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A Republican Spending Problem Will the House be willing to cut programs that benefit G.O.P. voters?
New York Times ^ | March 27, 2023 | David Leonhardt

Posted on 03/27/2023 7:38:36 AM PDT by Reily

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To: Amendment10

Come on people. Start with cutting where there is no pushback. 10% of the government could be eliminated tomorrow with no one noticing. Entire departments could have to go to prevent a future regrowth.

Do the democrats suffer any pushback when they apply their woke policies to the military? The opportunities are there for us.

Clinton wanted ‘a clean bill’ once. Didn’t want killer add ons. He won that argument over the gop majority.


21 posted on 03/27/2023 9:06:20 AM PDT by DIRTYSECRET
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To: DIRTYSECRET

Agree in principle!
Any program\agency can be cut 10%.
There would be savings there. However, if SS\Medicare are exempt & the debt is still allowed to grow. What savings there are from those cuts will soon disappear. Disappear in probably a surprisingly few years!


22 posted on 03/27/2023 9:20:14 AM PDT by Reily (!!)
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To: All

How about this?

All that swaggering stuff posted above of various political red meat cuts suggested to FBI, DOJ, NPR, and other claptrap — you are math challenged. That stuff is small potatos.

Then there is some foot stomping and chest beating about embracing MAGA policies and growing everything, which grows revenue and achieves nirvana.

Well, here is the problem.

None if it is going to work. $31T generates ENORMOUS interest expense. Cut rates so it doesn’t? What do you think has been going on for 10+ years? Look around the world. The Germans had NEGATIVE rates, and I mean nominal, not inflation adjusted. So you can just forget your insignificant spending cuts that make you feel good and maintains closed eyes to the math of the budget.

So how about this?

There is no answer. Capitalism failed in 2009 and is going to stay failed. How about a different ism? Socialism? Communism? All isms are measured by pieces of printed paper created by Central Banks. How can an ism measured like that have any ideological meaning?

So wrap your minds around futility. It won’t win any votes, but I’m not running for anything.


23 posted on 03/27/2023 9:22:38 AM PDT by Owen
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To: Amendment10

“...NYT is either clueless, or probably blatantly ignoring, that Congress cannot constitutionally justify most of the taxes that it makes people pay, most federal domestic policy based on state powers and state revenues that the corrupt, post-17th Amendment ratification feds steal from the states....”

Most of them have already been “Constitutionally justified” by USSC decisions. I don’t necessarily agree with the decisions, but they are there. If there haven’t been such a decision, no one thought success was likely if challenging them. Remember someone has to bring the case to the Court. It can’t look for cases!

Almost every USSC decision of the FDR era should be reexamined. One of the most heinous USSC decisions and one which the regulatory state is based on is Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111 (1942). (USSC decision that dramatically increased the regulatory power of the federal government.) There are several others - like SS. (Where in the Constitution is there permission for a national federally administered retirement program?). A lot of those decisions made by the USSC were made under duress. FDR & cronies were trying to pack the court at the time.

A recent (1964) USSC decision that has devastated states with large urban areas was Reynolds v. Sims. The now forgotten Illinois senator Evertt Dirksen prophesized what that decision would do to his state and others. He led an effort to convene an Article V convention for an amendment to the Constitution that would allow for legislative districts of unequal population. (Probably unequal population state senatorial districts is good enough!)

Only Clarence Thomas has made some indications that he would like to see the Court revisit some of those decisions.


24 posted on 03/27/2023 9:36:56 AM PDT by Reily (!!)
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To: Reily; All
Thanks for reply Reily.

"Almost every USSC decision of the FDR era should be reexamined."


Yes, FDR's New Deal programs were based on stolen state powers imo.

But the federal government arguably started overreaching its constitutionally limited powers before the ink on the Constitution had dried imo, President Washington wrongly signing Hamilton's national bank into law regardless that the delegates to the Constitutional Convention had decided not to give banking powers to Congress for example.

The delegates were arguably naive in thinking that Englishmen could stop thinking within the framework of British legal system merely with words on paper imo.

Consider the hypothetical Pledge of Allegiance on the day that the drafters signed the Constitution.

"I Pledge Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands One Nation Under God Indivisible with Liberty and Justice for all.

Oh, ... and G-d save the King!"


25 posted on 03/27/2023 10:43:35 AM PDT by Amendment10
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