thegreekdog wrote:I have another question for you to add to the list Titanic:
Question 1 - How, exactly, has President Obama done anything, differently than President Bush, to shore up Afghanistan?
Question 2 - What happens, in x number of years, when the bill for Cash for Clunkers (or any other plan) comes due? Do we have another round of spending to help save the economy again? Do we raise taxes to help pay for spending that occurred x number of years ago? That's my major issue with Cash for Clunkers: it will have to be paid for at some point, and the same people it ostensibly benefitted are the same people to pay for it. The other issue with Cash for Clunkers is that it, again, encourages people to spend money they don't have for something they probably didn't need.
1) He has sent tens of thousands more troops into Afghanistan (which was desperately needed, one of the reason the Taliban reappeared was due to the power vacuum that was left when Bush diverted the attention to Iraq). Also, he in invested much more money into the infrastructure in the country, building up the Afghan army and police with greater numbers, and also trying to talk with the tribal leaders to get them to come to some agreement with the US army. O, and because he is not George Bush, not everyone in the region actually hates him.
2) This is the whole point of the healthcare debate and Obama's budget. He is doing exactly what Clinton did when he came into power, he is sorting out the federal budget so it can return to a surplus in the long term. If he did nothing then the future costs will cripple the economy, but hes trying to sort out the escalating costs so that the budget by the middle of the decade can be balanced, and also be on track to post healthy surplus's to reduce the public debt.
As for the Cash for Clunkers part, it is a subsidy for the people and businesses in a recession, but it will be paid back when the country is back in the growth so the lasting effect is not bad as its actually going to help the country return to growth.
jbrettlip wrote:
Ok, so now Obama has solidified the financial markets, even though you said previously that TARP was all Bush. You act as if the gov handed bags of money to the banks, with no paper trail, etc. If the shares were overpriced, how did Citi rise 75%? Your arguments on this point aren't making much sense. Things like the CP facility, MMF insurance and others MADE the government money. The company I work for probably paid about $35 million for insurance that was never needed. They were enacted under Bush/Paulson. Building a border station in ND for 4 million isn't helping anyone (under the stimulus bill).
You said the government was spending "its" money to boost the economy. I was asking how the government earns its money (Hint, it is the taxpayers money and would be better spent by us.)
That's exactly what did happen. A huge part of Bush's stimulus was not accounted for, and no one actually has any clue where the money did go. The shares rising has nothing to do with what price the government paid for them. The shares has risen a lot because a lot of people thought the whole industry was going to collapse, but now that it has stabilised people are willing to invest in their stock again. Also, I know some people have paid the government back, but its nowhere near what the government invested overall and the lack of oversight on the original stimulus is the reason why.
Finally, the money would not be better spent by the taxpayer. How is the taxpayer going to sort out the financial or automotive industry? It needed huge government intervention and large financial backing, which can only come from the government and not from private individuals.