This should serve as a cautionary tale for America’s
tax-and-spenders in the White House and Congress, who want to raise taxes on
“the wealthy,” but it likely will float past them un-heeded. When you consider
the details of the first post-election offer from the White House, it is clear
that the administration does not comprehend such economic realities. The
proposal: $1.6 trillion in higher taxes over 10 years, $180 billion in new spending and
vague promises to cut only the growth
of entitlement spending at an indeterminate
future date, all while giving the president the power to unilaterally raise the debt ceiling.
The proposal calls for double the pre-election tax amount, additional
spending and no specific amount of spending cuts or dates certain for them to
take effect. And, there’s that last item, which gets immediately crossed-off:
it’s unconstitutional.
As idiotic as that proposal is, understand that President
Barack Obama appears serious about it.
Big government liberals live on entitlement spending, and
many would die without it. The president’s proposal includes allowing the Bush
tax cuts to expire for those making $250,000 a year or more, raising the top
rate to nearly 40 percent, which he supposes will raise $80 billion annually. That’s
enough to run the federal government for only 8.5 days. If America’s high
earners follow the lead of the Brits and reduce taxable income or shift it into
2012, it will be even less than that relatively small amount.
But what is worse, when you understand that half of those affected
by this rate increase are small businesses, it makes no sense to raise taxes on
them with unemployment still more than 50 percent above normal levels nearly 42
months after the recession ended.
The tax-and-spenders need to get past their resentment of
high earners and their appetite for their earnings, and get serious about
fiscal reform. Out-of-control spending for entitlements, a bloated and
inefficient government, a tax code that plays favorites, and other factors
combine to produce huge annual deficits and 16 trillion in crushing debt, and
it’s time to fix that.
Americans for Tax Reform has focused for years on getting
newly elected U.S. Representatives and Senators to take a pledge against
raising taxes, understanding that our problem is that we spend far too much,
not that anyone needs higher tax rates. Grover Norquist, its president, is now
a target of the tax-and-spenders for his organization’s efforts at controlling
taxation. However, those Senators and Representatives didn’t make the pledge to
Mr. Norquist, they pledged to their constituents they would vote against tax
increases.
The problem we have today is not a new one. A Cary Orr political
cartoon from 1934, in the midst of The Great Depression, shows a wagon filled
with drunken people drinking from a “Power” bottle and shoveling bags of money
out onto the road. On the back of the wagon is a sign reading, “Depleting the
resources of the soundest government in the world.” And there’s a man on the
side of the road painting a sign which says:
Plan of Action for U.S.
Spend! Spend! Spend!
Under the guise of recovery
Bust the government
Blame the capitalists for the failure
Junk the Constitution and declare a dictatorship
Other comments jotted around the scene say, “How red the
sunrise is getting” near an ominous looking man labeled “Stalin,” and, “It
worked in Russia.”
That is how Cary Orr saw what the government was doing then.
And what is unsettling about this cartoon is the striking similarity to what is
happening now.
He believed government’s actions were communistic. What our
government is doing today may not be socialistic or communistic under the
strict definition of those terms But an interesting coincidence is that the
Communist Party USA is now organizing teleconferences and rallies supporting the
plans to raise taxes and encouraging continued over-spending on entitlement
programs.
We should recognize that no nation on Earth has ever
achieved success that even approaches the level of success the United States of
America achieved before it began changing from the capitalistic model that
built it to a model that has produced mediocrity and fiscal peril worldwide.
We should heed the lessons of wrong-headed government
policies that extended the Great Depression for years longer than it should
have lasted, and try something different, like the economic principles of
capitalism that built America.
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