Michael Madigan wrote:
> Nobody has come out in favor of ending medicare and medicaid

Hi Michael,

It is in one of the triggers. If they overshoot and need more $$$ they 
have to cut dollar for dollar. The cut targets in that case are military 
Medicare and Medicaid, not necessarily in that order.

> Problem is ... I had a catastrophic accident in 1983 and I am alive because 
> of medicare and Medicaid. Take em away and I'll be dead in about a month!

> Exactly, now what has grown in the last 12 years that can be cut... 
> 
> Inflation... pesky little thing can't get rid of that
> Oh a recession that has cut tax revenues and increased federal spending
> Yup stop spending on Iran and Iraq.. pull the troups back.. that'll get some 
> votes
> Well might as well close the camp at Gitmo... save a fortune on orange boiler 
> suits... send them all back to Iran / Pakistan / Afghanistan
> Homeland Security.. hell no need for that when we're looking to save money... 
> just make sure everyone can carry a gun and then no one will dare attack us.
> Education and healthcare... let everyone provide for themselves.. "there is 
> no such thing as society"
> Care for seniors... shit they should of provided for themselves... low paid 
> jobs .. well tough..
> 
> Next?

> http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=45242
> 
> Democrats incessantly boast that “Bill Clinton balanced the budget.” 
> Since they give him so much credit for this achievement, and have never been 
> known to describe President Clinton​ as heartless and cruel to the helpless 
> dependents of Big Government, they can hardly denounce his levels of 
> government spending as “irresponsible” or “balancing the budget on the backs 
> of the poor.”
> 
> <snip>
> 
> Clinton spent only $1.7 trillion in 1999.  The Obama budget baseline is a 
> staggering $3.7 trillion.  The CBO would score a return to Clinton levels of 
> spending as a $20 trillion spending “cut.”
> 
> <snip>
> 
> This proposal has it all – and by simply proposing it, Republicans would 
> raise awareness about the absurdity of baseline budgeting.
> 
> Even if the Bill Clinton Budget Act of 2011 dies in the House, the arguments 
> against it would be highly educational for a public that thinks the phrase 
> “spending cut” means something entirely different than its Beltway meaning.  
> The public is, quite literally, not even speaking the same language as its 
> ruling class.  Bill Clinton would make an excellent translator.
-- 
Regards,

Pete
http://pete-theisen.com/
http://elect-pete-theisen.com/

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