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Joe Conason
Joe Conason
9 May 2013
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25 Apr 2013
The Newsmaker Memo: An Interview With Pioneering Climate Scientist James Hansen

Having directed NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies for most of the past four decades, Dr. James E. … Read More.

Ryan's Blurred Vision: What the 'New' Republican Budget Reveals (and Conceals)

Comment

Someone needs to tell Paul Ryan that his party — and the economic platform of austerity and plutocracy he crafted for it — lost a national election last year. Someone also needs to tell the Wisconsin Republican that he still chairs the House Budget Committee mainly thanks to gerrymandered redistricting.

Someone clearly needs to remind him of those realities because the "vision document" he proposed on Tuesday as the Republican federal budget is only a still more extreme version of the same notions (and the same evasions) that he and Mitt Romney tried to sell without success last fall.

Voters decisively rejected that version of Ryan's "path to prosperity," with its gutting of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, its additional tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, and its destructive cutbacks in education, infrastructure, scientific research, national security and a hundred other essential elements of modern American life — and a decent future — that require effective government.

Indeed, the astonishing initial assessment of the new Republican budget by experts at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities is that Ryan wants even deeper cuts and even more lavish tax cuts than he and Romney touted in 2012. The CBPP estimates that the new Ryan plan would cut $800 billion over the coming decade from an assortment of vital programs, including Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (SNAP, or food stamps), Supplemental Security Income (SSI) that supports the elderly poor, Pell grants for higher education and federal school lunches, among others, along with the Earned Income Tax Credits (EITC) and Child Tax Credits that have historically improved standards of living for millions of impoverished working families.

Ryan pretends to admire Ronald Reagan, but the late president — who proudly extended and expanded the EITC — was far too liberal for the likes of him and Romney. Unlike the sunny Gipper, these sulking millionaires resent the working poor - the "47 percent" - who aren't paying high enough taxes.

But everyone ought to know Ryan well enough by now to anticipate these cruel proposals.

They ought to know, too, that Ryan would allow the entire edifice handed down to us by previous generations — highways, bridges, airports, canals, reservoirs, schools, parks and much more — to crumble into oblivion, rather than increase taxes on the Republican donors whose wealth has multiplied so astronomically in recent years. His voice is the high-pitched drone of a generation of termites, voraciously consuming the nation's foundations.

What everyone may not know is that Ryan's vision of the future is quite blurry, since he again refuses to specify exactly how his budget allegedly achieves balance. It says (again) that the severest cuts will be made in domestic non-discretionary spending but never details how much will be cut from which programs or even categories. It says (again) that tax expenditures will be reduced to balance those tax cuts for the rich, but never details those either. It says (again) that the Affordable Care Act will be repealed, although there is no chance of that happening now. And it says that defense spending — including untold billions in well-known waste — will simply be restored to pre-sequestration levels, while everything else will be cut again, starting at the post-sequestration baseline, much as Romney promised last year.

It says the federal budget will achieve balance within 10 years, but (again) there is no reason to believe its unfounded promises.

This old "new" budget demonstrates that no change is taking hold among the Republicans, except that they seem even more rigid in their ideological obsessions. No basis exists for bipartisan negotiation toward a budget compromise.

Without a massive public reaction to the Ryan proposals, the likelihood is that sequestration will continue and the Republicans will again seek to hold government hostage, as they have done repeatedly since 2009. And the nation will continue to suffer until voters finally decide, in their wisdom, to curtail the power of this truculent and implacable faction.

To find out more about Joe Conason, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM



Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
I was the first female in my family of farmers to get a college education, and have been a practicing CPA for most of my adult life. The America I grew up in made this possible, and I believed it would always be so. Then came September 15, 2008. What a wake-up call. And since then, the previously opaque workings of the uber-rich started to come into view. Everyday I am saddened for all of us, especially our children, as I see the opportunities I took for granted disappear because of the entrenched and legalized plunder no one can stop.
Comment: #1
Posted by: whatnext14
Wed Mar 13, 2013 1:50 PM
To Joe Conason: Straight and simple....the content of your article titled "Ryan's Blurred Vision" is totally understandable....your publication comes from California...you are obviously a liberal/democrat....and you have no understanding of basic math....a country that is 16 plus trillion in debt will wind up in bankruptcy if the federal government continues to spend more than it takes in. It's like a family having take home pay of $50k per year but spends $70k per year. If they do that for too many years they have to file for bankruptcy. If our tax code requires individual families to balance their spending to their income why is it so wrong to ask the federal government to do the same? And like with a family...when you get deep into dept you have to cut spending...a term that liberals like yourself don't comprehend! It's like the old saying two wrongs don't make a right.....more deficit spending on top of deficit spending doesn't prevent bankruptcy! Get your head screwed on straight...then use your publication to tell the truth to the American people....even if it hurts....it is our government that got us in this mess...not the working people in this country.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Larry Redden
Thu Mar 14, 2013 5:35 AM
Mr. Conoson: I am a44 year Republican, and i feel the Party has been destroyed. Paul Ryan is trying to anialate the ccountry, As you say we must get rid of these ingrates, Keep up ggreat commentary.
Comment: #3
Posted by: John W. Hawkins
Thu Mar 14, 2013 5:54 AM
Unfortunately your vision is blurred. This country can no longer spend their way out of debt. That is not a successful model today or in the past. It just does not work. The truth is, there are way to many people being taken care of by our government and that is what has created this mess. The government is not our big brother, sister, mother and father. They are there to administrate for the country, not to control all aspects of our lives. Let's get real and try to take responsibilty for ourselves. I do not want a government controlling all that I do and say. It is time for all the people in this country, including administration to take responsibility for their lives and those around them.
Anyone that has an ounce of fiscal knowledge can see that there is no answer to this mess other than a complete changing of the guard. That means term limits and the elimination of lobbying. Wow, how simple does it get? This country was created on high morals and values. Where have they gone? I want my country back, don't you?
Charlie
Comment: #4
Posted by: charlie keepman
Thu Mar 14, 2013 6:20 AM
What happened September 15, 2008?
Comment: #5
Posted by: David Henricks
Thu Mar 14, 2013 6:20 AM
Henricks,
I remember it well. Lehman Bros filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy 9/15/08. The 14,15, and 16 were the trifecta of bad news in the financial sector/Wall Street.
Comment: #6
Posted by: morgan
Thu Mar 14, 2013 6:55 AM
Re: Larry Redden
Hi Larry, I don't know your background so I don't know how much you know about economy, accounting, and math. So, I just want to ask you whether or not you know why do we have so much debt? I am afraid many American don't realize that, they just listen from the wrong sources. I can explain but wait until I hear your answer first. In fact I am about to post my comment about this in one of social medias with the title "The Angles versus The Devils"
Comment: #7
Posted by: Hendra G
Fri Mar 15, 2013 6:47 AM
Re: morgan Filing for Chapter 11 in order to sell off assets, pay creditors and restructure is a bad thing, how?
Comment: #8
Posted by: David Henricks
Sun Mar 17, 2013 4:11 PM
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