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United States News Title: WSJ: Was he serious? The Wall Street Journal editorial board couldnt believe what it heard yesterday in Barack Obamas deficit speech. Well, believe is probably the wrong word, since Obama offered little of substance other than rhetorical bombs aimed at Paul Ryan, accusing him of trying to kill an entire generation of retirees while offering nothing specific to oppose it. The WSJ dismantles Obamas speech in their lead editorial as fundamentally demagogic and as unserious as a President can get: Mr. Obama did not deign to propose an alternative to rival Mr. Ryans plan, even as he categorically rejected all its reform ideas, repeatedly vilifying them as essentially un-American. Their vision is less about reducing the deficit than it is about changing the basic social compact in America, he said, supposedly pitting children with autism or Downs syndrome against every millionaire and billionaire in our society. The President was not attempting to join the debate Mr. Ryan has started, but to close it off just as it begins and banish House GOP ideas to political Siberia. Mr. Obama then packaged his poison in the rhetoric of bipartisanshipwhich starts, he said, by being honest about whats causing our deficit. The speech he chose to deliver was dishonest even by modern political standards. The most dishonest component of the speech, according to the WSJ, was the theme of soaking the rich as the solution to all the problems of the federal budget. The editors did what the White House apparently cannot math and explains why we are facing a spending problem rather than a revenue problem: Mr. Obama rallied the left with a summons for major tax increases on the rich. Every U.S. fiscal trouble, he claimed, flows from the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest 2%, conveniently passing over what he euphemistically called his own series of emergency steps that saved millions of jobs. Apparently he means the $814 billion stimulus that failed and a new multitrillion-dollar entitlement in ObamaCare that harmed job creation. Under the Obama tax plan, the Bush rates would be repealed for the top brackets. Yet the cost of extending all the Bush rates in 2011 over 10 years was about $3.7 trillion. Some $3 trillion of that was for everything but the top bracketsand Mr. Obama says he wants to extend those rates forever. According to Internal Revenue Service data, the entire taxable income of everyone earning over $100,000 in 2008 was about $1.582 trillion. Even if all these Americansmost of whom are far from wealthywere taxed at 100%, it wouldnt cover Mr. Obamas deficit for this year. If some readers dont trust the Wall Street Journal on this point, perhaps theyll feel more comfortable with CBS, although they attack the plan from the ambiguous spending reductions Obama proposed: Even if every provision of President Obamas deficit reduction plan is enacted and he concedes it wont be there still wont be a balanced budget on the horizon. And the National Debt will continue to expand by trillions of dollars. The Obama plan is designed to reduce deficit spending over the next 12 years by $4 trillion dollars. If every penny of that $4 trillion in deficits is eliminated, the governments own budget projections show that trillions of dollars more in deficits would remain in place. Speaking of which, the WSJ notes that Obamas one specific plan to reduce spending comes in the form of even greater rationing power at the federal level: His own plan is to double down on the programs price controls and central planning. All Medicare decisions will be turned over to and routed through an unelected commission created by ObamaCarewhich will supposedly ferret out unnecessary spending. Is that the same as waste and abuse? Fifteen members will serve on the Independent Payment Advisory Board, all appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. If per capita costs grow by more than GDP plus 0.5%, this board would get more power, including an automatic budget sequester to enforce its rulings. So 15 sages sitting in a room with the power of the purse will evidently find ways to control Medicare spending that no one has ever thought of before and that supposedly wont harm seniors care, even as the largest cohort of the baby boom generation retires and starts to collect benefits. Contrast that to Obamas insistence that giving seniors a choice in medical coverage was somehow un-American. Which sounds more un-American to most people outside the Beltway: being allowed to make your own choices, or being told by a 15-member star chamber whether you can or cannot get treatment? Obamas speech was fundamentally unserious, a rant that should have been committed to the White House blog rather than in a national address. If this is what passes for a major policy speech, this administration has completely run out of gas.
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#1. To: calcon (#0)
Soeaking of lobbing rhetorical bombs...
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