This is a post for any fiscally responsible fence sitters you might know. The links are picked specifically to be unassailable by even the most brainwashed Faux News zealot.
From:
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa543.pdfPresident Bush has presided over the largest overall increase in inflation-adjusted federal spending since Lyndon B. Johnson. Even after excluding spending on defense and homeland security, Bush is still the biggest-spending president in 30 years. ... Total government spending grew by 33 percent during Bush's first term. The federal budget as a share of the economy grew from 18.5 percent of GDP on Clinton's last day in office to 20.3 percent by the end of Bush's first term.Please note the charts on pages 1-7 of the above linked pdf document.
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Concerning our much ballyhooed finally increasing federal revenues:
http://www.crfb.org/html/documents/ReleaseMSRJuly2005.pdfWhile higher revenues are indeed good news, the recent revenue surge only begins to restore the decline in revenues over the last several years. Total revenues last year were $145 billion lower in nominal terms than they were in 2000. Even if the trend of unexpectedly high revenues continues throughout this year, total revenues will almost certainly fall below the 2000 revenue levels adjusted for inflation.Please note the chart on page 2 of the above linked pdf document.
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From:
http://www.crfb.org/html/documents/ReleaseMSRJuly2005.pdfAnnual non-military and non-homeland security spending increased $303 Billion between Fiscal Year 2001 and Fiscal Year 2005. The acknowledged Federal Debt has increased over $2 Trillion since Fiscal Year 2000 and now stands at $7.9 Trillion.*****
Our Republican controlled federal government has been spending borrowed money like a drunken sailor on shore leave at the exact time in our overall demographic "lifespan" when our government should be most concerned with
saving. Baby boomers are now at the height of their earning power as well as their ability to refinance real estate holdings because interest rates have been held artificially low for years. This has allowed the US population to temporarily fund consumption levels that are almost certainly unsustainable, despite lower real wages and salaries and a moribund job market. However, these boomers are approaching retirement age (even if it gets raised to 68 or 70) very rapidly. In addition, the Republicans' pharmapork prescription drug plan has committed our federal government to hundreds and hundreds of billions more in wasteful corporate welfare.
So after a truly historic orgy of tax cuts, corporate giveaways and rampant overall federal spending increases unseen since the days of LBJ's Great Society, exactly what do we as US citizens have to show for our 8 trillion dollar federal debt? Real wages and salaries are down. Past due credit card debt just hit a record high along with gas prices, and consumer confidence just suffered its biggest drop in 15 years. Job growth remains stagnant (to put it kindly), and the jobs that are being created are far less attractive than the well-paying white collar, information technology and manufacturing jobs that corporations are rushing to outsource to Asia by the million.
After spending over $200 billion in Iraq, we have somehow managed to
reduce the number of Iraqi battalions capable of combat without U.S. support from three to one (
http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGB60MB97EE.html ). How's that for money well spent? And with well over $100 billion already showered on the Department of Homeland Security, we can't even keep US citizens from dying of thirst by the hundreds in the aftermath of a natural disaster so predictable that the entire scenario was run as a mock FEMA exercise in July 2004 (
http://www.fema.gov/news/newsrelease.fema?id=13051 ). How secure does
that make you feel?
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Of course, even though it's definitely
NOT the American public, I suppose that
someone has to be benefiting from all of Bush's reckless spending. Guess who?