Sonntag, 4. September 2011

Neo-Conservatism is How We Got Into A World Mess

The article below reminds us of how neo-conservatism as an ideology is the actual culprit that got us into a world mess.  While Bush and Cheney didn't get Osama bin Laden they actually increased the hatred towards us around the world. In this regard, Bush and Cheney are hated while Obama still remains highly popular and loved around the world. This is even more telling in a struggling world economy and dangerous geopolitical climate.

Bush and Cheney Are How We Got Into This Mess

Thank you, George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, for emerging from your secure, undisclosed locations to remind us how we got into this mess: It didn’t happen by accident.

The important thing isn’t what Bush says in his interview with National Geographic or what scores Cheney tries to settle in his memoir. What matters is that as they return to the public eye, they highlight their record of wrongheaded policy choices that helped bring the nation to a sour, penurious state.

By Published: September 1

Questions about whether President Obama has been combative enough in dealing with the Republican opposition — or sufficiently ambitious in framing his progressive agenda — seem trivial when viewed in this larger context. Obama is tackling enormous problems that took many years to create. His presidential style is important insofar as it boosts or lessens his effectiveness, but its importance pales beside the generally righteous substance of what he’s trying to accomplish.

It was the Bush administration, you will recall, that sent the national debt into the stratosphere and choked off federal revenue to the point of asphyxiation. Bush and Cheney decided to fight two wars without even accounting — let alone paying — for them. Rather than raise taxes to cover the cost of military campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq, Bush opted to maintain unreasonable and unnecessary tax cuts.

So far, the wars and the tax cuts have cost the Treasury between $4 trillion and $5 trillion. If Bush had just left income tax rates alone, nobody except Ron Paul would be talking about the debt.

My aim isn’t to attack Bush but to attack his philosophy. When he was campaigning for the White House in 2000, the government was anticipating a projected surplus of roughly $6 trillion over the following decade. Bush said repeatedly that he thought this was too much and wanted to bring the surplus down — hence, in 2001, the first of his two big tax cuts.

Bush was hewing to what had already become Republican dogma and by now has become something akin to scripture: Taxes must always be cut because government must always be starved.

The party ascribes this golden rule to Ronald Reagan — conveniently forgetting that Reagan, in his eight years as president, raised taxes 11 times. Reagan may have believed in small government, but he did believe in government itself. Today’s Republicans have perverted Reagan’s philosophy into a kind of anti-government nihilism — an irresponsible, almost childish insistence that the basic laws of arithmetic can be suspended at their will.

The Bush administration also pushed forward Reagan’s policy of deregulation — ignoring, for example, critics who said the ballooning market in mortgage-backed securities needed more oversight. When the 2008 financial crisis hit, Bush did regain his faith in government long enough to throw together the $800 billion TARP bailout for the banks. But he failed to use the leverage of an aid package to exact reforms that would ensure that the financial system served the economy, rather than the other way around.

Faced with similar circumstances, would today’s Republican leadership react at all? Or is it the party’s view that the proper role of government would be to stand aside and watch the world’s financial system crash and burn?

This is a serious question. Just a few weeks ago, the Republican majority in the House threatened to force the United States government to default on its debt obligations — a previously unthinkable act of brinkmanship. Everything is thinkable now.

The Bush administration took Reagan’s tax-cutting, government-starving philosophy much too far. Today’s Republican Party takes it well beyond, into a rigid absolutism that would be comical if it were not so consequential.

We face devastating unemployment. Many conservative economists have joined the chorus calling for more short-term spending by the federal government as a way to boost growth. But the radical Republicans don’t pay attention to conservative economists anymore. The Republicans’ idea of a cure for cancer would be to cut spending and cut taxes.

Perhaps they’re just cynically trying to keep the economy in the doldrums through next year to hurt Obama’s chances of reelection. I worry that their fanaticism is sincere — that one of our major parties has gone completely off the rails. If so, things will get worse before they get better.

Having Bush and Cheney reappear is a reminder to step back and look at what Obama is up against. You might want to cut him a little slack.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/bush-and-cheney-remind-us-how-we-got-into-this-mess/2011/09/01/gIQAboXFvJ_story.html

8 Kommentare:

  1. Obama has had four years to put right what he and HIS mainstream media keep bleating on about being wrong.

    If Obama was the CEO of a major company, his failure to turn around the company from mega-losses to profit after all this time would earn him the sack for incompetance.

    Therefore, let him stand on his track record.

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  2. Actually he's had two and a half years to try to fix over thirty of conservative economic policies that have gotten us into serious trouble. CEOs also have full power to make changes while Obama must deal with the political realities of a paralyzed government. You also assume that Obama can magically fix a broken and corrupt world financial system.

    So what have conservatives got to point to that is really good? Their tactic is simply to blame Obama for their own failings and obstructionism.

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  3. Hang on a minute.. The nature of this post is laying this all at the door of the Republicans, as far as I can see.

    But wasn't Clinton a Democrat?

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  4. There is no escaping the fact that our current president is a DEMOCRAT.

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  5. We need to do much more than that. Everyone with any sense at all needs to get solidly behind Obama and make sure he knows it, at every opportunity until the election, and especially AT the election. Let him know he doesn't need to compromise. Forget the nitpicking. Whatever you think were his shortcomings, the other side would have been 1000 times worse.

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  6. For there is nothing like a big, all encompassing Government telling everyone exactly what they will do for the good of the President, is there?

    Didn't they try that in 1919 in Russia?

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  7. The people got solidly behind FDR at the first midterm and gave him a bigger Democratic majority, which is what Obama deserved and needed as well. Everyone in 1932 and 1934 knew very well that Republicans had ruined the economy and couldn't fix it. People should have known that in 2010. Now we have seen the face of radical Republican incompetence again, and it is ugly indeed.

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  8. Again - Democrats control 2/3 of the branches of government. Until 2010 they controlled everything. Obama should have been concerned with JOBS since day 1. He chose to focus on Obamacare. Even most democrats acknowledge that this was very idiotic.

    Voters know who is in power and FDR made the problem worse. Like Obama his policies prolonged our misery.

    Obama has lost most of the independent vote that put him in power.

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