Good golly, what a mess!
John Boehner walked out of the debt negotiations yesterday afternoon and wrote an angry letter because the President wouldn't bend over and take the "Cut, Cap and Balance" Act that would take away the President's power to adjust the budget, "Cut" social and regulatory programs across the board (except military spending and other pet projects the House wanted to exempt), "Cap" spending along unrealistic inflation measures (setting up the poor for a total screw-job as inflation kicks in) and Balance – well, only the kind of people who think Fox news is "fair and balanced" could have the nerve to use the word balance in a bill that would cut $400Bn of annual spending – EVENTUALLY (just $144Bn is saved in 2012 in this joke of a bill) and raise not one penny of revenues.
Keep in mind that we have a $1.4 TRILLION Dollar deficit this year so even cutting $400Bn off that figure leaves us with a $1Tn revenue shortfall so this plan, and all plans put forth, are not in the least bit serious about balancing a budget as THE INTEREST ALONE on a $1Tn shortfall over the next decade would add another $350Bn a year of mandated interest payments, causing the CUT of yet another $350Bn in spending until, eventually, the sole purpose of the US Government is to pay the interest on our debt.
You can't run a country based on "No New Taxes – EVER" the same way you can't run a home budget or a business saying you never, ever, ever intend to increase your income enough to pay your debts or even keep up with inflation. What happens to a business like that?
As the NYTimes points out, Obama, in fact, had already gone much too far in trying to make his deal palatable to House Republicans, offering to cut spending even further than the deficit plan proposed this week by the bipartisan “Gang of Six,” which includes some of the Senate’s most conservative members. The White House was willing to cut $1 trillion in domestic and defense spending and another $650 billion from Medicare, Medicaid and even Social Security.
Sunday night update: NO DEAL!
Congressional leaders from both parties were developing competing deficit-reduction plans, but they released only broad outlines and few details. Several aides stressed the plans were still evolving.One currently under discussion, a plan from House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio), would cut the budget deficit by $1.2 trillion over 10 years and raise the debt ceiling in two phases—one that would enable the government to cover its bills through the end of the year, and a second in January 2012 depending on recommendations from a congressional commission. "I would prefer to have a bipartisan approach to solve the problem," Mr. Boehner lied Sunday on Fox News. "If that is not possible, I and Republican colleagues are prepared to move on our own."Democrats say a six-month increase in the government's $14.29 trillion debt ceiling will introduce too much uncertainty into financial markets and they insist on a deal that would raise the cap by $2.4 trillion immediately, which would carry the government through the end of 2012.Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) said in a written statement Sunday evening he is pushing ahead with a plan for $2.7 trillion in spending cuts over 10 years, along with an increase in the debt limit sufficient to carry the government through the end of 2012 and no increase in tax revenue. The details of the cuts had not been finalized, but none of them would be to entitlement programs like Medicare, a Democratic aide said. One option being discussed was $1.5 trillion in cuts that were identified by a bipartisan group led by Vice President Joseph Biden, and another $1 trillion in savings from winding down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the aide said.If the next few days play out that way, with the House and Senate on separate paths toward a debt deal, it doesn't bode well for a bipartisan agreement—or for legislation to clear Congress before Aug. 2.
This is the second time in six months that Republican lawmakers have voted to cut funding for programs to prevent nuclear terrorism. Such programs have removed several tons of plutonium and highly enriched uranium from countries that might otherwise be unable to prevent those nuclear materials from falling into the hands of terrorists, made more than 1,000 buildings housing dangerous fissile and radioactive materials across the world more secure and strengthened security at many foreign ports and border crossings.
The House budget cuts come on top of the unprecedented 14 percent reductions made to those programs in the current federal budget. By comparison, from 2001 through 2010, Congress cut the budget by a cumulative total of slightly less than 1 percent. The House Republicans also eliminated a program that seeks to remove and secure 1,900 radioactive sources — sealed containers holding radioactive material — throughout the United States. Those radioactive sources are no longer in use, but they remain dangerous. Is it possible the Republicans WANT to invite a nuclear incident so they can "prove" Obama is soft on terrorism? According to the NYTimes:
Beltway budget battles always produce a lot of game-playing. But protecting America’s security is not a political game. The programs the House has cut are proven, effective and prudent national security investments to prevent nuclear terrorism and its devastating consequences. Slashing America’s best defense against nuclear terror will not make us safer or richer. In fact, it could invite the opposite result.