I'm not going to disparage our president, but I'm interested to see what happens this November. My guess is that the current fiscal policy that is destroying the confidence of small business owners will show up at the ballot box. And the ideology of taxing the rich will be our undoing. Do you think the rich will suffer if we tax them more? Unlikely, they can afford advisors and the like that will do well to manage their fortune. But a small business owner (makes up the bulk of the U.S. economy) who fits comfortably in the middle class will respond to taxes (which cut into the 2 - 3 % profit margin they operate on) by passing the "tax cost" on to the consumer, who will in turn purchase less of the more expensive product, which will in turn lead to fewer labor hours required to produce the more expensive product and then labor gets cut. TAXES ARE ALWAYS BOURNE BY THE CONSUMER. WE ALL PAY when the rich are taxed. What a deception that has been promulgated by the letter networks and on college campuses!
It is time to end the oppressive taxes in this country. Taxes hurt the middle class and the poor who purchase anything with a tax that is passed on to the consumer in the products they purchase. How much longer can we continue to hold our hand out to China, Europe, Japan and other creditors, before the interest rate on the long term treasury bonds rise precipitously to the point where we can no longer afford to borrow? And what happens when we cannot borrow any more? I don't know, but I don't think it will be good. I guess we'll suddenly balance the budget, with much collective pain. But if we're already burning through $400bn more every year than we take in with tax revenue, when that is gone, then how are we going to cut that much spending out? It boggles the mind.
We've robbed social security for two generations and Medicare for one and a half generations. And if my count is right, both Republicans and Democrats held positions of political control during these times. Clearly I'm a conservative, but it doesn't matter anymore. In fact, we owe $600m each day in interest payments on our debt. That is equivalent to $2/person/day, $8/family/day, and $240/family/month. So in essence, in some fashion or another we are already paying $240/mo per family to simply cover the interest on our current debt. How much more will we have to pay each month to pay the debt off in half a generation? $500/mo/family? Are you getting the picture? WE ARE NEVER GOING TO PAY THIS DEBT OFF!
The Roman Empire came to a close, as will ours. I don't like it, but is there any other way? Hey, sorry for being a downer.