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Carly-Fiorina-Republican-debate

Former Hewlett-Packard CEO and Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, front, stands on the debate stage to the left of former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, left. (Photo: Scott Olson / Getty)

While each of the Republican presidential candidates were clearly seeking to distinguish themselves in the first of two presidential debates Thursday, only one had a break-out moment. Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina was the clear winner of the first Republican debate that took place Thursday in Cincinnati, Ohio.

“You’re lucky you weren’t here earlier,” Fox News host and debate moderator Megyn Kelly said in the open to the prime-time debate. “She opened a can of you-know-what before.”

Kelly, who otherwise had a highly-criticized night, was correct. Carly Fiorina brought her A Game on issues of foreign policy, domestic policy, philosophical differences between party ideology and, of course, frontrunner Donald Trump.

“He is the party’s frontrunner right now and good for him,” the only female GOP candidate said. “He’s tapped into an anger that people feel. They’re sick of politics as usual. I’ll tell you this. Since he has changed his mind on amnesty, on health care and on abortion, I would just ask what are the principles by which he will govern?”

“I didn’t get a phone call from Bill Clinton before I decided to run for president. Did any of you?” Fiorina asked while turning to look at the other candidates on stage.

It has recently been reported that the former president and husband to the now-Democratic frontrunner called Trump prior to his announcement, raising eyebrows from the Beltway to the soon-to-be caucus rooms in Iowa.

“Hillary Clinton lies about Benghazi, lies about her emails, she’s still defending Planned Parenthood and she is still her party’s frontrunner,” Fiorina said in closing statements. ” 2016 is going to be a fight between conservatism and a Democratic Party that is undermining the very character of this nation. We need a nominee that is going to throw every punch, not pull punches. Someone who cannot stumble before he even gets into the ring.”

Last night, the self-made businesswoman did much to advance her argument for making her the nominee. Given the importance of modern political debates and the positive press that will saturate the airwaves for the next few days — or, perhaps weeks — it is likely that someone in the top ten will be forced to the second-tier. In the average of national polls, Fiorina is currently polling at around just 1 percent, though she has gained traction in a recent Gravis Marketing survey, among others. Given her strong debate performance, it is almost a certainty that her position and support will grow.

“I can win this job, I can do this job,” Fiorina added. “With your help and support I will lead a resurgence of this great nation.”

Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina was the clear

President Obama Speaks On Iran Nuclear Deal At American University

President Barack Obama addresses American University’s School of International Service in Washington, District of Columbia, U.S., on Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2015. The speech focused on the Iran nuclear deal being debated in Congress. American University was chosen as the venue by the White House because it is where President Kennedy made his famous 1963 speech on nuclear disarmament. President Obama’s Iran Deal speech at AU falls on the 52nd anniversary of the signing of the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. (Photo: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg/Pool)

Am I the only one getting tired of President Obama constantly berating his political opponents and accusing them of being bought? Well, he is doing it again, on his Iran nuke deal.

You can always tell when Obama is nervous about a policy proposal, because he won’t stop talking about it. As disturbing as Obama’s militant partisanship is, what’s worse is his delusional perception that anyone who disagrees with him is automatically unreasonable and corrupt.

Such is the world of an egotistical narcissist. If you resist Obama, you are crooked, because those free of corrupting influences grasp the superior wisdom of his ideas. He’s the true bipartisan, and both parties would adopt his ideas if they cared about the national interests. As such, he is justified in mistreating his opponents as shady partisan obstructionists.

I know, I know. Many of you think Obama’s not self-deluded, that he knows he is militantly partisan and this is just his Saul Alinksy act to target, isolate and demonize opponents — and to lie with abandon to accomplish his agenda.

I’m partially with you, but this is a false choice. Obama is Alinsky’s best pupil; he knows exactly what he’s doing when he lies to advance his ideas, but he also believes his own propaganda. He is so enamored with himself and so intoxicated with his transformational agenda that he believes his way is the only way — and that’s scary. But now, back to his lies on the Iran deal.

In his latest speech promoting his nuclear “arrangement” with Iran, Obama said, “Between now and the congressional vote in September, you are going to hear a lot of arguments against this deal, backed by tens of millions of dollars in advertising.”

You see — the deal’s opponents couldn’t conceivably persuade a majority of Americans and Congress without millions in deceptive advertising sponsored by rich, racist corporations who hate the homeless.

But if the deal is so great, why is he the one charging to the podium to promote it, just as he did with Obamacare? Polls show Americans oppose it, so he’s launched a desperate campaign to salvage it, which, I dare say, will not only be financed by his deep-pocketed allies, but also fueled by his free, megawatt presidential bully pulpit.

Obama claims this is America’s strongest ever arms deal. Yes, just like his economy is booming and real unemployment is falling. How can he brag about a deal that won’t prohibit Iran from developing nuclear weapons and will likely accelerate the process in the long term? (“not only” construction used in previous graf)

He claimed we had to reach a deal with Iran because the only other option is another war in the Middle East. Nonsense.

The chairman of the joint chiefs, Martin Dempsey, disputes this, saying, “We have a range of options” other than accepting Obama’s deal and going to war with Iran. When questioned by Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, on whether he told Obama war was the only other option, Dempsey said, “No, at no time did that come up in our conversation, nor did I make that comment. … I can tell you that we have a range of options, and I will always present them.” Is Obama going to claim some evil corporation is paying Dempsey to say this?

Obama always manufactures crises to advance his unpopular ideas. Yes, the idea of Iran getting nukes is crisis-worthy, but not the way Obama frames it. Our sanctions were working, which is the only reason Iran came to the table. By showing Iran his anxiousness to drop sanctions to secure some legacy-enhancing deal, he forfeited our negotiating leverage from the beginning.

Obama’s arrangement lifts the punishing sanctions that were weakening Iran’s nuclear aims and impairing its sponsorship of global terrorism in exchange for a Hail Mary chance that the deal will stall Iran’s nuke designs. It gratuitously releases billions of dollars back to Iran for funding terrorism and proxy wars around the world.

The only chance this deal has of working is if Iran stands down on its own (as it chants “death to America; death to Israel”) or the inspections work. But the inspections process is so flawed and America’s role in it so limited that it’s hard to believe any American president would so betray our national security interests.

Obama’s opponents are not the ones organizing a false advertising campaign. He is. His opponents are not the ones “making common cause with” Iran’s hardliners as he charged. He is. The hardliners and Obama are stewing in their mutual elation.

Perhaps Obama’s biggest whopper, however, is his claim that if Congress rejects the deal America will lose credibility as the anchor of the international system.
No, if this deal goes through, America will continue to decline in the eyes of a world craving leadership against evil — and in reality.

Am I the only one getting tired

Donald-Trump-Fox-News-debate

Billionaire real estate mogul Donald Trump on the Republican debate in Cincinnati, Ohio, when he said Fox News host Chris Wallace lived in a fairy tale.

The top 10 Republican presidential candidates met on the stage Thursday for the Fox News debate at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cincinnati, Ohio. While PPD doesn’t see a clear winner after the two-hour long event, we can certainly project a clear loser — Fox News — who shafted viewers and voters deserving of and expecting a serious debate on the issues.

Instead, social media was buzzing — or rather, fuming — over the moderators handling of the debate forum, their questions and their obvious tactics. From the “raise-your-hand” stunt by Bret Baier at the open of the debate, to roughly an hour in to the debate when Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker graciously told the moderators to focus on Hillary Clinton and the issues, it was ploy-after-ploy to take down frontrunner Donald Trump, and set off fireworks. They threw heavily weighted softball questions at Govs. Jeb Bush and John Kasich, and the room was artificially packed with their supporters.

Baier opened the debate asking each candidate to 1) pledge to support the eventual Republican presidential nominee and, 2) not to run as an independent if they are not the nominee. It was a clear attempt to sandbag Trump from the beginning — which lends more credibility to an earlier report claiming donors, Fox News and the Republican Party colluded prior to the debate — and people were on to it.

Their headline immediately after the debate, “DEBATE LIGHTNING ROD: Sparks fly among GOP rivals after Trump opens door with ‘pledge’ refusal,” was only outdone by a narration by Megyn Kelly that asked “Who Soared and who faltered?” overlapped by the footage of Trump raising his hand.

As if that wasn’t obvious enough, notoriously inaccurate pollster Frank Luntz, who also hosted the forum that attempted to trip Trump up on the controversy surrounding Sen. John McCain’s war record, brought in one of his notoriously inaccurate, cherry-picked focus groups. They, of course, were alleged Trump supporters now wanting to testify to their sudden disillusion with the billionaire real estate mogul.

voter-comments-social-media

Following the debate, Trump complained specifically about Fox anchor Megyn Kelly’s question about derogatory statements Trump has made about “women,” largely focused on tweets to and about America-hating comedian socialist actor Rosie O’Donnell.

“I thought it was an unfair question,” Trump said. “They didn’t ask those questions of everybody else. Those weren’t even questions. They were statements. The questions to me were not nice. I didn’t think they were appropriate. And I thought Megyn behaved very badly, personally.”

https://twitter.com/CzarofFreedom/status/629502892257361922

And if that wasn’t bad enough, to make it more obvious, Kelly interviewed DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz — the women who twice last week could not distinguish between a Democrat and a socialist — and didn’t take issue with her calling Trump — and the party at large — a party practicing “misogyny.”

The second-tier candidate debate forum earlier in the evening was hosted by Bill Hemmer and Martha MacCallum, who earned praise from voters and political junkies on social media. In just over an hour of debate, the seven candidates had a substantive discussion that included detailed economic plans, proposals for a Middle East NATO and entitlement reform.

According to a snap poll conducted after the debate, nearly 35 percent say Trump won, with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in a distant second at 15.5 percent. Dr. Ben Carson, who gave strong answers to the limited number of questions he received throughout the night, came in third with 10 percent. When Kelly directed a second question toward Dr. Carson he actually thanked her and said, “I didn’t think I was going to get to talk again.”

The top 10 Republican presidential candidates met

Underdog-Republican-debate

Republican presidential candidates take to the podium for the first GOP debate featuring the underdogs at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cincinnati, Ohio.

The seven underdog Republican presidential candidates for president took the stage in Cleveland Thursday and slammed President Obama and Hillary Clinton, rather than each other. While the Republican primary underdogs downplayed their relatively low poll numbers, each was clearly seeking a break-out moment in the first of two presidential debates.

As usual, PPD will break it down. Overall, the candidates gave strong or stronger-than-expected performances. Let’s begin with the candidate that many believed was unfairly bumped from the final slot by Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who recently enjoyed a typical polling bump following his announcement a few weeks ago.

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry was under a great deal of pressure not to have another “Oops” moment, and he did not. Fox News debate moderator Bill Hemmer, who made an inappropriate reference to the prime-time debate at 9:00 PM ET in the beginning of the debate that was condescending to the underdogs, immediately asked Perry about his fight with current frontrunner Donald Trump. Perry’s answer was strong, choosing to focus mostly on some of the more questionable stances Mr. Trump has taken on the past such as his support for single-payer healthcare.

“How could anyone running for the Republican nomination be for single-payer healthcare,” Perry asked. “I ask that with all-do respect, and nobody, nobody on either one of these stages has done more than the state of Texas to deal with securing that border. We send Texas Ranger recon teams, we sent Parks and Recreation teams. I deployed the National Guard. I stood and looked President Obama in the eye and said, ‘if you won’t secure the border, Texas will.'”

He also took aim at the president’s agreement with Iran, which was announced in July.

“The first thing I will do is tear up that agreement with Iran,” he said.

Most of the Republican candidates gave strong opening statements, but former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina and former New York Gov. George Pataki gave stand out introductions. Fiorina focused strongly on her rags-to-riches personal story and private-sector experience, while Pataki focused on his electoral and governing successes in the deep blue Empire State.

“When I took office 1 out of 11 man, woman, and children were on welfare,” Pataki said when arguing why he doesn’t believe Americans are cultural dependent on government. “There were 1,000,000 fewer people on welfare when I left office.”

Continuing on the topic of the economy, the candidates offered surprisingly in-depth proposals aimed at getting Americans working again and increasing wages for those already in the workforce. Former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore put forward a tax plan he says is modeled off of the Reagan-era tax cuts that led to unprecedented economic growth in the 1980s, which will allow American companies to compete again in the global economy.

“We are going to give a tax cut to every American,” Gilmore said, noting that there would be just three — 10, 15, 25 percent — rates for individuals, while corporations would pay a flat 15 percent. “With a few tweaks, we know what would happen. We would have an explosion of economic growth.”

Each of their plans stood in stark contrast to the proposals coming from Clinton and the Democratic Party, which seeks to expand government at the expense of higher taxes. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-professed socialist, has refused to rule out a 90 percent tax rate and Clinton recently proposed an economic plan heavily critiqued by economists in the hope to stave off Sanders flanking her on the left.

“Democrats are working hard to turn the American Dream in to the european nightmare,” Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said. “At least Bernie Sanders is honest about that he is. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are the same, they just try to hide being a socialist.”

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who appeared nervous at times early in the debate, argued Clinton is too closely tied to the Obama administration’s policies to turn the country around.

“She’s not gonna repeal ObamaCare and replace it. I will. She’s not gonna build the Keystone pipeline. I will,” Graham said, bluntly stating he would re-deploy U.S. ground troops to Iraq and also Syria to defeat the Islamic State (ISIS) and stave off Iran’s pursuit of regional hegemony. “Anyone who isn’t willing to take the fight to them over there has no business being president.”

Beltway pundits have increasingly speculated that Graham, despite the backing of the 2008 Republican nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain, is running solely because he wants to push the party back into a more interventionist platform. Graham boldly and unapologetically repeated talking points to advance what has been referred to as the neoconservative narrative.

“Whatever it takes,” Graham said in response to a direct question regarding the War on Terror. “As long as it takes to defeat them.”

The 2012 runner-up, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, downplayed his weak standing in the polls and noted that the numbers are not as weak juxtaposed to 2012. Santorum touted his congressional career on issues such as welfare reform, which was vetoed three times by then-President Bill Clinton before he was forced to sign it. Santorum said “it’s a one-two punch” to get Americans working again, referring to the need for both economic growth and entitlement reform to reverse the growing dependency problem in the country.

“I would say the message that got us the win in Iowa and ten other states is the message that will deliver us,” Santorum said.

Next up is the prime-time debate at 9 p.m. ET, with the 10 top-polling candidates, based on their showing in the last five national polls. Perry almost made the cut, but now leads the second group with an average of 1.8 percent among the latest polls on Real Clear Politics.

Both debates are hosted by Fox News and Facebook in conjunction with the Ohio Republican Party.

The seven underdog Republican presidential candidates for

Campaign-2016

I have a very mixed view of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which is an organization representing self-styled deficit hawks in Washington. They do careful work and I always feel confident about citing their numbers.

Yet, I frequently get frustrated because they seem to think that tax increases have to be part of any budget deal, regardless of the evidence that such an approach will backfire. So, when CRFB published a “Fiscal FactChecker” to debunk 16 supposed budget myths that they expect during this campaign season, I knew I’d find lots of stuff I would like…and lots of stuff I wouldn’t like. Let’s look at what they said were myths, along with my two cents on CRFB’s analysis.

Myth #1: We Can Continue Borrowing without Consequences

Reality check: CRFB’s view is largely correct. If we leave policy on autopilot, demographic changes and poorly structured entitlement programs  will lead to an ever-rising burden of government spending, which almost surely will mean ever-rising levels of government debt (as well as ever-rising tax burdens). At some point, this will lead to serious consequences, presumably bad monetary policy (i.e., printing money to finance the budget) and/or Greek-style crisis (investors no longer buying bonds because they don’t trust the government will pay them back).

The only reason I don’t fully agree with CRFB is that we could permanently borrow without consequence if the debt grew 1 percent per year while the economy grew 3 percent per year. Unfortunately, given the “new normal” of weak growth, that’s not a realistic scenario.

Myth #2: With Deficits Falling, Our Debt Problems are Behind Us

Reality check: The folks at CRFB are right. Annual deficits have dropped to about $500 billion after peaking above $1 trillion during Obama’s first term, but that’s just the calm before the storm. As already noted, demographics and entitlements are a baked-into-the-cake recipe for a bigger burden of government and more red ink.

That being said, I think that CRFB’s focus is misplaced. They fixate on debt, which is the symptom, when they should be more concerned with reducing excessive government, which is the underlying disease.

Myth #3: There is No Harm in Waiting to Solve Our Debt Problems

Reality check: We have a spending problem. Deficits and debt are merely symptoms of that problem. But other than this chronic mistake, CRFB is right that it is far better to address our fiscal challenges sooner rather than later.

CRFB offers some good analysis of why it’s easier to solve the problem by acting quickly, but this isn’t just about math.Welfare State Wagon CartoonsIt’s also important to impose some sort of spending restraint before a majority of the voting-age population has been lured into some form of government dependency. Once you get to the point when more people are riding in the wagon than pulling the wagon(think Greece), reform becomes almost impossible.

Myth #4: Deficit Reduction is Code for Austerity, Which Will Harm the Economy

Reality check: The folks at CRFB list this as a myth, but they actually agree with the assertion, stating that deficit reduction policies “have damaged economic performance and increased unemployment.” They even seem sympathetic to “modest increases to near-term deficits by replacing short-term ‘sequester’ cuts”, which would gut this century’s biggest victory for good fiscal policy!

There are two reasons for CRFB’s confusion. First, they seem to accept the Keynesian argument about bigger government and red ink boosting growth, notwithstanding all the evidence to the contrary. Second, they fail to distinguish between good austerity and bad austerity. If austerity means higher taxes, as has been the case so often in Europe, then it is unambiguously bad for growth. But if it means spending restraint (or even actual spending cuts), then it is clearly good for growth. There may be some short-term disruption since resources don’t instantaneously get reallocated, but the long-term benefits are enormous because labor and capital are used more productively in the private economy.

Myth #5: Tax Cuts Pay For Themselves

Reality check: I agree with the folks at CRFB. As a general rule, tax cuts will reduce government revenue, even after measuring possible pro-growth effects that lead to higher levels of taxable income.

But it’s also important to recognize that not all tax cuts are created equal. Some tax cuts have very large “supply-side” effects, particularly once the economy has a chance to adjust in response to better policy. So a lower capital gains tax or a repeal of the death tax, to cite a couple of examples, might increase revenue in the long run. And we definitely saw a huge response when Reagan lowered top tax rates in the 1980s. But other tax cuts, such as expanded child credits, presumably generate almost no pro-growth effects because there’s no change in the relative price of productive behavior.

Myth #6: We Can Fix the Debt Solely by Taxing the Top 1%

Reality check: The CRFB report correctly points out that confiscatory tax rates on upper-income taxpayers would backfire for the simple reason that rich people would simply choose to earn and report less income. And they didn’t even include the indirect economic damage (and reductions in taxable income) caused by less saving, investment, and entrepreneurship.

Ironically, the CRFB folks seem to recognize that tax rates beyond a certain level would result in less revenue for government. Which implies, of course, that it is possible (notwithstanding what they said in Myth #5) for some tax cuts to pay for themselves.

Myth #7: We Can Lower Tax Rates by Closing a Few Egregious Loopholes

Reality check: It depends on the definition of “egregious.” In the CRFB report, they equate “egregious” with “unpopular” in order to justify their argument.

But if we define “egregious” to mean “economically foolish and misguided,” then there are lots of preferences in the tax code that could – and should – be abolished in order to finance much lower tax rates. Including the healthcare exclusion, the mortgage interest deduction, the charitable giving deduction, and (especially) the deduction for state and local taxes.

Myth #8: Any Tax Increases Will Cripple Economic Growth

Reality check: The CRFB folks are right. A small tax increase obviously won’t “cripple” economic growth. Indeed, it’s even possible that a tax increase might lead to more growth if it was combined with pro-growth policies in other areas. Heck, that’s exactly what happened during the Clinton years. But now let’s inject some reality into the conversation. Any non-trivial tax increase on productive behavior will have some negative impact on economic performance and competitiveness. The evidence is overwhelming that higher tax rates hurt growth and the evidence is also overwhelming that more double taxation will harm the economy.

The CRFB report suggests that the harm of tax hikes could be offset by the supposed pro-growth impact of a lower budget deficit, but the evidence for that proposition if very shaky. Moreover, there’s a substantial amount of real-world data showing that tax increases worsen fiscal balance. Simply stated, tax hikes don’t augment spending restraint, they undermine spending restraint. Which may be why the only “bipartisan” budget deal that actually led to a balanced budget was the one that lowered taxes instead of raising them.

Myth #9: Medicare and Social Security Are Earned Benefits and Should Not Be Touched

Reality check: CRFB is completely correct on this one. The theory of age-related “social insurance” programs such as Medicare and Social Security is that people pay into the programs while young and then get benefits when they are old. This is why they are called “earned benefits.”

The problem is that politicians don’t like asking people to pay and they do like giving people benefits, so the programs are poorly designed. The average Medicare recipient, for instance, costs taxpayers $3 for every $1 that recipient paid into the program. Social Security isn’t that lopsided, but the program desperately needs reform because of demographic change. But the reforms shouldn’t be driven solely by budget considerations, which could lead to trapping people in poorly designed entitlement schemes. We need genuine structural reform.

Myth #10: Repealing “Obamacare” Will Fix the Debt

Reality check: Obamacare is a very costly piece of legislation that increased the burden of government spending and made the tax system more onerous. Repealing the law would dramatically improve fiscal policy.

But CRFB, because of the aforementioned misplaced fixation on red ink, doesn’t have a big problem with Obamacare because the increase in taxes and the increase in spending are roughly equivalent. So the organization is technically correct that repealing the law won’t “fix the debt.” But it would help address America’s real fiscal problem, which is a bloated and costly public sector.

Myth #11: The Health Care Cost Problem is Solved

Reality check: CRFB’s analysis is correct, though it would have been nice to see some discussion of how third-party payer is the problem.

Myth #12: Social Security’s Shortfall Can be Closed Simply by Raising Taxes on or Means-Testing Benefits for the Wealthy

Reality check: To their credit, CRFB is basically arguing against President Obama’s scheme to impose Social Security payroll taxes on all labor income, which would turn the program from a social-insurance system into a pure income-redistribution scheme.

On paper, such a system actually could eliminate the vast majority of Social Security’s giant unfunded liability. In reality, this would mean a huge increase in marginal tax rates on investors, entrepreneurs, and small business owners, which would have a serious adverse economic impact.

Myth #13: We Can Solve Our Debt Situation by Cutting Waste, Fraud, Abuse, Earmarks, and/or Foreign Aid

Reality check: Earmarks (which have been substantially curtailed already) and foreign aid are a relatively small share of the budget, so CRFB is right that getting rid of that spending won’t have a big impact. But what about the larger question. Could our fiscal mess (which is a spending problem, not a “debt situation”) be fixed by eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse?

It depends on how one defines “waste, fraud, and abuse.” If one uses a very narrow definition, such as technical malfeasance, then waste, fraud, and abuse might “only” amount to a couple of hundred billions dollars per year. But from an economic perspective (i.e., grossly inefficient misallocation of resources), then entire federal departments such as HUD, Education,Transportation, Agriculture, etc, should be classified as waste, fraud, and abuse.

Myth #14: We Can Grow Our Way Out of Debt

Reality check: CRFB is correct that faster growth won’t solve all of our fiscal problems. Unless one makes an untenable assumption that economic growth will be faster than the projected growth of entitlement spending. And even that kind of heroic assumption would be untenable since faster growth generally obligates the government to pay higher benefits in the future.

Myth #15: A Balanced Budget Amendment is All We Need to Fix the Debt

Reality check: CRFB accurately explains that a BBA is simply an obstacle to additional debt. Politicians still would be obliged to change laws to fulfill that requirement. But that analysis misses the point. A BBA focuses on red ink, whereas the real problem is that government is too big and growing too fast. State balanced-budget requirement haven’t stopped states like California andIllinois from serious fiscal imbalances and eroding competitiveness. The so-called Maastricht anti-deficit and anti-debt rules in the European Union haven’t stopped nations such as France and Greece from fiscal chaos.

This is why the real solution is to have some sort of enforceable cap on government spending. That approach has worked well in jurisdictions such as Switzerland, Hong Kong, and Colorado. And even research from the IMF (a bureaucracy that shares CRFB’s misplaced fixation on debt) has concluded that expenditure limits are the only effective fiscal rules.

Myth #16: We Can Fix the Debt Solely by Cutting Welfare Spending

Reality check: The federal government is spending about $1 trillion this year on means-tested (i.e., anti-poverty) programs, which is about one-fourth of total outlays, so getting Washington out of the business of income redistribution would substantially lower the burden of federal spending (somewhat offset, to be sure, by increases in state and local spending). And for those who fixate on red ink, that would turn today’s $500 billion deficit into a $500 billion surplus.

That being said, there would still be a big long-run problem caused by other federal programs, most notably Social Security and Medicare. So CRFB is correct in that dealing with welfare-related spending doesn’t fully solve the long-run problem, regardless of whether you focus on the problem of spending or the symptom of borrowing.

This has been a lengthy post, so let’s have a very simple summary.

We know that modest spending restraint can quickly balance the budget. We also know lots of nations that have made rapid progress with modest amounts of spending restraint. And we know that the tax-hike option simply leads to more spending. So, the only question to answer is why the CRFB crowd can’t put two and two together and get four?

Dan Mitchell explores the top myths of

Hiroshima Remembers the Past, Concerned for the Future

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The Japanese city of Hiroshima is commemorating the 70th anniversary of the atomic bomb being dropped in World War II by a U.S. aircraft on August 6, 1945. A ceremony, which was attended by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, was held at Hiroshima’s memorial park.

At least 70,000 people died when a U.S. B-29 bomber dropped a uranium bomb on the Japanese city. In total, at least 140,000 died as a direct and indirect result of the attack. Three days after Hiroshima, the U.S. dropped another atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki, which killed 40,000 instantly and brought an end to World War II. The decision by then-U.S. President Harry S. Truman has been heavily criticized by left-wing academia, but it ultimately prevented massive U.S. casualties that would’ve followed an invasion of the formerly fascist Japanese nation.

The anniversary comes as the country debates the expansion of its military presence abroad. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his government are pushing new legislation that could send Japanese soldiers into conflict for the first time since World War Two. In response, proponents of Japan’s pacifist constitution have organized protests around the country.

Prime Minister Abe, who in a speech at the ceremony called for abolishing nuclear weapons, answered his critics by arguing that the legislation was essential to ensure Japan’s safety. Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui agreed with Abe on nuclear weapons, but also urged the creation of security systems that do not rely on military might.

“Working with patience and perseverance to achieve these systems will be vital, and will require that we promote throughout the world the path to true peace revealed by the pacifism of the Japanese constitution,” he said in a speech.

The Japanese city of Hiroshima is commemorating

Planned-Parenthood-Rocky-Mountains-VP-Medical-Director-Savita-Ginde

Planned Parenthood Rocky Mountains VP & Medical Director Savita Ginde. (Photo: Screenshot/The Center for Medical Progress)

The recent broadcast of videotapes taken of persons employed at Planned Parenthood — the prolific and notorious abortion provider — has brought the issue of abortion to the national consciousness again and front and center to the Republican presidential primary campaign. The tapes were made secretly by a pro-life group determined to show to the world the dark side of Planned Parenthood’s use of federal funds.

What the world saw was terrifying and damning. The tapes are difficult to watch, just as any discussion of human slaughter is difficult to watch. If you have seen these tapes, you witnessed physicians and others talking about the profits Planned Parenthood is making in the sale of baby body parts, even though such sales are criminal under federal law.

The cavalier demeanor of those who profit from this slaughter is chilling, and the moral punch in the nose to the Democratic Party is excruciating. That’s because Planned Parenthood is virtually a branch of the Democratic Party. It has a lock on the federal treasury to the tune of $500 million per year. It pays for or performs more than 325,000 abortions a year, which is about one-third of all abortions in America. It contributes heavily to the campaigns of Democratic office seekers. You can see the cycle.

Even though federal law has prohibited the use of federal funds for abortions for nearly 18 years, money is fungible. The Planned Parenthood folks may be baby killers, but they are not dumb. They know how to dedicate federal funds for maternal health and free up maternal health funds for the slaughter of babies — and make it all look legal.

The reason these tapes are so upsetting to the Democrats, and to some Republicans as well, is that they have convinced themselves that the fetus in the womb is not a person. Yet, watching their abortionists graphically discuss the monetary value of body parts and the physical manipulation of fully formed babies so as to maximize the harvesting of their organs ironically humanizes the body parts and the babies from which the parts came, and is thus so upsetting to those who deny fetal personhood.

But this is more than upsetting — it seriously challenges the underlying commitment of today’s Democratic Party that the fetus is not a person. This is, of course, the central holding of the Supreme Court’s 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade. Just as in Dred Scott v. Sandford, wherein the court held in 1857 that African-Americans were not persons, so did Roe v. Wade make that holding for fetuses.

And the stated reason for the holding was the absence of consensus in 1973 among philosophers, physicians, theologians and scientists about when life begins. Yet, the duty of the court is to say what the Constitution means, not to count noses. Roe is the only Supreme Court decision in history grounded on the absence of discernible consensus among the populace.

Is the fetus in the womb a person? Before answering this, consider the depravity to which we have sunk due to its legal non-personhood. The slaughter of babies, some where it is legal in their ninth month of gestation, the sale of their body parts, and the taxpayer financing of this have become so morose that even their staunchest supporters cannot confront these realities publicly for fear of losing political support.

Is the fetus in the womb a person? Before answering this, consider the danger of a Supreme Court possessing the power to declare any human offspring to be a non-person. Two months ago, we witnessed the spectacle of the court finding four plain English words — “established by the States” — to be ambiguous and, 21 pages later, telling us that legally those words do not mean what they say. If the court can change the meaning of ordinary words, can it change the meaning of life?

It has.

Is the fetus in the womb a person? Of course it is. It has two fully human parents and the fully actualizable human genome to achieve post-natal existence. The single-cell zygote in the mother’s womb came from her flesh and cannot be anything but a human person. For 600 years, the law has permitted the fetus in the womb to inherit property. How could that be if the fetus were not a human person? If you kill a pregnant woman and the fetus dies, you can be charged with the murder of two persons. If the reason for government in the first place is to protect rights, the government’s prime obligation is to protect the rights of persons to live.

The Democrats are not alone at fault here. In the first six years of the presidency of George W. Bush, when the Republicans controlled the White House and the Congress, numerous efforts were made to introduce a simple one-line statute: “The fetus in the womb shall be, for all constitutional and legal purposes, a person.” Republican congressional leaders kept all such proposals from being voted upon.

But seeing is believing. The tapes are the abortionists’ nightmare, because in their wanton slaughter they have let slip the utter humanity of their victims. And the souls of the Holy Innocents who have been slaughtered before drawing their first breaths are no doubt praying for the conversion of the hearts and the salvation of the souls of those who killed them.

Judge Andrew Napolitano on Planned Parenthood revelations,

Cecil-the-Lion

Walter Palmer with a different lion, and messages outside his dental surgery office.

 

BOZEMAN, Mont. — That picture of Cecil the lion’s corpse and the American dentist posing triumphantly over it was ghastly. Cecil had apparently been lured out of a safe haven in Zimbabwe and illegally shot.

It happens that the Cecil story appalled many of the hunting and fishing writers gathered here by the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. The partnership represents sportsmen dedicated to maintaining wildlife habitats.

Its members often see themselves squeezed between other environmental groups hostile to hunting and the “slob hunters” they believe sully the sport. And they feel underappreciated as protectors of the wild environment. Hikers and campers pay far less for conservation than they do.

“Cecil was an absolute disaster on multiple fronts,” Don Thomas, a well-known outdoor writer and co-editor of Traditional Bowhunter Magazine, told me. From what is known, Thomas places most guilt on the dentist’s hunting guides. It is their responsibility to know the laws and see that hunters abide by them.

“The hunter’s errors seem to be more a matter of sleaze factor than of illegality,” Thomas added, though he is not cleared of the latter.

But Thomas also has a problem with the Disney-fication of Cecil — “taking a wild lion, giving it a name and turning it into a faux pet as a tourist attraction.” The biggest threat to African lions, he explained, is not hunters but the loss of wild habitat through human overpopulation, development and climate change.

What is ethical hunting?

It’s not killing an animal who has no legitimate means of escape. It’s not taking an animal who has been around people a lot and has lost its instinctual fear of humans. Collared and long studied by biologists, Cecil would seem to fit into that second category.

Ethical hunters have long condemned “trophy mania,” that is, measuring the experience merely by the size of the antlers harvested.

The general public, meanwhile, does not grasp how much conservation is paid for by hunters and anglers. Hunting and fishing license and permit fees largely go toward habitat restoration.
The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act of 1937 taxes the sale of hunting gear. The proceeds, more than $12 billion so far, go to state wildlife agencies for conservation. A similar tax on fishing equipment followed the 1937 law. Buy a fishing rod and you pay the excise tax. Buy a sleeping bag and you don’t.

In 1900, fewer than 500,000 white-tailed deer remained in North America. Extensive deforestation, poaching and over-harvesting had decimated the population of deer, as well as of turkeys and ducks. Now there are 30 million white-tailed deer.

Better habitat care and hunting practices deserve the credit, Brian Murphy, a wildlife biologist who heads the Quality Deer Management Association, told me.

The complaints nowadays are of too many deer — and with reason. “Too many deer imperil the health of the forest, removing forage that other species rely on,” he said.

Many hunters and anglers feel right at home in the locavore movement, which promotes food grown locally. They say their relationship with the hunted dinner is far more intimate than with a plastic-wrapped chopped meat shipped from wherever.

When his family says grace over a meal, it thanks the animal itself, Murphy said. “I’ve never felt that way over a Big Mac.”

Furthermore, the game animal on the dinner table had probably enjoyed a far fuller life in the wilds than the penned cow turned into hamburger. These hunters have a point.
The Cecil story should have little to do with them.

The Cecil the Lion story -- and

news-media

In the past, I’ve identified the world’s most misleading headlines and I’ve also identified the world’s least surprising headline. Today, I’m going to share the world’s most disappointing headline. When I first saw this story in USA Today, I thought it was time to celebrate.

Wow, I thought, what a great outcome. I’ve always wanted a restoration of federalism, but I never thought this is how it would occur. So, I decided to read the story to find out what’s causing DC’s well-deserved disappearance.

Alas, none of those reasons apply for the simple reason that the headline is an absurd exaggeration. I hate to burst anyone’s bubble, but Washington isn’t really going away. Here’s what’s actually in the story.

…new research from the U.S. Geological Surveyand the University of Vermont shows that the land in the district — where the Lincoln Memorial was built on silt dredged from the Potomac River — is expected to fall 6 inches or more during the next 100 years.

Sigh, how disappointing. In other words, we’re going to have to rely on old-fashioned methods if we really want to cut Washington down to size. Since it’s not going to disappear on its own, we’ll need tax reform, deregulation, and program terminations if we want to solve the problem.

And one fringe benefit of this approach, as pointed out by the Wall Street Journal, is that a smaller government means fewer lobbyists and special interest groups.

Businesses have no choice but to lobby a government that can cripple them with a single new regulation. …The real problem is the opportunities for corruption and special dealing that a too-large government provides. Every new regulation or twist of the tax code is an opening for some powerful Member to assist the powerful. But the solution is to reduce the size and scope of the regulatory state and to reform the tax code.

Amen. I’ve been arguing for years that big government means big corruption. I even narrated a video making that point. But I think I said it best in this CNBC interview when I equated big government to a dumpster in an alley. So we may not be able to sink Washington, but we can make it less of an unseemly nuisance by reducing the size and scope of the federal government.

tified the world’s most misleading headlines and

jobs-san-francisco-unemployment

A discouraged worker sits in an unemployment office in San Francisco. (Photo: Reuters)

The ADP Nation Employment Report released by payroll processor ADP found the private sector added 185,000 jobs in July, missing Wall Street expectations.

The media economist forecast was looking for an increase of 215,000 jobs.

“July employment growth was slower than June, but is still in line with what we have seen since the first of the year,” said Carlos Rodriguez, president and chief executive officer of ADP. “Notably, large businesses with more than 500 employees had their strongest job gains since last December and were almost double the June number.”

Payrolls for businesses with 49 or fewer employees increased by 59,000 jobs in July, half of the June number. Employment among companies with 50-499 employees increased by 62,000 jobs, down from 78,000 the previous month. Employment gains at large companies – those with 500 or more employees – increased sharply from June, adding 64,000 jobs in July, up from 34,000. Companies with 500-999 added 17,000 jobs after adding 28,000 jobs in June. Companies with over 1,000 employees added 47,000 jobs, almost eight times the weak 6,000 added the previous month.

“Job growth is strong, but it has moderated since the beginning of the year,” the ever optimistic Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said. “Layoffs in the energy industry and weaker job gains in manufacturing are behind the slowdown. Nonetheless, even at this slower pace of growth, the labor market is fast approaching full employment.”

Nevertheless, high-paying jobs continue to lag behind lower-paying, low-wage positions.

Goods-producing employment rose by 8,000 jobs in July, after adding 13,000 in June. The construction industry added 15,000 jobs in July, down from 17,000 last month. Meanwhile, manufacturing added 2,000 jobs in July, after gaining 9,000 in June. Service-providing employment rose by 178,000 jobs in July, down from 216,000 in June.

The ADP National Employment Report indicates that professional/business services contributed 42,000 jobs in July, down from June’s 61,000. Trade/transportation/utilities grew by 25,000, just over half of the previous month’s 47,000. The 10,000 new jobs added in financial activities was a drop from last month’s 16,000.

The ADP Nation Employment Report released by

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