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You Lost Republicans, so Stop Pretending Like Obamacare is On the Table
There are some professions that demand a certain level of earnest deliberation and an attitude of gravity toward something considered to be of importance, and seriousness is certainly the opposite of comedy or insignificant play. Politicians should be serious about their jobs because their actions have the potential to adversely affect the population as well as the nation, but as the so-called fiscal cliff looms large, Republicans have demonstrated that they are not serious about compromising with the President and Democrats and are engaged in a comedic reiteration of their failed campaign in the recent election. The American people sent a strong message to Republicans that they rejected Willard Romney’s tax plan and the anti-tax extremism inherent in the GOP, but beginning on the day after their crushing defeat, they claimed they would not consider following the will of the people and compromise with the President to avoid the fiscal cliff they created.
The latest joke from Republicans was offered up by House minority leader Eric Cantor who echoed Speaker John Boehner’s call for President Obama to put the Affordable Care Act on the table for elimination in order for Republicans to compromise on revenue increases. Republicans are still pressing the no-tax increase, trickle-down agenda by proposing eliminating tax loopholes for the middle class, and cutting taxes as their plan to increase revenue. The joke any family gets is that cutting taxes equates with higher revenue for the government, and that giving the wealthy and corporation’s greater tax cuts will spur economic growth and job creation. It is a thirty year-old theory that resulted in slow growth for the nation’s economy and increased income inequality as the rich get a larger share of the nation’s wealth and devastated the middle class.
The suggestion by Cantor borders on insanity if Republicans think that after Democrats defended the ACA in two elections and a Supreme Court challenge they will bargain the healthcare law away under any circumstances. Cantor said yesterday that, “If the President is serious about joining us and fixing the problem he ought to be putting ObamaCare on the table. There is no question in my mind that is the largest expansion of government programs that we’ve seen. All I can say is that the president has got to get serious. The speaker is correct that Obamacare is such an expansion of government spending that it ought to be on the table.” The problem is, besides preventing 30-million Americans having access to affordable healthcare, that getting rid it will not actually bring down the deficit at all, it does the exact opposite and based on past experience, Obamacare “on the table” always means full repeal or full defunding. Republicans are not serious about the deficit or preventing the fiscal cliff. However, they are completely serious about pushing Romney’s losing tax plan on Americans.
Speaker Boehner signaled his intent to use Romney’s plan as a means to avoid the fiscal cliff when he assigned Ryan as point-man for talks to avoid the fiscal cliff Ryan voted for. Republicans, and Ryan, are pushing to cut taxes for the wealthy, and based on new data from the Internal Revenue Service that shows the effective tax rates for America’s top earners fell even lower in 2010, one wonders why Republicans are pushing for greater cuts included in Romney’s plan.
The President has held firm on allowing Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy expire according to schedule, and resisted bringing Social Security into the equation. On Monday, White House press secretary Jay Carney said President Obama was not interested in broaching cuts to the government administered retirement program because “Social Security is not currently a driver of the deficit. That’s an economic fact,” but the President is holding firm to $1.6 trillion in new tax revenue and insists it be achieved by allowing tax rates on the wealthy to increase at the end of the year, as well as by eliminating deductions. Carney continued that, “Math tells us that you can’t get the kind of balanced approach that you need without having rates be part of the equation. We haven’t seen a proposal that achieves that, a realistic proposal that achieves that.” No, and if the White House is looking for realistic proposals from Republicans, they will be looking for a long time. The White House published a report Monday warning that the average family will pay $2,200 more in taxes next year if Congress does not freeze rates for the middle class, but Republicans will hold the middle class hostage to maintain, and reduce, the wealthy’s tax rates.
Republicans are not serious about deficit reduction or compromise to avoid the fiscal cliff, and proposing that the President put his signature healthcare law on the chopping block proves it. According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, the ACA still reduces the deficit regardless the GOP talking points to the contrary. If eliminating the ACA is not ridiculous enough, Paul Ryan is still pushing the meme that revenues will increase with lower rates for the wealthy, because as Republicans are wont to claim, higher tax rates on the wealthy hurts economic growth. Allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire and return to Clinton-era rates when the economy thrived and 23 million jobs were created is a historical fact Republicans still cannot grasp, but when governing is a joke, facts are irrelevant.
For the past four years, the Republican Party has been an abject failure and a joke, an evil dysfunctional joke, and they show no signs of relenting and getting serious about acquiescing to the will of the people or fact-based sound economic theory. Their intransigence on taxes notwithstanding, they have transformed governance into a comedy that lacks all logic and reason, and they have elucidated their position as obstructionists intent on bringing the country to its knees in their campaign for plutocracy. If Americans thought pushing the losing Romney tax plan on the nation was a joke, Republicans proposing the President putting the ACA on the table should send them into a hilarious fit, the only problem is, Republicans are not joking and the cliff they advocated and voted for last year will be as serious as they are about holding the middle class hostage for the wealthy’s tax cuts.
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luciboo
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 11:51 am
Okay let’s not have any tax increases. Let’s repeal Obamacare. Let Texas succeed. Most let’s pretend Obama and Democratic Senators didn’t win.OH PLEASE!!!! The Republicans have lost touch with the American people and reality!
booluci
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 5:10 pm
…not sure “succeed” is the word you are looking for…
Reynardine
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 11:59 am
The ewepeople refused to be led like lambs to the slaughter, and if the GOP won’t get it, we’ll just have to ram it home, wether or not they like it (I know. I need a new coffee pot).
Reynardine
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 12:16 pm
On second thought, I feel sheepish about that remark. Without caffeine, my thought processes are a little wooly, but not to the point of being mutton-headed.
Johnee
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 12:28 pm
Heh.
BTW when is it actually mutton? Isn’t that an older sheep? (Sorry. Useless trivia seems to be an annoying hobby of mine).
robyn ryan
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 1:18 pm
I think it’s a sheep meat more than 6 months old.
Maranon
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 12:39 pm
The GOP representatives want tax cuts for all their friends and campaign contributors, while cutting everyone else’s pay to the chinese standard.
Have they volunteered to have a salary cut, or say no to free lunches, free shoe shine, parking?
Have they said no to the government provided health insurance?
The GOP will continue on their attacks and the people needs to mobiiize and get a campaign to their representatives to bring the fire to their doors to deal with the issues.
Johnee
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 12:55 pm
Not to mention the fact that the only “government” in the ACA (excluding Medicare reform of course) is regulatory; in other words, it is making the insurance companies DO what they SHOULD HAVE DONE in the first place.
If these corporate fat cats are going to get involved with businesses that have to do with public health or safety…then they should have a reasonable expectation that they are going to be heavily regulated; they will still make their billions of dollars. If they don’t like it, there are plenty of other businesses that they could get into ( with light, if any, regulation).
Mr. Califash
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 12:59 pm
Want to address income inequality and the deficit?
1. Let the Bush-era cuts lapse for those at $250,000 and above.
2. Remove the ceiling on FICA-taxed income.
3. Fix the AMT issue.
4. Treat UNearned income the same way we treat income earned by the sweat of our brows.
robyn ryan
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 1:22 pm
“There is no question in my mind that is the largest expansion of government programs that we’ve seen.”
Who cares what is a question in Cantor’s mind? He hasn’t shown any great ability to think beyond ‘gimme.’ .
Travis
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 3:54 pm
The “O” in GOP stands for obstructionism.
mjh
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 4:25 pm
It could also refer to their collective IQ . . .
.
Alan Koeppen
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 4:20 pm
Get rid of all of the Republican senators, congress people and house representatives. Simple solution there.
homeless1000
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 3:13 am
Alan, I would be ready to pay you a one way ticket to Cuba, provided you never come back. You are right, why go to Cuba, when in the next 4 years Obama will have Cuba come here!!! I know, you say, I should take the one way trip to hell… Well, I buy the one way part, but I shall choose the destination…
mjh
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 4:24 pm
The latest joke from Republicans was offered up by House minority leader Eric Cantor who echoed Speaker John Boehner’s call for President Obama to put the Affordable Care Act on the table for elimination in order for Republicans to compromise on revenue increases.
EARTH TO ERIC “SLEEPY” CANTOR AND JOHN “AGENT ORANGE” BOEHNER:
The Affordable Care Act
- was voted on and passed both houses of Congress
- was duly signed into law by the President
- as was upheld by the US Supreme Court
Like the election/re-election of President Obama, it will not go away no matter how hard you stamp your feet and yell . . .
.
Walter Zimmerman
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 5:06 pm
It would seem that the Republicans misunderstand the Black Knight scene in ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’. When the Black Knight’s arms and legs are severed, he is in no position to demand Arthur’s surrender, and his helplessness makes his inexplicable hubris ironic and amusing, not brave or exemplary. To me, Eric Cantor’s demand that, after the President’s successful bid for re-election, ObamaCare should be laid out on the bargaining table has a similar ring of the ridiculous and pathetic.
Sabyen91
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 9:17 pm
Hey, it is just a flesh wound.
johnee
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 9:59 pm
“All right, we’ll call it a draw”.
Peter J. Kraus
Nov. 27th, 2012 at 5:54 pm
Let the damn thing expire. Watch them cringe on Jan.1.
Why all this hand-wringing? The Republicans forced the “fiscal cliff” on Obama. So let them win for once.
As soon as they accede to all demands, sign the new Tax bill and forget about shrinking expenditures. A fair tax on the greedy will take care of the deficit (as long as no new Republican administration gets a chance to blow up the deficit again).
joseph
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 12:42 am
you know, as a middle class person, I think I would rather pay more in taxes than give an inch on the affordable care act. Mr. President, call their bluff.
homeless1000
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 1:46 am
After the surgery, the doctor comes out and says to the family of the guy on the operating “table”: the surgery was a success, unfortunately the patient died. The moral being: if you do not want to kill the patient better keep him on the table until you find a better solution.
luciboo
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 8:45 am
Booluci you are correct. Thank you the world is secede!
Wuzzi
Dec. 3rd, 2012 at 9:32 pm
You know I actually wrote to the President and told him that if it could be guaranteed to provide the same percentage of their (the top percentage earners) income as mine, I would very happily endure a tax increase, even though I am actually one of the poor among us – disabled from an incurable chronic illness. I realize they might as well just cut my benefit (not even $1100/month) – it saves paperwork and me mailing the money back to them, but it is okay if they would rather make it a little more cumbersome.
Do I WANT to endure living on less than $15K/year? No, but if it will increase the revenue for our government and shame the Republicans into giving in and making those who make more in a few minutes than my monthly benefit to pay more in taxes, then I will do it.
In the end, the future of my country is important enough for me to be willing to budget that kind of sacrifice.