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Obama Throws Down the Gauntlet, Targets the "Very Wealthy"

By Robert Parry, Consortium News. Posted March 3, 2009.


To the American Right, those are fighting words, and leading conservatives are foaming at the mouth.

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In a startling ambitious budget message, President Barack Obama has thrown down the gauntlet to the American Right not only by tying the current economic crisis to the recklessness of the past eight years under George W. Bush but by tracing it back further to the anti-regulatory, anti-labor and anti-government policies of Ronald Reagan.

“For the better part of three decades, a disproportionate share of the nation’s wealth has been accumulated by the very wealthy,” the 142-page budget message states. “Technological advances and growing global competition, while transforming whole industries -- and birthing new ones – has accentuated the trend toward rising inequality.”

Though Obama lays the bulk of what he calls “a legacy of mismanagement and misplaced priorities” at the feet of the Bush administration, there is no mistaking his larger message – that the problems which were “exacerbated” by Bush’s tax cuts and other pro-rich policies have been building since Reagan’s 1981 inaugural declaration that “government is the problem.”

Obama even made a glancing reference to that formulation in his preamble to the budget message. “We need to put tired ideologies aside, and ask not whether our government is too big or too small, or whether it is the problem or the solution, but whether it is working for the American people,” Obama said.

To the American Right, those are fighting words, and leading right-wingers have already trotted out their curious charge of “class warfare,” an ironic message given the fact that the growing disparity in American wealth reveals that “class warfare” has long been at the heart of Reagan-Bush policies – and the rich are winning.

Yet, while it may be audacious for the young President to take on the well-entrenched forces of reaction in Washington, there is another reason for Obama and his supporters to worry. The national news media remains largely enthralled by the pro-Republican rules of the past three decades.

In both right-wing and mainstream news organizations, stories continue to be structured as faulting Obama and largely absolving Bush (not to mention the iconic Reagan).

Look for example at the lead stories in the New York Times and the Washington Post on Saturday. Both describe the stomach-turning 6.2 percent drop in the gross domestic product during the last quarter of 2008. Though that was the last economic quarter of the Bush administration, the stories instead were framed around Obama’s failures.


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Robert Parry's new book is Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq."

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View:
Pay For What You Receive: A Little Puritanism Isn't So Bad
Posted by: edgar1 on Mar 3, 2009 3:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I strenuously disagree with President's stimulus packagage as a waste of money, I do believe the govt must pay its bills. While all taxpayers should bear the burden of the costs incurred by their Congresses, and thus all the Bush tax cuts should be repealed, and thus all taxpayers should pay more(unless they have no taxable income), you get what you can.

Poltically if that means the folks with taxable income over 250 grand pay more, so be it, although I think its unproductive to tax capital gains or dividends for anyone of any income. You want to encourage savings. Excessive spending by corporations and individuals got us into this mess.

I believe that if all or most of the Obama spending proposals are adopted, we will eventually have to repeal tax cuts for everyone, and forget the obviously political tax credits and cuts Obama offers to folks who pay little or no taxes now. This is and should be an era of sacrifice, not "I'm getting something for free because I'm entitled."

I wish Obama would realize that this is the true populist postion and apply it to AIG, the banks, as well as to individuals and families of all but the poorest strata. I'd rather have a family pay 100 bucks a year in federal income tax rather than get 200 bucks in refund if they have low income. If you want to cut taxes for the working class, eliminate the payroll tax and have social security and medicare financed openly by income taxes at rates that cover the costs. Be honest, not dishonest, which is what the current and proposed tax systems are.

People must realize you don't get something (like subsidized health care) for nothing. If subsidized health care or heating insulation is determined to be necessary by Congress, fine, but don't give it away, we have enough apathy and lack of oversight in America.

Pay for it and you are interested in how it's administered and whether it is efficient.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Actions speak louder than words...
Posted by: peacelf on Mar 3, 2009 5:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not until we see:

- a progressive tax that insures wealth is taxed proportionately to ability to pay.

- an estate tax rate of 90% to end inherited (unearned) wealth transfers to unappreciative children.

- an end to corporate power and influence in political campaigns.

- universal, single-payer Medicare for all.

- workers rights to organize.

- a "living" minimum wage of, say, $15.00/hr.

- and a pension system that is secure and solvent.

- cut the military budget by 75%.

Then, we will have won the war against the rich.

peace

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

The colors have been raise and the war has started.
Posted by: 2thepoint on Mar 3, 2009 6:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama has the power to take this crises anyway he wants. He's chosen to start a class war with those that actually provide the jobs. He has essentially supported turning the poor in this country against the middle/upper class.

That is unfortunate as it's this group that provides the bulk of job in this economy. He seems to be stuck in his community organizer mentality and is unable to see the larger picture.

Bush was no picknick but he did structure Iraq re the surge, which Obama was against, which is enabling us to withdraw. Obama wants credit for something already in place while he wants to wash his hands of the disaster that has become our economy especially since the porkbill and his new budget and more bailouts? He is driving this country into the ground and dividing it like never before.

Instead of blaming Reagan (it was actually Clintons deregulation policies and NAFTA that was the seed for this crises) we should look to Reagan's policies which launched this country out of the miserable state brought upon it by Carter. Reagan gave us one the longest running periods of prosperity we've had.

Buyouts of mismanaged companies, consolidating more power into already corrupt unions, bailing out homeowners who had no business owning homes, giving social security to illegals, class warfare tax on those providing the jobs in this country, giving corrupt unions more power, nominating tax cheats for cabinet posts, including lobbyist in his government.

This guy is turning out to be a disaster. And everyone is afraid to say so.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

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