM
The bond rally has already happened.
4/18/2010 7:31:28 PM
didn't read most of the thread...but we have deficit and debt problems that ending the wars won't solve (and OEF isn't going away for while, anyway).I'd like to think that no tax increases will be needed, but I'm not sure that's the case. I definitely roll my eyes every time the right rants and raves about wanting more tax cuts. While that would probably be possible if we kept the federal government within its lane, we have to carve away a bunch of federal bullshit before we can lower taxes (and maybe before we can even keep them where they're at). Cutting taxes further will just cause further deficits, in my opinion--not responsible pruning of spending (this is, of course, assuming that at this point, we're on the back side of the Laffer curve...I'm no economist, but that's my guess).I think that few people realize just how overwhelmingly large our deficit has become. Getting rid of it will require cuts in a lot of peoples' sacred cows.
4/19/2010 12:54:25 AM
4/19/2010 9:52:07 AM
4/19/2010 5:18:47 PM