Obama's Bogus Budget
Our long national austerity nightmare is finally over.
"With the 2015 budget request," The Washington Post reported last week, "Obama will call for an end to the era of austerity that has dogged much of his presidency."
Well, it's about time! The end of austerity cannot come soon enough, as far as your humble correspondent is concerned. And a quick look at the historical budget tables shows why: In 2008, the federal government spent just a hair under $3 trillion. After six years of President Slash-and-Burn, spending has shrunk to almost $4 trillion. If we keep cutting like this, it will be down to $5 trillion before you know it.
These savage reductions have taken place in nearly every major federal program. Take defense spending: The year before Obama took office, it stood at $594 billion. It's now $597 billion. Back in 2001 it was almost $300 billion. Even if you adjust for inflation, it's clear that defense spending has shrunk at an alarming rate.
Same deal for food stamps: Under President Barack Obama, spending on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program has gone from $40 billion to $78 billion, in constant dollars. And that's after it went from $20 billion to $40 billion under Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush. Spending cuts like that are simply barbaric.
But they are par for the course. Using inflation-adjusted, 2012 dollars, federal spending on K-12 and vocational education has gone from $41 billion in 2002 to $100 billion in 2012. During the same period, Medicare spending has gone from $293 billion to roughly $500 billion. Transportation spending? It went from $86 billion to $138 billion. Medicaid and related programs? $223 billion to $327 billion. Energy? Half a billion to $9 billion.
If we keep hacking away at federal spending like this, pretty soon we won't have any federal government left! No wonder the economy has been so sluggish: We obviously need more stimulus.
Clearly, trends like these cannot go on. You can't cut your way to prosperity; America needs to be building up, not tearing down. We need more investment in basic research '" research like an important new project being funded by the Fish and Wildlife Service, which is giving $175,000 to a grant recipient who will use the money to study "the Swimming Abilities of Native Stream Fishes in the Northern Rockies-Upper Great Plains Regions of Montana."
Studying the swimming abilities of fish is precisely the sort of research the federal government is best at. But if we don't wise up and start spending money faster, we might have to do without it. Then where will we be?
It's not just America. There has been a lot of austerity in Europe, too. Just ask Paul Krugman, the great economist who writes for The New York Times. "You see," he patiently explained last week, "some but not all members of the euro area … were forced into imposing Draconian fiscal austerity" during the recent economic downturn '" the results of which were "nasty, in some cases catastrophic, declines in output and unemployment." (Krugman has been explaining this patiently for some time. In his 2012 piece on "Europe's Austerity Madness," he pointed out that "with erstwhile middle-class workers reduced to picking through garbage in search of food, austerity has already gone too far.")
Just how bad has the European austerity been? According to a piece in the Financial Post last May, in 2007 government spending consumed 45.6 percent of the GDP of countries in the European Union. By 2012, that percentage had shrunk to a shockingly low 49.4 percent. No wonder the economy over there stinks.
Clearly, we cannot allow any more of those darn foreigners to enter America and bring any of that austerity nonsense with them. Unfortunately, we are going in the wrong direction on border control, too. A decade ago, we had almost 10,000 border-patrol agents. Now we have more than 21,000. Border fencing, meanwhile, has increased 370 percent. Deportations are at an all-time high. It's like we don't even care about sealing the border any more.
One more data point should clinch the case: In January 2013, The Washington Post reported that "Congress funded Customs and Border Protection at $11.7 billion '" 64 percent more than FY 2006 and $262 million more than in FY 2011, despite the new climate of austerity."
Yes, the new climate of austerity. Thank heavens we're putting an end to that.
This article originally appeared at the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
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"Obama will call for an end to the era of austerity that has dogged much of his presidency."
We have always been at war with Austeria.
But at least our chocolate rations have been increased. I love you, Big Brother.
"But at least our chocolate rations have been increased. I love you, Big Brother."
Well first they were cut by 50%. But then they were increase by 75%. That's a 25% increase!
But they still don't look as big as I remember them.
I would so love to see government experience real austerity. Let's cut the budget to 20% for a year and find out what happens.
..."Let's cut the budget to 20% for a year and find out what happens."
So, by Obo-math, that would mean a $7Tn budget?
Sorry, I don't know advanced math like that.
Tom Lehrer can probably help you out with that.
I'd post a video, but I can't really find a good one from my phone.
Hey maybe THAT'S where they speak Austrian. Obama was just a bit confused.
Math is hard!
/Barbie Obama
Of course, it's all smoke and mirrors, since Congress isn't likely to pass a spendathon bill at the moment. Not to suggest that any bill not cutting government deeply isn't a spendathon.
"And when I'm president, I will go line by line to make sure that we are not spending money unwisely"
Uh huh.
Well, politically, it's wise to pay off the people you owe and to buy votes and donations wherever possible.
He didn't mean lines of text, he meant production lines. Production lines of money.
Snorting money?
That's certainly a possibility, but I still think that he meant he was going to inspect the mint's production lines to make sure we didn't buy any crappy, wasteful money printing machines. That's got to be as efficient as possible.
Posted this below but it's a good compilation:
http://vimeo.com/m/81183603
Anyone who views the forthcoming Obama budget -- ending "austerity," reneging on his "promise" to address entitlement reform, and cutting the military to "pre-WWII levels" -- as anything other than an act of partisan politics, designed to appeal to his base in a midterm election year and divert attention from Obamacare, is a fool.
Let us make a list of non-bogus things related to Obama.
Well, he is a genuine Marxist.
Let us make a list of non-bogus things related to Obama.
While I admit that your list is pretty definitive, I feel compelled to point out that that entire list could also apply to just about any politician.
Herr Goebbels must be looking up from Hell in adoring fascination.
"And when I'm president, I will go line by line to make sure that we are not spending money unwisely"
This is undoubtedly a true and honest statement. Unfortunately, spending "wisely" based on personal political incentives is guaranteed to produce disastrous results, as we have plainly seen.
..."Unfortunately, spending "wisely" based on personal political incentives"...
So it's one more goddam lie.
What a fuckin' moron. Is it 2016 yet?
You think the next moron will be better?
"With the 2015 budget request, Obama will call for an end to the era of austerity that has dogged much of his presidency."
I refuse to believe someone wrote that. I just can't take it.
Sarcasm?
I love how some people think the president sets federal spending levels.
"I love how some people think the president sets federal spending levels."
What actually gets spent is open to question.
What is under discussion here is what he *wants* to spend and the bogus claim of "austerity".
Just so you know...
Sometimes we need a good chuckle...
http://vimeo.com/m/81183603
lol, I love it.
I like Hinkle's approach: blatantly lie like Obama and claim the opposite of reality. It also reminds me of GOP promises to cut spending. Spending that goes up, and they claim they cut it.
We need to put government on a diet, where we cut approximately 80% of it. That would be austerity for those making a living from the fruits of confiscating other people's money. And a respite from the austerity experienced of those actually producing fruits.
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