obama credibility +0.2 for effort and realizing what needs to be donemoron,so obama is suddenly concerned about the inefficiencies of bureaucracy and is streamlining some shit and you are trying to call out how the republicans are going to argue against him???LOL. nice trick there. he ALMOST had moron supporting a small govt for a minute. just admit it. good job on the trickery though buddy!
1/16/2012 12:36:28 PM
Oh wait. I gave credibility just a tad too soon.He's downsizing "The Small Business Administration" lol. Literally the one part of govt that isn't interested in gov't at all and is actually pro- small business.wow
1/16/2012 12:40:25 PM
-2 credibility for you for triple posting[Edited on January 16, 2012 at 1:00 PM. Reason : fuck, a triple post]
1/16/2012 12:59:46 PM
that's cool, so what's your take on obama and his election year cycle economic 'change' ?this is literally obamas last desperate attempt to build up his 'resume' of 'small govt' issues and economic reform to even be able to be in the same ball park with romney when the debates start soonromney is going to be in a completely different mental league on economic issues. and now obama will have his 'ace' here to play every time he's in a jam during an exchange. at this point it's more than obvious.i give him credit for trying though. he's finally figuring it out perhaps. but the guy is just in over his head at this point trying to do this at year 4 during an election. [Edited on January 16, 2012 at 1:12 PM. Reason : ,]
1/16/2012 1:07:18 PM
Romney doesn't have a small government track record, either. Make no mistake, Romney will grow government. That's what he did as governor. Let's see who his top campaign contributors are:Goldman Sachs $367,200Credit Suisse Group $203,750Morgan Stanley $199,800HIG Capital $186,500Barclays $157,750Kirkland & Ellis $132,100Bank of America $126,500PriceWaterhouseCoopers $118,250EMC Corp $117,300JPMorgan Chase & Co $112,250The Villages $97,500Vivint Inc $80,750Marriott International $79,837Sullivan & Cromwell $79,250Bain Capital $74,500UBS AG $73,750Wells Fargo $61,500Blackstone Group $59,800Citigroup Inc $57,050Bain & Co $52,500http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/contrib.php?id=N00000286Well, hot damn! All the big investment banks really want to see Romney get elected! Probably because he wants to deal with the underlying issues with banking that have resulted in such a poor economy, right?
1/16/2012 1:25:10 PM
Obama top campaign contributors:Goldman Sachs $1,013,091Harvard University $878,164Microsoft Corp $852,167Google Inc $814,540JPMorgan Chase & Co $808,799Citigroup Inc $736,771Time Warner $624,618Sidley Austin LLP $600,298Stanford University $595,716National Amusements Inc $563,798WilmerHale LLP $550,668Columbia University $547,852Skadden, Arps et al $543,539UBS AG $532,674IBM Corp $532,372General Electric $529,855US Government $513,308Morgan Stanley $512,232Latham & Watkins $503,295haha.I guess Obama wins. motherfucker if romney was even 0.01% as much in bed as obama was with dirtbags and their money some of your extremist OWS'ers would have already assassinated himlook at that shit. Fucking 1 million from goldman sachs. hell, obamas worst contributor here is eclipsing the shit out of anything on the other list.[Edited on January 16, 2012 at 1:36 PM. Reason : ,]
1/16/2012 1:29:48 PM
You do realize the GOP nominees contributions will skyrocket once it is a 1 man race, right?
1/16/2012 1:41:29 PM
I was thinking the same thing. Once all of Ron Paul's 5 and 20 dollar contributors solidify behind Romney, it'll change everything
1/16/2012 1:59:08 PM
lol
1/16/2012 3:45:24 PM
the budget for a few hundred government employees andthe cost of health care for 40 million AmericansAre you trying to make a point?It's sad enough you changed the subject, but you changed it to something even more idiotic.Baritt Robamney 2012
1/16/2012 4:43:33 PM
^you shouldn't be so ashamed to need a little extra big government help in your life. if that's the kind of person you are, then come out and say that you need more government in order to pursue life and liberty. don't be embarrassed or feel the need to troll in order to feel more accepted with your opinions.
1/16/2012 4:48:39 PM
He has a point. That picture is kind of standard fodder retardedness that we've come to expect out of guys like you.
1/16/2012 4:50:13 PM
1/16/2012 6:36:11 PM
TerdFergusson don't bother. They have no conception of time or historical perspective. The government is always too big. Taxes are always too high. Regulation is always too tight. There aren't shut-off valves for these positions, it's an ideology in itself to always believe these are problems no matter what.
1/18/2012 8:45:30 AM
Doesn't the government need to actually get smaller before we need to consider reevaluating our position that it is too big? The government has grown dramatically. Have you re-evaluated your position that it was too small?
1/18/2012 12:06:10 PM
1/18/2012 12:13:30 PM
Just to head you off here, if you post a graph of the dollar-value of spending I will not take you seriously. Spending should rise over time, because of inflation, growing population, growing economy, etc. If you can make an argument about spending as a ratio to GDP, I might pay attention.But, if you do go with the spending-to-GDP route, simply posting the graph wont be sufficient. The recession both lowered GDP and increased unemployment benefits and other income assistance , so the ratio will obviously begin spike around mid-2007. It's one thing to see an uptick in spending during a recession, on automatic social safety nets that have been long established, but if you can show we've had an increase in spending-to-GDP that *isn't* just a result of recession economics I'll be more amenable to the shrink-government hysteria. If you really want to convince me government's too big, show me some expensive new agencies or a significant rise in non-income-assistance spending. Oh yeah, and you might as well subtract DoD spending, since that is one area of government I *definitely* agree is too big. [Edited on January 18, 2012 at 12:21 PM. Reason : .]
1/18/2012 12:17:04 PM
Your argument is sound if GDP had in fact fallen. But GDP has recovered completely from the downturn and is well into positive territory. As for the larger question, it depends what we mean by "Government". Aspects of our government are in fact too small for my taste. They are being starved of resources to pay for all the crap I wish we would stop doing. This is not the case when it comes to the federal government, which needs to be a lot smaller in nearly every regard. Something less than 10% of GDP, not the current post WW2 record setting 25%. As for the rest of government, the states need to grow a bit to fill the space. But the tax collection of the country is way too centralized, starving local governments and forcing city and local planners to lean too heavily upon their regulatory powers. As such, cities and counties need to have their regulatory power curtailed a bit, to be replaced with more direct spending in terms of local planning.[Edited on January 18, 2012 at 6:53 PM. Reason : .,.]
1/18/2012 6:50:25 PM
Welp, here we go again. As the government shrinks, the economy grows.
1/29/2012 8:24:16 PM
1/30/2012 12:39:58 PM
Alright, I got that for you. Let me know if you want to ignore this data too.
1/30/2012 3:51:14 PM
In what way has the government shrank?
1/30/2012 4:15:30 PM
Government spending fell 0.9% last quarter while the non-government economy grew 4.5%.
1/30/2012 4:35:26 PM
1/31/2012 10:14:21 AM
Here, I'll help youHere are the big ticket items, making up about 87% of the total federal budgetThere's a lot to process, but here's one thing to note: Only 3 items are above their 20-year average: -Medicare, which can be attributed to a growing and aging population. It's not outside it's long-term trendline, it's growth has had little to do with what the government's been up to for awhile now. -Health is up slightly since the recession hit, but mostly in line with its trend as well. -income security has the greatest spike of all, going from about 13% of Federal expenditures in 2007 to a peak of about 18% mid 2010. Pretty clear what's going on here, once the recession hit there was an explosion of health and income security spending, exactly what you'd expect from mass unemployment, all other government expenditures remaining constant. Here's the remainder of small ticket items, categorized roughly:Energy, education, and veterans are the only ones that break trends. The first is minor and recovery/stimulus spending, the second may be tied to student loans being extended to unemployed going back to school, while "veterans" is probably tied to the business cycle (Veterans seek more benefits when they're unemployed).So, in short, the idea that Obama has massively expanded government is total bunk, the hysteria is just partisan manufactured outrage. The surge in spending is almost entirely an automated response to mass unemployment based on programs that have been in place for fucking decades. If you disagree, please tell me where this new spending is. If you want to get the deficit and debt down, we need to be spending money getting people to work, to both get these tax receipts up and income security outlays down. Income taxes account for 50% of incoming tax revenue, and right now tax receipts are at ~15% of GDP, below the long-term average of 18%. We need to put people to work, that's the only way to fix the recession and get the deficit down.The only other alternative is to start cutting these benefits, damaging not only the unemployed but sapping even more consumer demand out of the economy. I don't know how the second option ends in anything except even fewer jobs as time goes on.
1/31/2012 10:41:13 AM
This continues Obama's pattern of beating the GOP at their own game. Stimulus comes out, he puts like 40% of it as tax cuts. He wants an extension to the payroll tax cut. He wants to merge departments and make government more efficient. I love it.
1/31/2012 3:54:11 PM
1/31/2012 4:40:06 PM
Post-1945 the United States had the only economy not decimated by war and an entire world to export goods to. It would have been almost impossible not to grow the economy by an unprecedented amount. What exactly did government scale back on other than military spending?
1/31/2012 5:57:13 PM
^ hahaha. I've heard liberals specifically argue against that point when I brought it up so that they could defend their "OMFG THE WELFARE STATE MADE US GREAT!!!!" funny to hear it used on the other side now
2/1/2012 5:19:22 PM
I think New Deal policies helped create a more stable society and a social safety net, but anyone who argues that that's what made America great is an idiot.
2/1/2012 9:09:00 PM
TerdFerguson I'd like to see those numbers including Military Personnel. That would be a more realistic graph. Lets see EVERYONE on the Federal payroll.
2/2/2012 11:19:14 AM
well the numbers in the military should always be looked at a little differently, IMO, especially when we are technically at warbut this is the best I could do (just up to 2006, sorry, I'll keep looking although others can look)as a percentage of population the numbers are pretty much the lowest since WWII.
2/3/2012 8:04:55 AM