I’m feeling pretty guilty. I hadn’t known I was causing billionaires so much suffering. The former co-chair of President Obama’s deficit (a.k.a. catfood) commission just asked me during a public event to stop going after rich people. Then he came up to me after the event to make sure I’d gotten the point. He seemed truly worried about it.
This was a panel discussion at the University of Virginia. The panelists were Simpson, David Walker (former U.S. comptroller, former partner and global managing director of Arthur Andersen, and longtime deficit hysteric), moderator Larry Sabato, and odd-man-out Dean Baker (co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research). I say odd-man-out about Baker because Sabato introduced the panelists as all agreeing about things that only Sabato, Simpson, and Walker seemed to agree on (and I’m including the audience when I say that). Sabato declared the national debt the biggest crisis of our lifetimes and claimed that “no foreign country can ever do to us what we’re doing to ourselves” by going into debt.
“I love him dearly,” said Sabato of Alan Simpson during an elaborate and very personal introduction. Walker and Baker got dry readings of written bios. The first four questions went to Simpson. And Simpson went straight after Social Security and Medicare. He said the word “defense” twice in passing, but literally just said the word as part of a list of areas to be addressed. Sabato then went to Baker for a couple of questions, then to Walker. And then Sabato asked Simpson to address what Walker had said. And this sequence was repeated, through which each of Baker’s very persuasive refutations of what the other panelists had said was never replied to by the other panelists.
Here’s a video clip of Dean Baker’s first comments, in which he explains (in 4 minutes 22 seconds) why we should not be worried about Social Security, why an actual health coverage system would eliminate the deficit, why fixing the deficit won’t fix the economy, but why devaluing the dollar might help.
Here’s another clip of Baker, in which (in under 7 minutes) he explains that the collapse of the economy is a big cause of the deficit, a healthy economy could eliminate the deficit, we could save $270 billion per year by making prescription drugs generic, and free-market health vouchers that allowed people the choice of buying into the health coverage of Canada, Germany, Costa Rica, or anywhere else would increase our life spans and put $15,000 savings per year in each person’s pocket. The voice at the end pretending Baker had talked about a completely different topic is Larry Sabato’s.
When it was time for audience participation, I complimented Baker on the healthcare solution and proposed we try to buy into Vermont’s plan if Washington lets it get away with creating one. Then I asked basically this:
“We could cut three-quarters of our military and still have the biggest one in the world. We have a war that two-thirds of the country wants ended. Up through the Korean War we used to increase taxes on rich people and corporations, not cut them, to pay for wars. Why is it inconceivable that anything be done about this, and why is it not even talked about?”
Baker responded, basically agreeing with me. Walker, too, agreed with me, said he favored cutting “defense” and also objected to the unconstitutionality of undeclared wars launched by presidents. Simpson too said he agreed and wanted the military cut. And it’s true that cutting it was part of his proposal to the president. But then Simpson stressed a particular part of the military that he would like to cut, namely . . . wait for it . . . healthcare for soldiers. Here’s that bit. Listen at the end for Sabato’s punditry and refusal to ever be mistaken.
There were more questions from the audience, but Simpson addressed himself to me when he explained what was wrong with taxing wealthy people. We have to get away from talking about the rich versus the poor, he said. For one thing, when you talk about who’s responsible for something, the commission you’re working on can’t come to any agreement. The Iraq Study Group, for example, had to set aside who was to blame in order to propose what should be done. (Of course, most of us don’t spend our lives serving on bipartisan commissions, and taxing the rich is as forward looking a concept as any other; blaming the rich was a straw man Simpson created.)
Simpson had a second argument for leaving the poor suffering rich alone. We could confiscate all the wealth of everyone with over $1 million, he claimed, and only pay for running the government for a single year. Now, first of all, that’s an outrageous lie, but it’s also another straw man. Taxing the rich progressively and heavily year after year, as the United States used to do when it had a prosperous economy is quite different from confiscating everything. And doing so wouldn’t have to pay for the entire government in order to pay for part of it.
Baker didn’t pick up on the topic of taxing the wealthy, but he did respond to Simpson’s request never to ask who was responsible for anything. Here’s what Baker said, followed by Sabato objecting (joking, ha ha) that he depends on a lack of accountability. Following Sabato are Simpson’s closing remarks in which he repeats that we must not blame the rich or anyone else, although it would be a good idea to blame poor people who bought four houses with no money down. I’m reminded of the case against the estate tax that was costing so many poor families their farms, specifically of the fact that not a single such family could be found in the country to represent the horrible trend. How many people do you know who went out and bought four houses with no money down? And even if you can find one, do you think he or she qualifies for blame while all members of government are off the hook? Simpson concludes be stressing that government cannot provide people with anything they might want. Watch the clip:
After the event, Simpson came up to me, shook my hand and blathered some more nonsense along the same lines. I asked if he could tell me how much wealth everyone with over a million dollars had, and he began ranting about how I needed to stop blaming people. I asked my friend next to me if he’d heard me blame anyone. I asked Simpson if we couldn’t forget blaming people, look forward, and still end the wars, cut the military, and tax the rich. He replied as if he were Michelle Bachmann staring into the wrong camera. He was having a conversation with someone who wasn’t there, certainly not with me. He wanted the rich to be left alone and he wanted me to leave them alone. Finally, he wanted me to go out and vote for people who would do what I wanted rather than just hanging around like some kind of slacker who goes to panels rather than spending every waking moment voting.
“Anonymous blogging,” Simpson had remarked earlier in the evening, “is cutting America to shreds.” I’ve signed my name to this, Senator.



77 Comments

We can’t afford rich people anymore. Personally, I think they ought to be composted. When the Randians talk about going Galt, my response is, “Is that a promise? How soon?”
Sounds like Larry Sabato, letting Simpson and his ilk drive the agenda and spew their lies, is auditioning for a gig on Meet the Press or the PBS Newshour.
{ stand on chair clapping } Please keep going after rich people to pay taxes and their fair share in this society.
Maybe we are having an impact with these bastards? If Alan Simpleton is worried about questions around taxing the rich and pointing out that Wall st is the cause of this mess is worrying them?
Dean Baker is a good guy and we should demand more debates with progressives given a loud voice!
Signs of the times:
“A Harsh Look At The Real Warren Buffett (Apr. 25, 2011)
“And So The Billionaires Turn On Each Other – Sokol’s Lawyer Accuses Buffett Of Lying” (Apr. 27, 2011)
If we can’t out-rhetoric Mr. Incoherent/simpson, what does that say about us?
He really hates us internet commenters. I for one, am for sale. Just 1 million dollars. Pass it on to simpson. Thx ;)
Alan Simpson’s real vision for everyone else who isn’t rich wears his name: Simpson‘s
Hint: What would Wealthcare for Billionaires do? Make his head explode by taking things to the logical extreme: FREE THE CORPORATIONS!!! (video, Apr. 26, 2011)
Sign the motion: MoveToAmend.Org
Priceless.
Thanks for this, Dennis.
I needed a laugh.
Shit.
I mean David.
Coffee time.
Baker’s ideas should be a series of articles in the Media but the media is owned by the rich. Still the voters despite the media favor cutting the war or taxing the rich in part because of Baker and the blogs:)
but Simpson addressed himself to me when he explained what was wrong with taxing wealthy people. We have to get away from talking about the rich versus the poor, he said. For one thing, when you talk about who’s responsible for something, the commission you’re working on can’t come to any agreement. The Iraq Study Group, for example, had to set aside who was to blame in order to propose what should be done.
So what did Simpson tell you let them eat cake…. they like it?
Or was it more like let them eat cake or else?
What is wrong with taxing rich people it worked very well when FDR got us out of the depression.
I am curious about the Iraq study group they had to set aside blame to get stuff done? Sorry Blame must be fairly assigned and punishments upheld to everyone regardless of rank I take it Alan has never read Han Fei Tzu.
He prefers the Sun King’s method of keeping nobles under control. We should stop calling the rich rich and just call them nobles with the way wealth is inherited in this country.
The Sun King kept nobles close to him at the capital and having so much fun being fashionable they were in debt and thus easy to keep track of and to weak to over throw him. ( I should research this more )
Agreed our parasites are to big we should let them all go Gault on an island some where.
Good on ya, David.
Talking about “rich people”, I was amazed when, during the last Presidential campaign, one of the Democratic contenders said, “Thank God for the rich.”
So I thought about it, and, in my own fashion I did.
I got down on my knee, clasp my hands together in prayer and looked up toward Heaven.
“God”, I said, “it has been suggested that everyone in America should thank you for the rich, which I do … but, do you think that maybe, just maybe, you might try to make them a little nicer?”
I continued, “Now, I don’t want you to think, Lord, that I’m telling you your business, as I know that Your unseen Hand is busy stuffing just as much money into the pockets of the rich as IT can possibly manage, but, you know, that means that there is really not very much left for anyone else. I’m not complaining, you understand, I know you do, but I’m seriously wondering if You and Jesus could spare the rest of us some nickles and dimes. Now, I realize that you especially like to help those who help themselves, but frankly, and I’m certain that you are aware of this, some of this self-helping involves the breakdown of civil society and little human things like the rule of law and such ‘internals’ as ‘conscience’ and what I was told, when I was a child, was called ‘morality’. Despite what has been going on, down here, I have to imagine that such things DO matter to You, at least a little bit …?”
“Anyhow, I hope that my words have not offended You too much, and that you will forgive me for mentioning Adam Smith’s vile maxim, which you probably remember hearing about? Smith’s maxim, more or less, was this: Everything for the rich and nothing for the rest … devil take the hindmost.”
“I just kind of wondered if You went along with that kind of thinking and the Calvanist sense of the Puritan ethic, that wealth reflects your pleasure and appreciation of those who help themselves to a lot of it or whether such stuff is simply the result of poor translation or poor ‘reception’ at the human-soul level?”
“Well, thanks for hearing me out and putting up with the stupid questions, but I would really appreciate some help in figuring all this out. Amen”
(So far the Heavens remain silent about these issues, but, on the ground it’s pretty clear which way things are intended to go… and it looks like the vast majority of the world’s people, who are NOT rich, are going to have a hell of a rough time in the short run and probabaly end up going there in the long run, or not, to extinction. So, I guess, if God won’t do anything to improve the behaviors of the rich, the rest of us, down here, will, simply, HAVE to. I hope that neither of us invokes the wrath of the Lord for my saying this, and a lot of wealthy others have already made the claim, but David, and I don’t mean to offend you, it seems, in a very real and honest way, that, by doing what you’re doing, it is probably fair AND reasonable to say that such endeavor really does amount, one way or another, to doing God’s “work”.)
;~DW
Great investor finds undervalued stocks that make real money as opposed to finding an insider tip about the latest hot stock.
However McDonalds on where he made tons of cash underpays its workers and is so big people use the term McJob as an insult for the type of job that is not worth going to work to or if you have a family the type of job where you can work fulltime and probably collect welfare.
Coke with its corn syrup is probably more responsible for the nation wide diabetes epidemic than anything else.
If you can’t make money without screwing your workers or customers either you should leave the business world because you are not smart enough or the system itself is just too corrupt.
Given that Dick Cheney can call himself a self made man see the VP debate between him and Joe Lieberman where nobody argues when he says this and you get the job by going on a fishing trip with a bunch of CEO’s no government favors expected from them? Bwahahaha!
We need a list of those CEO’s
Then you build Hal up with government contracts. Then you as VP under Bush really build up Hal.
Dick’s only business decision that I can recall that did not involve government was when he bought an asbestos company with tons of lawsuits.
So as VP he worked to get rid of that liability.
So maybe Warren really had no choice if he wanted to get rich.
Still if guys like Buffet gave Costco the same funding Wallmart got and a Costco was on every corner instead of a Wallmart.
If the hamburger chains that make money and pay their workers living wages but survive despite McDonalds had gotten the financing Mcdonalds got and spread lie McDonalds the book Fast Food Nation lists a few my copy is at my brother’s house.
Well imagine an America where the biggest retail store and the biggest fast food chain paid living wage jobs.
I’m adding your comment in a diary:)
I’m enthusiastically in favor of rich people going Galt to upper Minnesota because they’d spend a lot of money building mansions up there, they’d get bored and would import all sorts of entertainments, who would need more housing and bars and restaurants, etc. After spending all sorts of money, many of them would wander back home. As their old mansions would have been sold of by then, they’ll have to build still more mansions!
Win-win all around! We get the rich folks to spend lots and lots and lots of money on real, practical, brick & mortar-type things (As opposed to nonsense items like “credit default swaps”) and they get the romantic adventure of “Going Galt” and making some sort of philosophical point.
Seems to me that not only should everybody making above $250,000 a year have a special tax levied on them to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but that money should be collected in person. The collectors would be in Salvation Army-type uniforms, they’d collect the checks (Say, 15% of everything the rich person makes that’s above the $250,000 and each and every type of income counts equally, i.e., no exceptions for capital gains) with all sorts of trumpets and drums announcing their arrival at the rich person’s place of employment (With preference being given to city places, i.e., with places where you’d get a good, big audience). The person receiving the check could then give a speech thanking the rich person for his or her patriotism and selflessness.
Not quite sure how to fit the dirty hippie protesters in there so as to encourage the rich person to identify with and make common cause with them.
I guarantee ya, the wars would end purty durned quickly!
See; Simpson had you thinking *Menace*. ;o)
Good questions, great diary, David; but really: you should be ashamed of blaming the Rich. Where would we be without them? Utopia or something?
I happened to be at the event too. I thought the Center for Politics did a great job of showing both sides; those videos alone show that Dean Baker was given ample time to refute Simpson’s claims! It was a great event.
I dunno, I was there and I thought it was pretty fair. Baker, just like Simpson and Walker, was able to make his points. It’s not as though the liberal position was somehow missing from the forum.
Agreed let them go Gault if they want:)
An interviewer once asked Nader if he ever worried about the rich. “No” he replied. “The rich are doing fine”.
Simpson has long been running on autopilot. No one’s to blame. Cut social spending, cut health care spending – except for Congress’ platinum plan – cut welfare and unemployment, cut education and training, cut infrastructure. Increase defense, domestic surveillance and the federalization of local law enforcement.
Spend on tools of control, but not on the the infrastructure US citizens need to survive and thrive. He, his corporate patrons and co-directors don’t need it. They can hire Chinese, who go without or whose government provides it. Ditto in India, Eastern Europe, or some Pacific island we last heard about in 1945, about when Mr. Simpson had his last good idea.
Obama can now claim Mission Accomplished.
In nearly 2.5 years he’s smashed through that pesky wall of “overpaid Americans,” making his base (Wall St.) mighty happy.
Heck of a job, Baba.
McDonalds hires 62,000,and turns away 938,000 applicants
for minimum wage or part time jobs.
Over one million people applied for 50,000 jobs at McDonald’s.
Men with families reduced to minimum wage.
Simpson’s got to be thrilled. A job well done.
Wonder how long it’ll take to pay off that $80,000 Harvard loan?
Mr. Simpson’s rant about health care for former military personnel is another shout at the average guy to get off his frigging lawn. Why do veterans have good health care programs? He pooh poohs the reasons: the dangers and family and personal sacrifices. “I know all about them….yada, yada, yada.”
What Simpson doesn’t say is that the reason those health care programs are good is that they were demanded, fought for and defended, something Democrats refuse to do for Main Streeters, but which Congress does for its current and former members, most of whom could readily pay cash for any health care they wanted anywhere in the world.
They look good because so few others have them. That’s the same reason government jobs – the right’s enemy du jour – now look good to the privately employed and unemployed. For decades, the ambitious considered those jobs dead ends, valuable only in the afterlife of retirement.
Lastly, those programs look good because they were built that way for people who couldn’t count on living through their jobs, for people who couldn’t count on getting health care in the private market, for people who knew how important it was to life and limb to have sound health care readily available. We shouldn’t be cutting such programs, we should be expanding them so that every American has something similar.
Let’s let Mr. Simpson stomp off to Galt’s Gulch, and see what health care his aged frame receives among the rocks and snakes, those with legs and those without.
Another reason veterans retirement health care looks so good, apart from the fact that so few in America have it outside of Medicare, is that it’s paid for by way of deferred compensation.
Soldiers, sailors, air crew and Marines get paid less today because they get future benefits. (That’s also what pays for the UAW and other union’s benefits.) Employers, even private ones, used to love that deal, because statistically, it meant paying less today – and taking home fatter bonuses because of it – and it meant paying benefits only to a some of today’s workers, since many would fall by the wayside before collecting them.
What’s not to like? Two things. Better services and health care meant more veterans lived, some with prolonged war-related injuries. The private sector is just antsy that it’s now time for them to pay their half of the bargain. They want out of it and call themselves fiscally responsible for reneging on their deals.
Ignoring that dynamic – claiming that veterans’ care costs veterans less than $500 a year – is another falsehood that makes Simpson a blithering, if useful, idiot.
So the rich and their sycophants have got their eyes on you….well, just remember who your friends are when they try to buy you out with that $4.5 million co-opt check (don’t accept a penny less!)
“Sabato declared the national debt the biggest crisis of our lifetimes and claimed that ‘no foreign country can ever do to us what we’re doing to ourselves’ by going into debt.”
Sabato is a fucking right-wing idiot.
He is a disgrace to the University of Virginia.
The students at UVA should invite Dean Baker back — to tell them the truth without a right-wing hack masquerading as a professor and a senile, angry, old asshole intervening with lies and nonsense.
“Sabato declared the national debt the biggest crisis of our lifetimes and claimed that ‘no foreign country can ever do to us what we’re doing to ourselves’ by going into debt.”
I doubt Sabato would know the truth if it hit him over the head with a 2X4. The FACT is more like this: “… although the national debt is not the heinous scary scary FEAR FEAR thing that the upper 1% are making it out to be, it is perhaps more accurate to say that ‘no foreign country can ever to do to us what *the upper 2% in the USA* are doing TO the average US citizen & the nation at large: screwing ‘em big time to rip off as much as possible for their own egregiously greedy selves.”
I sure won’t hold my breath waiting for Sabato to cough up any truthful facts like that.
“Anonymous blogging,” Simpson had remarked earlier in the evening, “is cutting America to shreds.”
Wowee-zowee! Well bust my buttons, if THAT doesn’t make my day. Hey even though I realize that Simpson’s full of it, IF somehow in some small way any of us here at FDL & similar fellow-traveler blogs have contributed to pissing off Simpson, or even better, making Simpson feel??? uncomfortable (I seriously doubt that self-absorbed greedy psychopath like Simpson has the remotest capability of feeling anything akin to guilt, shame or remorse), then: WIN!! And WIN Big Time!!
Yeah baby: pile it ON!
Dean Baker is far better than a good guy, he’s been the BEST Economist in the USA for speaking out on the most important economic of the last 15 years! He spoke against the Boskin Commission recommendations to reduce our measurement of the CPI, he spoke out on the right side of the Glass-Steagall revocation, and he warned loudly about the oncoming housing debacle way back when it could easliy have been avoided. I know of NO other Economist who was out front of all three critical issues.
His reward for being the best was to ignored by the Democrats in Summer of ’08 when they called “prominent” left leaning Economists together for feedback & ideas leading into the election.
Great job, David! Thanks so much for being there and being in their greedy piggy ignorant self-absorbed sh*tty lying faces. IF they felt any kind of “heat” or pressure: well done!!
Amazing, though, to consider their whining and crying. What a load. They want to pull the rug out from under Seniors, the disabled, kids, infrastructure, you name it, but we, the SERFS, are supposed to grovel at their feet tugging our forelocks, or better still: go away somewhere and STFU.
Crooks. Every last one of ‘em a giant sucking CROOK & LIAR.
x2
Congratulations David! clearly you are getting to them!
Yes, thanks.
I am sure Galt’s Gulch will be such a paradise we will need to protect it and make sure only the truly deserving get in. How about putting it inside Leavenworth Penitentiary.
Rounds these parts if a horse or a dog goes lame or gets very sick we put it down.
Stories about Alan Simpson always remind me of that for some reason.
If you think of the American community like being a church congregation, then leaving the rich alone would be like letting them just toss a dollar into the collection plate while everyone else is tithing a percentage of their income. Are the rich being more pious by their ‘thrift?’ If the church can’t make ends meet and gets a delinquency notice, the rich would do what? Tell the congregation that they’ll need to increase their tithing percentage?
What exactly are the values the rich are learning from their church and what if the rest of the congregation decided to follow their example?
“Sabato declared the national debt the biggest crisis of our lifetimes and claimed that “no foreign country can ever do to us what we’re doing to ourselves” by going into debt.”
Amen. The leadership never hesitate to point to Osama bin Laden as the rationale for defense spending, but conveniently forget the means by which bin Laden promised to destroy the U.S.
November 1, 2004:
“(CNN) — The Arabic-language network Al-Jazeera released a full transcript Monday of the most recent videotape from Osama bin Laden in which the head of al Qaeda said his group’s goal is to force America into bankruptcy.”
The tape concludes:
“[T]he real loser is you,” he said. “It is the American people and their economy.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/11/01/binladen.tape/
I think it is better that you take the blame, David, than women. Seriously, liberal women are now accused of castrating men who otherwise would be able to tackle the deficit. See how that flows? Liberal women also include “pink ladies” and those supporting Planned Parenthood. I am sure if it had been me talking to him, instead of you, he would have spoken along those lines. I think you do a great job and I could not get through a day without checking in. Thank you.
Meh. He’s old. With any luck a tiny fraction of his flagrantly feudalist fantasies will die when he does.
I’m pretty sure that’s our only real path out of this broken formulation of society; that improvements are possible purely through attrition of these old codgers.
Excellent, David. Now if we only had about a dozen or so more Davis Swansons, we could shake things up.
One of my life’s gifts is that we are always on the same side because each time I see you in action, I’m glad I don’t have to defend myself against you.
We could confiscate all the wealth of everyone with over $1 million, he claimed, and only pay for running the government for a single year.
Good Lord that man is dense. Check out Edward Wolff paper “Recent Trends in Household Wealth in the United States: Rising Debt and the Middle-Class Squeeze—an Update to 2007″.
http://www.levyinstitute.org/publications/?docid=1235
From Wolff’s 2007 numbers, top 10% is $900,000 and and top 1% is $9 million and up (who knows how the numbers have changed in last 4 years, so call it $1 million and $10 million). Wolff foud that the top 10% owned 73.1% of household net worth (and half of that was just the top 1%).
At the end of 2010, household net worth in the US was $58.6 trillion. So if Uncle Sam took all the wealth from those families with over $1 million (58.6 x .731), it would raise $42 trillion, considering that the US Govt spent $3.5 trillion last year with a $1.4 trillion deficit), Simpson’s off by more than order of magnitude or to put it another way, 10 years worth of current spending.
That man is the opposite of a national resource, he’s a national time suck. as I see I’ve joined the legion of people who’ve wasted their time proving Alan Simpson wrong. If the WH’s goal in nominating him was to aggravate people with his bullheaded ignorance, mission accomplished!
That’s why they worship Ayn Rand and teach her books in their prep schools –they need to imbue “greed is good and you are superior” early on or it doesn’t take.
And yes, feudalism is exactly what it is. They want to avoid taxes, just like the royalty of old.
Please, please, if you haven’t read it yet, check out David’s review of Get Up, Stand Up. The link is below the comments.
Reading comments elsewhere on FD today, I saw reflections of what Levine uncovers in this book. I think Bob Marley would be proud he used his words for the title.
Those of us out here would like you to keep going after the rich David! Good work.. and Mr.Baker for president! Thank you.
Simpleton Simpson can shake in his shoes..
The rich will be going to Michigan- Land of the Great Lakes (“Pure Michigan” says the promotion) and so very private and defensible. Shitty Rick Snyder is transforming our beautiful state into a grotesque version of itself under his “new fascism.” Why institute such a concentration of power? An end run around transparent federal bankruptcy? Confiscation of all those assets known as fresh water…and more. Subversion of both constitutions. For cover, Snyder has just come out with a proposal for anti-bullying legislation!! Just as he flips the state coffers for his corporate friends and the rich- he who takes no salary (got rich as the shepherd of Gateway to China and hell)- and prefers no accountability or conscience over what responsibility to Michigan people really means.
Michigan-Home of Amway, Erik Prince. Private security? Private Michigan. Check this on Sovereign Deed: _ http://jackshow.blogs.com/jack/2008/01/essay-sovereign.html and then this-
http://michiganmessenger.com/1393/even-dogged-by-controversy-sovereign-deed-moves-forward-with-plans-in-petoskey-area
You can tax the rich today or http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Eat_the_rich_symbol.png
David,
I want to thank you for providing this diary. I am way late to this thread having been out all day, but I cannot miss an opportunity to say a big thank you to you and Dean Baker for as you say “schooling Alan Simpson.”
Sorry to say hear that Simpson is tone deaf and cannot hear anyone who disagrees with his majesty’s dictates.
And to actually suggest cutting healthcare for our soldiers is
unconscionable.
Again, thank you!
Sorry- this too- the rich are planning… the Pellston airport and …
Sovereign Deed, in those circumstances, would function as a private army — a militia, if you will — for the wealthy, protecting their property and their lives while ignoring the plight of those who can’t afford to pay their exorbitant fees.
http://michiganmessenger.com/728/hypocrisy-and-ambition-what-the-barrett-moore-story-says-about-america
After all, they are our masters. Look at people fawning over a prince getting married. What do you think Royalty is? We so easily sign over our rights, and it’s always been that way.
If an idiot like ray gun can say he bankrupted the soviets, someone with some intelligence can do the same to the idiotic US.
Oh boo-hoo, those poor, downtrodden rich folks! They NEED somebody to stand up for them, because God knows they don’t have the power to stand up for themselves, unlike the poor. Oh wait…
And nice work, David. Keep it up.
yeah, has been for years
Also I’m willing to be protested for LESS than $76,000
Hey, David, stop stealing all my trickle-downs !
he also says only they can save us
good idea
maybe we’ll invite him to this
http://micat50cville.org
hmm i’ll bring up castration next time
i understand i’ll be hosting a chat with levine here
Geebuz what a mother fucker sumabitch asshole.
Great read David, thanks for this, n thanks for being there and calling his sleezy, slimey elitist ass out on it all.
Aawww… Let’s call the poor little rich boys and girls a waaambulance to carry them to safety.
It seems such widespread sentiment among the peasantry has caused some panic among the landed gentry. They don’t like a culture war when the other side fights back, as well they should have known before engaging in it so wholeheartedly for so long. “You can fool all of the people some of the time….”
This is the sensitive spot they have spent decades dividing and fictionalizing the populace to keep from being seen, much less prodded. Now that we’ve found it, I say we take the political equivalent of a nice dull knife, shove it in there and twist it around a bunch. Not only will it get things done, but watching the rich squeal and squirm because they might actually be held responsible for their actions is always entertaining, and would provide endless satisfaction after decades of them doing it to us.
“We should stop calling the rich rich and just call them nobles with the way wealth is inherited in this country.” I agree. Most wealth is inherited not earned. These folks produce nothing but angst for the rest of us. They invest in China et al. register they’re yachts in the Cayman Islands where most also hide their $$ as well. Why do we coddle these traitors? Because they buy politicians the way they buy everything else. We should let them buy titles and pay a tax or fee each yr. to maintain it. Duke Trump sounds about right and Lord Gates and Buffet etc. They’d love it. Then we and they could but aside the increasingly annoying and dishonest ruse that were all middle class here in Amerika.
Does that means having more debates like the one that was held on Wednesday night at UVA? Because Baker was invited there by the Center for Politics and was certainly part of the debate.
So, is it the norm for “debates” at UVa to have the moderator and two guests presenting the deficit hysterics point of view against one person saying otherwise?
Fair and balanced right?
Your FoxNews career is calling you.
Well, he may have been ignored by the Democrats, but he wasn’t ignored by this forum, and the video’s posted here to prove it.
One thing to note about this panel is that it wasn’t really Republican right-wing — none of the three endorsed the Ryan budget, for instance, that nearly all GOP House members voted for. And, as the author notes, all three panelists agreed with him that defense/war spending could and should be cut back. That’s more than one can say about Ryan’s plan.
Precisely why it was nice to hear Baker at the event in question.
Another way of looking at it is that Baker endorsed the Progressive caucus’s roadmap while none of the panelists endorsed Ryan — does that mean the right-wingers would have a legitimate complaint? Baker was right in that the progressive caucus’s budget is rarely talked about, yet he was there to bring it up to the audience at this event. So, ya, Baker was arguably outnumbered by other two speakers, but he held his own and the audience got to hear what he had to say (and applauded, too).
Ya, as someone who went to this forum, I was happy that UVA invited Baker. May not have been perfect from my point of view but I don’t think it’s fair to compare that forum to Fox.
Get your point, but IMO it’s just more Kabuki Show on that score. So ok: Ryan’s budget is more draconian. What did these three Elitists offer? Some waffling “reference” to Defense spending? Big hairy deal. Don’t buy it. It’s just Kabuki Show and is meaningless.
The real deal is Simpson whiiiiiing about how “don’t attack the rich.” They don’t want trifling piffling serfs like YOU and me to have one little say. So they toss out a CRUMB (if it’s even that) about “Defense Spending.” Do you think Sabato or Simpson will truly *fight* to cut Defense Spending? If you do, I suggest you think about that one a lot longer. Ain’t gonna happen, no way no how.
Don’t get fooled by the Kabuki Show. Just saying….
I have heard as many people call Professor Sabato left wing as I’ve heard call him right wing. I think that’s a good indicator that he’s pretty non-partisan…
Ya, I’m not necessarily saying you’re wrong about the talk of cuts versus actual cuts in reality. But I think the impression left here in the comments was that this was some total right-wing event, and I just don’t think that was the case, especially b/c Baker was invited and in good form.