Saturday, February 18, 2012

Response to a Facebook posting

I started this blog because of a response that I made to a Facebook posting today.  This person "shared" a picture of someone holding up a list of accomplishments of President Obama and these were their reasons for voting for him in 2012.  Well, I just couldn't let this go by without a comment, or two, or eight.  In fact, there were eight points that they made and I countered each one.  What this person saw as the reasons for voting for him again were the exact reasons why I wouldn't vote for him.  It's just a matter of perspective.  As a result, these answers not being short one or two sentences, I ended up spamming my friends' walls.  If your one of them, I'm sorry but I couldn't control myself.  But this was such an ideal opportunity to counter what the left thinks are accomplishments and tell them how it really is.  For this post, let me try to repeat these points.  First, I'll put the argument that was put forth for the re-election of Obama and I will follow with my comment.

This was the shared post:

Point One: When Bush negotiated the first law that covered perscription meds, there was nothing but criticism from the left. But Obama pushes through, without debate, the monsterous heath care bill, he gets praise from the left. It's not that we don't want affordable health care, but lets debate it...not pass it and then find out what's in it.

Point Two: He did not end the war in Iraq or even Afganistan. The pullout in Iraq was negotiated by the Bush administration and began before Obama came into office. He had nothing to do with the pullout. By the way, we still have many thousands of soldiers in Iraq. As for Afganistan, the plan was always to get out of there. The question is whether we sit by and let another government there to flourish that is favorable to those who attacked us on 9/11.

Point Three:  Preventive Care For Women is an interesting topic with respect to Obama.  He calls abortion Preventive Care.  Really?  He is lumping the ending of a life alongside mammograms and pap smears.  They are not the same.  Pregnancy is not a disease to be cured.  What is interesting is that shortly after the government passed a law to take control of the medical industry, two separate government panels issued new guideline for preventative care.  One said that regular mammograms should not be done on women until they are in their 50's.  The reason was that there are an unusually high number of false positives on women in their 40's.  I wonder how many true positives were detected with women being tested in their 40's.  The same type of guideline change pertains to pap smears.  Why the sudden change?  Cost.  Now that the federal government will need to pay for these tests, the guideline changed so fewer tests are done over the lifetime of American women, saving the government trillions of dollars over the next 10 years. What a way to reduce preventative healthcare costs.

 Point Four:  This is interesting. Is there really equal pay? The major reason for this inequity has more to do with women taking time off from their careers to have children. My experience shows me that two people with the same experience should have the same pay, and where there is a difference, there should be something done about it. But lets not let race, sex, ethnic background or anything other than experience determine pay rate.The Clinton era "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy probably should be revoked. But lets at least debate the issue, not have it rammed down our throats like most of Obama's initiatives are.

Point Five: Where in the constitution does it give the right for the government to "invest" in green jobs? This make no sense. If the technology made it feasible and affordable, the market would have been there already. Instead, we the taxpayers are pushing for a program that will forever cost us money to support. Again, this was done with no real debate in congress.

Point Six: It is my belief, and those of many conservatives, that Reagan made a huge mistake getting the federal government into education. Again, where in the constitution does the federal government get their authority to involve themselves in local issues like education? No wonder education costs have gone through the roof over the last number of decades. Unfunded mandates.

 Point Seven: I don't know about anybody else, but I have never worked for a poor person. The most successful business owners that I know are responsible for most of the jobs in our area. You cannot tax your way out of a recession. It has never worked before and it won't work now. Don't raise taxes because your boss drives a better car than you. Everyone should pay the same tax rate accross the board.

Finally, Point Eight: This is not the worst economy since the depression. Since the 70's yes. But that was supposed to improve when Obama and the Dems passed the stimulus package. But the unemployment kept climbing and has stayed above 9 percent since. When does this recession stop being the Bush recession and become the Obama recession?

That's the Facebook posting in its entirety.  I didn't post the responses, including mine to others, but this give you the gist of the argument.  

The problem that I have with this whole thing is that the same arguments for President Obama are the same arguments against.  It is a matter basic philosophy.  Is it imperative that the federal government solve our problems or should it get out of the way?

The Obama Administration has been the most arrogant Presidency in recent memory.  Even Bush Sr. and Reagan tried to work things out with the Democrats in congress.  Obama didn't.  In fact, when the Republicans mentioned that they opposed the Healthcare bill, Obama told the Republican leadership to "...shut up and sit down.  You had your chance and now it's our turn."  No Debate.  No attempt at keeping his promise being someone who unites, not divides.  I can go on but this discussion will come in a future blog post.  Right now it is interesting to note the clear difference between blind Obama faithful and reality.  But you know what they say, "REALITY BITES" back.

Welcome to my new blog!!

Thanks for checking out my new blog.  I started this because I find myself rambling on for too long on my Facebook page.  Sometimes, opinions need to be fully expressed and it feels like that when you do that on Facebook, your spamming someone else's wall that may not want to hear what I have to say.

So I started this blog.  I did this so that I can go into details about various subjects.  By coming to my blog you have agreed, at least in principle, to hear me out.  In return, you'll be able to post to this blog as well.  If you find it informative, provocative, or just downright dumb, I hope you still enjoy it and share it.

The topics discussed will cover a wide range of areas in normal everyday life.  Since I am starting this in an election year, then you also must know that politics will be discussed.

So where do I stand politically.  In order to understand this, let me tell you where I come from.

I was born and raised in northern Fairfield county Connecticut.  My mother is a die-hard Democrat.  Her father even held local political office as a Democrat.  My mother even went into the most liberal institution in the US today, education.  She was a grade school and middle school teacher in Ridgefield, CT for over 30 years.  As a result, I grew up believing that the problems we have in this country can only be answered by politicians in Washington.  I grew up believing that Jimmy Carter was the smartest President ever and that Reagan was nothing but a war monger and in the pocket of the rich.  Just like Nixon before him, all Republicans by their nature were evil and only Democrats could save this country.  Pretty pathetic if you think about it.  Not that I was influenced to believe these things by my family, but that there actually people who believe this bullshit.

My father, on the other hand, was a Republican, but he rarely argued with my mother about politics because my mother has the normal Democratic reaction to opposition that makes sense, start name-calling.  She would call Nixon a crook, Reagan an idiot, Bush Sr. untrustworthy (because he headed the CIA at one point), and Bush Jr., well, he was just an idiot.  This is how I grew up.  Once I did grow up and started to think for myself, I realized that this religious devotion to a party was outright wrong.

My first election was in 1980.  I didn't vote for Carter.  The economy was in such a terrible state that I couldn't vote to re-elect him, let alone the lousy way he handled the Iranian hostage crisis.  I didn't vote for Reagan either.  All those years of listening to my mother kept me from voting for him.  I voted for John Anderson.  I wasn't even into his politics as much as I was against the established parties.

The next time I voted for a President was George H. W. Bush.  Bush Sr. was such a better choice.  As Reagan's VP, together they presided in one of the greatest economic turnaround in recent history.  At the beginning of the Reagan administration:

  • Unemployment was in double digits
  • Inflation was in double digits
  • Interest rates were in double digits
  • The world was pushing us or our allies around
    • Hostages held in our embassy in Iran
    • USSR invaded Afghanistan while talking to Carter about detante
    • The balance of trade was beginning to severely shift against the US
  • Our military was stripped of vital and needed munitions and moral was at the lowest point
  • Federal income tax rates topped off at 50 percent
    • With state rates, some income brackets were paying as much as 90 percent of their income to taxes
  • Our industrial base, the strength of our economy, was weakened.  Our factories hadn't had any improvements for decades.  Meanwhile, emerging economies from Southeast Asia were building factories that were modern and more efficient than those of the US.
When Reagan came into office, his first initiative was to lower the tax rates.  This freed up capital.  It is interesting that even I thought this was stupid.  We were running deficits and building so much debt, why would we cut tax rates.  What I didn't understand then is now one of my most important lessons when it comes to the economy and federal spending.

It is not tax rates that determine federal revenues; it is economic activity.

You see, even President Kennedy understood this.  In pushing for a tax cut shortly after entering office, he created an economic boom in the early 1960's.  You can look back into history and the lesson repeats itself time and time again.  Cut taxes results in increased economic activity.  Increased economic activity results in increased federal revenue.  A simple formula bored out by simply studying history.

By the time Bush Sr. ran for President, I fully understood that the Reagan administration was responsible for the turnaround that began in the mid-1980's and actually lasted nearly 20 years.  

A brief note about this 20 years of regular growth.  When I say this, I do remember the crash of '87.  I do remember recessions.  These cyclical events occur regularly.  The best thing a government can do is to stay out of the way and the cycle corrects itself.  

After four years, the economy did recover, but slowly.  Part of the problem was that Bush Sr., after pledging not to raise taxes, ended up raising taxes in order to get a budget deal with the Democratically controlled congress.  Of course, the deal on the Dem side fell through and the only result was an increase in taxes and no noticeable cut in spending.

Then came Clinton.  I wasn't happy with Bush Sr. and Clinton spoke well.  I voted for Clinton.  Not only once, but twice.  I will state here that I wish I didn't.  However, the Republican candidates were not much better.  Thank God for the Republican "Contract with America" that forced Clinton, after two year of absolute liberalism, to move toward the center.  He suddenly support welfare reform, cutting spending and other more right-leaning policies that he rejected only a few months earlier.

It was during the Clinton era that I became more conservative.  Of course this didn't set well with my mother.  Our political discussions were heated, loud and sometimes nasty.  Again, I find it interesting that it was the liberal, my mother, who would resort to calling me an idiot, that what I thought was nothing but lies, and that Clinton was the best President since Kennedy.  I of course disagreed.  

Just about 20 years after the Reagan tax cuts, the economy began to falter.  This is about right.  Any business or accounting major will tell you that capital expenditures in machinery and buildings has an expected life span of about 20 years (that's why these things are depreciated over 20 years for tax purposes).  Of course, the tax increases put in by Clinton in the early 90's did have an effect but the bleeding was stopped by the Republican congress.  But Clinton supporters kept pointing to the President as to the reason for economic growth through the 1990's.  The reality is that our growth had more to do with the lower tax rates put into effect by the Reagan Administration than it had anything to do with the Clinton Administration.  They call this "Trickle Down Economics".  My mother hated that phrase.  She always used to say that the trickle never gets to the little guy.  In part, she is right.  But it was never meant to be that way.  Trickle down means that, when millionaires and corporations pay less to the government, they have more money to invest in new infrastructure such as buildings and equipment.  This makes these companies more profitable and able to complete globally.  This trickle down leads to lower unemployment and, yes, to higher wages.  What it doesn't mean, like many Dems portray it as, is the money doesn't trickle down to the employees directly.  If this was how it worked, the portion that makes it to each employee would not even be noticed.  But they do notice new factories, updated or upgraded equipment, and companies that can compete.

An example of this would be the auto industry.  By the end of the 1970's, American car companies were going under do to competition from abroad.  I already explained that this was, at least partially, due to these foreign companies building new and modern manufacturing plants.  Remember Chrysler.  They were in such bad shape they needed a bailout from the government.  By the mid-1980's, things began to change.  The first new top to bottom auto plant to be built in decades was built.  The Saturn plant was the model of modern manufacturing.  Did this come from nowhere?  Is the timing just a coincidence?  I don't think so.  (By the way, that plant went through very few major upgrades over the years and now, just over 20 years later, they closed that plant down.  Interesting).

By the end of the Clinton Administration, I began to realize that the country was becoming more and more divided.  The Dems were becoming more liberal while the Republicans, at least initially, were keeping to the right.  The Democrats  figured they had a shoo in with Clinton's VP, Al Gore.  Gore was by far one of the most liberal Presidential candidates that I can remember.  The Republican response was Bush Jr.  Although he worked with the religious right during his fathers Presidency, he was more a center leaning Republican.  This was someone, in my early years of conservatism, could support; and I did.  I voted for Bush Jr. both times.  But the Democrats didn't put up much of a fight.  Their candidates were far left leaning liberals whom I would never support.  Even the fight over the 2000 election results shows the difference.  After first conceding, Gore then fought the results all the way to the Supreme Court.  They still lost the election, but of course the Democrats kept saying that it was the Supreme Court that gave Bush the white house.  If they looked at the facts, Gore lost Florida.  Even after picking Democratic district for the recounts and preventing Republican district from being in the recount, they still lost.  To my Democratic friends and family, get over it already.  I still hear about how Bush Jr. was an illegal president because of the 2000 election.  In the long run, thank God Gore wasn't in office on 9/11.  If he was, there probably wouldn't have been any retaliation.  The lawyers would have prevented action, just like they prevented Clinton from going after Bin Laden.

Well, that how I went from a liberal Democrat (although registered Unaffiliated) to becoming a conservative. Although I am a registered Republican now, I consider myself a conservative who is a registered Republican.

So that's my politics.  I expect to argue with liberals and even Republicans.  That's good.  Debate brings out the best in society.  It's when the debate is quashed that things are taken for granted and soon, we find ourselves in a whole hell of a lot of trouble.