luke warm, on 2011-May-17, 03:55, said:
PassedOut, on 2011-May-16, 17:20, said:
Although you haven't named any of those policies -- do you have some particular offenders in mind? -- you can be sure that I oppose all policies of Obama that spend money unnecessarily.
just one? ok, military spending
It's certainly true that Obama's Afghanistan policies have increased US spending there, and he had the option not to do that. Same with deploying the drones, taking action in Libya, and so on. Overall I feel that Obama has made his military decisions responsibly and after careful reflection, but I can see how folks could consider some of that spending to be unnecessary.
To me, the Bush invasion of Iraq was totally unnecessary (from the get-go), but I did support Bush's decision to invade Afghanistan after the Taliban refused to turn over bin Laden.
There is always going to be some federal spending that I agree with and some that I don't. The same with you and with every other citizen, and we won't always agree on what is necessary and what is not. Those decisions should be debated with vigor, and those decisions won't always go the way we wanted.
Once those decisions are made, however, I believe that they should be paid for quickly by current taxes -- whether we agree with the spending or not. Why should future generations have to pay for poor decisions made today? Let them pay for their own poor decisions, not ours.
I have no problem with our representatives fighting tooth and nail about what spending to cut and what to keep. I know I won't agree with all the decisions, but that's life. Once that process is completed, however, taxes need to be set to pay for those decisions with current tax dollars. A little deficit in hard times, a little surplus in good times, but taxes basically in balance with spending. That should not be up for discussion.
Before 1980, there was a bipartisan consensus on that, and I'd like to see that restored. I strongly believe that paying as you go focuses attention on wasteful federal spending, while asking future taxpayers to pick up the tab takes away some of that urgent scrutiny.
Politicans who refuse to set tax rates to pay for the spending they've authorized are completely irresponsible. So are the voters who support them.
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. — Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell