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Showing posts with label gop pledge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gop pledge. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2011

The "Uncertainty" Lie

Oct 10th, 2011

To hear the Republican party's current ranking members tell it, everything wrong with the American economy stems from "over regulation." This has created too much "uncertainty" and is the reason the engine of job creation has collapsed.

In particular, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor's (R-VA) entire economic message is based on this premise. A few weeks ago, he repeated his position, "By pursuing a steady repeal of job-destroying regulations, we can help lift the cloud of uncertainty hanging over small and large employers alike, empowering them to hire more workers."

There are more examples of this nonsense HERE, HERE and HERE.

Most experts have been growing increasingly annoyed listening to this skipping record. You don't have to be an ardent Keynesian to understand that the problem starts with demand. Lawrence Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute recently observed:

"There is a ... story, widely told by Republican politicians and business trade associations, which claims that business investment and hiring is being held back by uncertainty over future regulations and taxation. As Maine Senator Susan Collins said in introducing her bill to put a moratorium on all new regulations: “Businesses, our nation’s job creators and the engine of any lasting economic growth, have been saying for some time that the lack of jobs is largely due to a climate of uncertainty, most notably the uncertainty and cost created by new federal regulations” (Kasperowicz 2011). Her view has been repeated by others, including House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (2011) and the Chamber of Commerce (Donohue 2011)."

Is it true? Are America's businesses desperately crying out against "regulation?" 

In a word, "NO." 

As it turns out, not only is it provable that this is bullshit but, even better, it is former Reagan aide and stalwart conservative economist Bruce Bartlett who has done just that.

"Evidence supporting Mr. Cantor’s contention that deregulation would decrease unemployment is very weak. For some years, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has had a program that tracks mass layoffs. In 2007, the program was expanded, and businesses were asked their reasons for laying off workers. Among the reasons offered was “government regulations/intervention.” There is only partial data for 2007, but we have data since then through the second quarter of this year.

The table below presents the bureau’s data. As one can see, the number of layoffs nationwide caused by government regulation is minuscule and shows no evidence of getting worse during the Obama administration. Lack of demand for business products and services is vastly more important."


Here is the same data from the BLS crunched by the EPI in the form of a graph.



I have opined in the past that this "uncertainty" meme is not only dishonest, it is actually anti-Capitalist.

What the GOP has been arguing in favor of over the last decade is not unfettered markets. They want to rig the game, not set it free.

Pure Capitalism is built on the concept of accepting risk.

Today's Republicans are stipulating that there should be little or no risk.

They are determined to shield capital investors from the consequences of stupid or even dangerous decisions. Their message and their mission is to eliminate responsibility.

The sick irony, now that they also have declared that "corporations are people," is that they are actually doing what they have been arguing "liberals" have been trying to do for the last two generations.

The GOP is actively conferring victimhood on a group and trying to confer special rights and a special status.

It's not the corporation's fault... it's everybody else's fault.

The little dears... 

Friday, October 7, 2011

Cracks In The Norquist Pledge

Oct 7th, 2011

For months, the GOP's slavish devotion to the so-called "Norquist Pledge" against raising taxes ever, for any purpose, on anyone (except the lower and middle class, apparently) has been one of the most obvious sources of gridlock in congress.


Thursday, August 4, 2011

Who Signed The Norquist Pledge?

August 4th, 2011

A better question might be, "who didn't sign the Norquist Pledge?" A complete list is available HERE. It's worth reading if only to confirm how nearly complete a stranglehold the radical anti-tax movement has on the 112th Congress. Only 7 GOP members of the House and 7 GOP members of the Senate had the good sense not to pledge allegiance to Grover over their duty to the country.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Take The Pledge!

April 1st, 2011
 
Frankly, we are all on board here at The Hand. From The Book Of Cletis:

The Cletis Stump Pledge
     
     "I hereby pledge to inform others, even those I find difficult, regarding the duplicity and chicanery of the modern Republican party. I will provide examples supported by facts and easily referenced sources. I will do this through personal contact, letters to the editor of my local paper, distribution of informative flyers door to door, and any other method which fits my life's circumstance. I will do this in an on-going manner and will not allow gross ignorance nor pervasive apathy, which I will surely encounter, to dissuade me."

Sunday, October 3, 2010

The Truth About The Republican Opposition

Oct. 3rd, 2010


by F. Grey Parker


Rep. John Boehner said something stunning a week ago that deserves the attention of every citizen who intends to vote this November. It defines the entirety of the republican contribution to the American experiment in these times. Chris Wallace questioned Mr. Boehner in the sympathetic confines of the FOXNews studios about the GOP Pledge's lack of specific policy proposals. The response was profoundly informative. The emphases are mine:


"BOEHNER: Chris, this is what happens here in washington. When you start down that path, you just invite all kind of problems. I know. I've been there. I think we need to do this in a more systemic way and have this conversation first. Let's not get to the potential solutions. Let's make sure americans understand how big the problem is. Then we can talk about possible solutions and then work ourselves into those solutions that are doable."


We have created a "Sunday Picture Show" to drive home the moment.





Chris Wallace looked amazed.








"Let’s not get to the potential solutions."


Did you, like, really say that?








"Let’s not get to the potential solutions."








Shit. He did.








"Let’s not get to the potential solutions."










Dude, shut up.










"Let’s not get to the potential solutions."










Okay. That's it. You are a dumbass.






When the do-nothing opposition casually states that their vision for our troubled nation's future is to continue to do nothing, they really ought not be emboldened this November by the angry electorate's sour grapes.