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2 SOTUs
National Review Online ^ | February 01, 2006 | Veronique de Rugy

Posted on 02/01/2006 9:18:58 AM PST by JTN

Last night there were two State of the Union addresses, and they offered radically different visions for America's future. One vision endorsed smaller government, permanent tax cuts, and individual liberty. The other approach offered a much more statist and paternalistic future for America, one where every possible problem, no matter how small, requires federal government action.

These two descriptions refer not to two addresses — one being George W. Bush's State of Union 2006 address and the other the Democratic response. Rather, these completely inconsistent messages were both part of the president's address.

Speaking from a free-market script, the president said we need to reform our tax code to move us closer to a simple and fair flat tax and to increase America's competitiveness. He also urged Congress to make his first-term tax cuts permanent. He proposed to reform Social Security. And in an effort to restore his administration's fiscal credibility, the president once again called on Congress to support a tough budget that reins in domestic spending by cutting 140 wasteful programs. He proposed to pass a line-item-veto measure and eliminate earmarks. These are welcome words, especially since the White House has a bleak track record on the issue of government spending.

Unfortunately, the president also used a New Deal script for part of his speech. Much of his time was used to propose over two-dozen new or expanded spending initiatives.

For instance, the president endorsed yet another massive intrusion into energy markets through a 22-percent increase in clean energy research and development; he also promoted the construction of new nuclear-power plants and the development of ethanol and of fuel made from the waste of plant crops. But if these technologies had real promise, the private sector would make the investments. There is no reason for taxpayers to subsidize biofuels that are not cost effective. Many studies have shown that they cost more than the current alternative.

Along the same line, the president wants to promote the development of alternative fuel for automobiles. This program will complete a 12-year federal effort to develop a hydrogen-based source of energy for automobile use. Do we need to remind the president that the program that preceded it — namely the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles, lavishly funded for eight years under President Clinton — never produced the hybrid car we were promised? However, nonsubsidized hybrid cars produced by foreign automakers Honda and Toyota have been available to U.S. consumers since 2004.

The president also wants to boost federal "investment" in math and education in mathematics, science, and engineering. Why? First there is little correlation between spending and results. Also, surely the president doesn't believe that America became one of the world's leaders in technological innovation and scientific advancements because of big-government subsidies. In fact, it is because the U.S. government managed to reasonably refrain itself from interfering too much in these fields that our country is way ahead of countries like Japan and France, which rely on government funding.

So which speech should we believe: The small-government or big-government speech? Do we believe the message of budget restraint from the White House or the calls for spending increases on the president's favored programs? The track record does not leave much room for optimism. In the last five years, total spending has risen 40 percent — a figure larger than Clinton's two terms combined. Moreover, real discretionary spending increases in FY2002, FY2003, FY2004, and FY2005 are 4 of the 10 biggest annual increases in the last 40 years.

To his credit, last year the president proposed to cut funding for Amtrak, to rein in Medicaid, and eliminate or reduce 150 programs. However, when Congress came back to him in December with a spending bill accepting only $6 billion out of $16 billion proposed cuts, Bush happily signed the legislation while showering Congress with praises for being fiscally responsible.

So when the president says the administration is really committed to fiscal responsibility, one should not let hope triumph over experience.

Unfortunately, an ambiguous message can only be counterproductive at a time when Republicans are supposedly looking for a solution to the explosion of earmarks in the federal budget and lobbying extravagances. Why should members of Congress — whether Republicans or Democrats — accept any cuts to their programs if the president is not willing to sacrifice his pet interests like science?

The president also called for more government subsidies and tax preferences for health care. The truth is that the sad state of our health-care system is largely because government intervention and subsidies have created a system where consumers pay for only a tiny fraction of their health care — the "third-party payer" problem. And since market forces are not allowed to operate, it should not be surprising that costs are climbing. One need only compare the falling prices and increasing quality of cosmetic surgery and laser eye surgery (procedures where consumers actually pay the real cost) with the gross inefficiencies in the rest of the health-care system to see the damage of government intervention.

Some of the president's policies, such as health-savings accounts, have some potential to alleviate the "third-party payer" problem, but trying to fix a problem caused by government with a new government program is at most a second-best approach. Why not just try to reduce the existing level of subsidies?

Today it is impossible to square the president's rhetorical support for free markets and limited government with the long list of programs and new initiatives that he claims to support. If all this sounds familiar, it's because it is. Bill Clinton was a master of this strategy, declaring one minute that the era of big government was over and then the next minute proposing new government programs for every conceivable problem in society.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: 100fantasyland; bushdoctrineunfold; completeignorance; govwatch; libertarians; losetarianfantasy; lunaticfringe; lunaticlosers; mnloonie; moronanalysis; politicalfantasy; politicalidiots; politicallosers; sotu; stateoftheunion; stupidity; unelectables; wackowhining; whineallthetime
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To: MNJohnnie
More nonsense from the Losetraian party.

The American Conservative Union

21 posted on 02/01/2006 12:59:18 PM PST by JTN ("I came here to kick ass and chew bubble gum. And I'm all out of bubble gum.")
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To: JTN
he also promoted the construction of new nuclear-power plants and the development of ethanol and of fuel made from the waste of plant crops. But if these technologies had real promise, the private sector would make the investments. There is no reason for taxpayers to subsidize biofuels that are not cost effective. Many studies have shown that they cost more than the current alternative.

In the case of biofuels, the author may be right, but in the case of nuclear power, the utilities cannot do a thing without some form of government protection from frivolous lawsuits by the enviro-wackos, anti-nuke power crowd. The reason nuke plants are no longer built in this country is because it takes so long to get approval, then plow through court just to build the thing, then another round of lawsuits to put it into operation.

Seabrook Nuke plant had TWO plants in the process of being built, but it took them almost 10 years of stupidity in the courts before they could even get the first one on line, so they abandonded the second one. The containment building is there, but they never put in the machinery and hooked it up. Folks sure don't seem to be worried about living close to it, either. There are several high priced homes on the beach near the seawater inlet for the plant.

The time is right for utilities to start to build nuke plants again, and there have been a lot of enovations over the last 30 yrs to build them more safely and less expensively. They can also build smaller ones that serve a smaller population, so they don't need as much land as they used to need for a plant.

22 posted on 02/01/2006 1:18:28 PM PST by SuziQ
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To: JTN
Gee I am sorry you find it so hard to deal with the political realities. Too bad for Bush but he has to work in the REAL world, not the fantasy land political world of the Losetarinan party and their pet, never done anything but learn how to write, Columnists.
23 posted on 02/01/2006 1:26:15 PM PST by MNJohnnie ("Good men don't wait for the polls. They stand on principle and fight."-Soul Seeker)
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To: MNJohnnie

Wake up. She's writing on behalf of the administration's favorite think tank, tha American Enterprise Institute (rather than the American Conservative Union as I mistakenly said earlier). She's not writing for the Libertarian party.


24 posted on 02/01/2006 1:33:33 PM PST by JTN ("I came here to kick ass and chew bubble gum. And I'm all out of bubble gum.")
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To: JTN

I suspect we'll get some of both SOTUs. This president apparently thinks deficits are a fine thing.

As for the resemblance to Clinton, when it comes to Big Government: Meet the new boss; same as the old boss.


25 posted on 02/01/2006 3:59:50 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Jack Murtha: America's best-known EX-marine)
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To: Diddle E. Squat
Much easier to simply default to the political myth that he is really just another socialist.

Yes, I'm sure that when you get past the AIDS money for Africa, ethanol subsidies, farm subsidies, increased education spending, the Medicare drug benefit, the Department of Homeland Security, the 2.5 trillion-dollar budgets, and the signing of EVERY spending measure that comes down the pike, you'll find that deep-down he's a small-government, libertarian kinda guy.

26 posted on 02/01/2006 4:05:07 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Jack Murtha: America's best-known EX-marine)
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To: Small-L
"Bush, Blount, Hastert, Lott, and Frist are no different than Kennedy and Clinton." You're ignoring foreign policy.
27 posted on 02/01/2006 7:27:13 PM PST by GoodWithBarbarians JustForKaos (Save the environment! Let's ruin our economy to save an amoeba or two!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Yeah, kinda sounds like that RINO Ronald Reagan and his amnesty, negotiating with terrorist regimes (Iran), pulling up and withdrawing after Beirut terrorism, piling up record budget deficits,...


28 posted on 02/01/2006 9:09:00 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
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To: Badray; Conservative Goddess

Ping....and Ping to me for later reading.


29 posted on 02/03/2006 7:45:07 PM PST by Conservative Goddess (Politiae legibus, non leges politiis, adaptandae)
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