Simple story fails public
Gene Lyons
Posted on Thursday, March 12, 2009
URL: http://www.nwanews.com/adg/Editorial/254728/

Watching the national news media struggle to cover the economic crisis 
lately, one could be forgiven the fear that the United States had grown 
too ignorant and lazy to govern itself.
Between mis- and disinformation, cheap political posturing and crowd 
pleasing histrionics masquerading as commentary, the public has been 
inundated by a flood of dangerous nonsense. Cable news networks must 
think their audiences have the attention span of fruit flies.

Many in the New York/Washington media establishment appear to identify 
with the financial and political geniuses who got us into this mess, and 
to share their values. Jamison Foser at mediamatters.org noticed that 
coverage of President Obama's budget in The Washington Post and The New 
York Times centered mainly upon increased taxes affecting "the oil and 
gas industry, hedge fund managers, multinational corporations and nearly 
3 million of the nation's top earners," poor babies.

ABC News produced a heartbreaking tale of woe about harried 
professionals scheming to reduce their incomes to avoid higher tax 
brackets. A dentist told the reporter she was contemplating cutting her 
income from her current $320,000 to under $250,000 by having her dental 
hygienist work fewer days and by treating fewer patients.

Neither she nor the reporter appeared to have any idea how marginal tax 
rates work. To wit, she'd pay the higher 36 percent rate only on income 
above $250,000. The current rate is 33 percent. Hence, Dr. Happy-Tooth's 
brilliant plan would save her exactly $2,100 in taxes at a cost of 
$67,900 in forgone income. No wonder people like her vote Republican.

ABC subsequently filed an amended version of the story making itself 
look a bit less foolish.

Even less attention was paid to the fact that the White House needs to 
do absolutely nothing to make this happen, merely stand aside as the 
Bush tax cuts expire in 2010, a concession originally made to hide their 
long-term cost. Top tax rates would then be identical to those during 
the Clinton administration, a time of prosperity and balanced budgets.
On "The Daily Show," Jon Stewart responded with a devastating video 
segment depicting the selfsame CNBC gurus urging investors to 
buy-buy-buy stock in companies that have since vanished from the Earth.

For some-former House Speaker Newt Gingrich comes to mind-a tax overhaul 
provides yet another opportunity to get everything dead wrong. Back in 
1982, Gingrich joined the Wall Street Journal's Editorial page in 
declaring that President Ronald Reagan's tax increases would doom the 
economy. He and every Republican in Washington chanted the same mantra 
when Bill Clinton raised taxes in 1993, then proclaimed that President 
George W. Bush's 2001 tax cuts would lead to universal prosperity. 

Instead, they produced the worst jobs growth since World War II. Now 
they again foretell disaster. If they'd been peddling NFL betting tips 
over the phone, gamblers would shun them.

But hey, this is politics, a faith-based enterprise for many. Show them 
arithmetic, they respond with theology.

Others are easily distracted by shiny objects and rubber chew bones with 
bells inside; hence, the media's fascination with $7.7 billion in 
earmarks attached to the new administration's budget bill, considerably 
less than 1 percent of government allocations this year.

What the press loves about earmarks, says Bob Somerby at 
dailyhowler.com, is that they're easy. 
Memorize five basic terms and the 
stories write themselves: "earmark, pet project, pork, pork-barrel, 
wasteful spending."

Constantly seeking simple, melodramatic storylines, cable networks 
pounced like Labrador retrievers. "The O'Reilly Report," CNN's Lou Dobbs 
and Campbell Brown in particular made a big to-do about Obama's alleged 
failure to cut waste. But how wasteful were most earmarks? Sure, $1.7 
million for "beaver control" in North Carolina and Mississippi gave Sen. 
John McCain a chance to play Beavis to New York Times columnist Maureen 
Dowd's Butthead. But where I live, beaver dams flood cropland, kill 
hardwood forests, undermine levees, railroad and highway bridges. 
Somebody's got to trap the animals, move them and destroy their dams. 
Would it stimulate the economy to fire those workers?

Much the same can be said of "Mormon cricket" control in Utah, another 
item that tickled the McCain/Dowd funny bone. Swarms of the voracious 
insects can devastate a rancher's alfalfa crop overnight.

So Topeka, Kan., gets $250,000 to establish a database linking "law 
enforcement to emergency management personnel." Tornado season's coming, 
you know.

Doubtless there's a certain amount of needless brother-in-law spending 
somewhere in the bill, but it's not clear that the press found any. 

Besides, in the fix we're in, obsessing over earmarks is like worrying 
about crabgrass while your house is on fire


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