Posted on 04/07/2011 9:35:49 AM PDT by 92nina
Today, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) released his FY 2012 budget resolution. It is a no-tax-increase budget which stands in stark contrast to the Simpson-Bowles (Obama) commission (and the Coburn-Chambliss Gang of Six which is introducing legislation modeled after Simpson-Bowles). The Ryan approach is the conservative one...
Read more: http://www.atr.org/paul-ryans-budget-real-conservative-looks-a6023#ixzz1Ir3F0fkk
(Excerpt) Read more at atr.org ...
Take this article and others I found to the fight to the Libs on their own turf; put the Left on the defensive at at Digg and at Reddit and in Delicious and Stumbleupon
|
Gang of Six / Simpson Bowles |
Paul Ryan | |
| Ten Year Net Tax Hike | $1-3 Trillion (Depends on Estimates) | $0 |
| Tax Revenue Target | 21% of GDP, an unprecedented high | 18-19% of GDP (the historic average) |
| Spending Target | 21% of GDP in perpetuity | 21% of GDP, falling to 14% of GDP by 2050 |
| National Debt | 34% of GDP by 2040 | Paid off by 2050. |
| Obamacare | Retained | Repealed |
| Top Personal and Corporate Tax Rates | As High as 28%. | No higher than 25%. |
| Payroll Tax Hike | Yes | No |
| Gas Tax Hike | Yes | No |
| Tax Increase Trigger | Yes | No |
There is ideal and there is political reality. Right now we have a Dem controlled Senate and a Marxist president. The Paul budget is both economically sound and political well positioned, when we consider where we are right now.
It’s what patriotism and leadership is all about.
We have seen none of this from our dear leader.
I don’t disagree, but the 2012 budget is a one year budget that is factually going to involve a Democratic Senate and Obama in the White House. This budget is also the single document that is going to lay the groundwork for our side in 2012. If a lowly committee chair in the House goes around eliminating all these departments, we are DOA in 2012. He is eliminating Obamacare, reforming Medicare and Medicaid into private sector centered offerings and reducing spending significantly. Is this the perfect document? No, but it is a significant step forward, and the most significant change in government services at least in 15 years if not since Reagan.
The fact is, the voters want reductions, but hate when it gets into specifics. Our approach has to be targeted to be effective. Here is FL, our governor is doing a great job getting our spending under control and cutting programs that should have never existed. In the process, he is taking a huge beating, and probably will have a challenge in re-election. If our House blows their load in 2011 and 2012 attacking every issue at once, they will get hammered in 2012 elections. There are a lot of critical seats up in the Senate, and all House races will be largely dependent on the Presidential race. If they go for too much too soon with no chance of getting it through the Senate and WH, we will literally blow our load without being able to enact anything, and get wiped out in 18 months.
It's taken us 50 years to get where we are, don't you think you should have SOME patience in getting these programs rolled back? If we try to do it all at once, the VOTERS won't stand for it. If we start down the road, and do it incrementally, we'll be more likely to get the cuts and KEEP them, with the help of more of the voters. That way we won't keep whiplashing back and forth between Democrat and Republican control of Congress, and not be able to get ANYTHING done.
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