Monday, March 20, 2017
We told you in October 2012 that the income tax makes big government POSSIBLE
Here:
As an invention of progressivism the income tax eventually worked a revolution in government by allowing government to grow to gargantuan size with a ready pool of available cash, stolen by force from the population's income. And it is no coincidence that the first major expenditure financed by the income tax was US entry into The Great War. Not long after which came The Great Depression. If progressive ideas were good ones, no one seems to have paid much heed to the early evidence to the contrary.
Every effort by the people since the introduction of the income tax to obtain deductions, exemptions, credits and other incentives in the tax code should be understood by conservatives as wholesome reactionary, counter-revolutionary, rear-guard opposition to what the income tax represents, but today you can hardly find a conservative who will even entertain the idea of overthrowing the income tax, let alone any other of the so-called "achievements" of the progressive era. In fact, some so-called conservatives have become veritable cheerleaders for the income tax. Rush Limbaugh, for one, can't seem even to imagine an America without one for the first 137 years of its existence. An originalist in name only is he.
The problem with so-called Reagan conservatism, then and now, is that it makes peace with the tax code, just as it does with the social welfare state, including Social Security and especially Medicare. Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan actually campaign on just such a platform of preserving Medicare for future generations. As Reagan compromised in the direction of liberalism in the 1986 tax reform, so will they.
Brian Domitrovic and Larry Kudlow aren't the first to tell you the income tax made big government possible
Their book, JFK and the Reagan Revolution, released in September 2016, makes the point well, as does this article in Forbes:
And sure enough, with the income tax presenting itself as patriotically taxing the rich—at times with utterly fictional 91 and 94% top rates, from the 1940s until the 1960s, as Larry Kudlow and I marvel at in our recent book, JFK and the Reagan Revolution—government was able to grow where government under the tariff could not. The income tax supervised the rise of the federal government to well over a fifth of national output—from 3% during the era of the tariff. ... The dishonesty at the heart of the income tax was the key that unlocked the financing of big government, by the little guy no less.
We've been making the same point, more or less, since at least 2011, and especially in March 2016 here:
[Mark Levin's] tariff rant this evening ignores that the America of his precious founders was a tariff regime until the dreaded income tax of 1913.
The America of the founders was also a limited government for that reason until that very day.
But open wide the avenue for revenue, and you open the maw of the Leviathan and crawl into it.
Labels:
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ignorami,
Larry Kudlow,
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Sunday, March 19, 2017
Maureen Dowd, upper-class bunko artist
Maureen Dowd, the ever clever mistress of written fraud, makes it appear as if Nunes says Trump must be taken literally as commander in chief, but makes sure not to quote him saying as much:
Even Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, gave up the Sisyphean effort of defending Trump’s tripe. He said that if you took Trump’s remarks “literally” — as we expect to do with our commander in chief’s words — “clearly the president was wrong.”
The fundamentalism is all hers.
Labels:
bunko artist,
Devin Nunes,
Donald Trump 2017,
Maureen Dowd,
NYTimes
Fundamentalist Maureen Dowd calls her own newspaper's claim of Trump wiretaps "unhinged" from which the Times hasn't backed off since publishing it
Here:
For two weeks, [Trump] has refused to back off his unhinged claim that his predecessor tapped his phones during the election. ... Even Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, gave up the Sisyphean effort of defending Trump’s tripe. He said that if you took Trump’s remarks “literally” — as we expect to do with our commander in chief’s words — “clearly the president was wrong.”
Labels:
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Saturday, March 18, 2017
Friday, March 17, 2017
Five 9th Circuit judges say fellow 3-judge panel usurped Trump's constitutional presidential rights
Here:
Aside from the procedural defects of the process, the five panel jurists then noted the deep legal problems with the panel’s order: its a-historicity, it’s [sic] abdication of precedent, and its usurpation of Constitutionally delegated Presidential rights. Mirroring much of the Boston judge’s decision, the five judges then detail and outline what other critics, skeptics and commentators have noted of the prior panel decision, including critical commentary from liberal law professors and scribes Jonathan Turley, Alan Dershowitz, and Jeffrey Toobin. The original 3-judge panel “neglected or overlooked critical cases by the Supreme Court and by our making clear that when we are reviewing decisions about who may be admitted into the United States, we must defer to the judgment of the political branches.” Of particular note, the five panel judges note how the 3-judge panel decision in “compounding its omission” of Supreme Court decisions and relevant sister Circuit precedents, also “missed all of our own cases” on the subject. The 5 judges conclude the panel engaged in a “clear misstatement of law” so bad it compelled “vacating” an opinion usually mooted by a dismissed case.
Story about pre-emptive first strike against North Korea is total crap, Rex Tillerson never used the term
The dishonest media put the words in his mouth, but Tillerson never used them.
It's an effort to paint the Trump administration with the stink of George W. Bush.
Foreign Policy acknowledges preemption is only hinted at, here.
Labels:
Bush 43,
Donald Trump 2017,
First Strike,
North Korea,
Rex Tillerson
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Obama's legacy of student loan dependency: America has 2 million too many enrolled in college
In 1990 7.3% of the civilian noninstitutional population was enrolled in college or graduate school.
In 2016 that has grown to 8.1%.
The difference in 2016 comes to almost 2 million.
That's one reason why college tuition has exploded, along with the student loans to fund it.
Loans outstanding in 2016 are FIFTY-ONE TIMES their size in 1997.
The current balance of $1.05 trillion is an artifact of the Obama disaster, financing "education" for the chronically unemployed.
Just ask the kids using their loans to finance Spring Break.
Trump orders review of Obama's crazy CAFE standards
From the story here:
Mr. Trump on Wednesday announced plans to re-examine the fuel mandates, taking a step back from Obama-era environmental regulations. ... The standard for passenger cars stayed at 27.5 mpg from 1990 until 2007. In 2009, the government set a fuel economy standard of 34.1 mpg for cars and light trucks by 2016. In 2012, it set a new target of 54.5 mpg by 2025. The number can change depending on the mix of vehicles customers buy. Right now, it stands at 51.4 mpg because people are buying more SUVs and trucks.
Michigan's Steve Gruber and Tim Walberg peddle stupid, continue to insist Obamacare passed with fewer than 60 votes in the Senate
This morning on Gruber's radio show before the eight o'clock hour.
Republicans continue to peddle this ridiculous idea that Obamacare passed without 60 votes in the Senate, for political reasons.
They're trying to build support for the current repeal effort, and give it a legitimacy with their constituencies which it will never have on its own, by elevating the possible outcome which won't pass with 60 votes in the Senate by denigrating Obamacare's legislative legitimacy.
That way they hope that the repeal bill, which won't repeal the shell provisions of the law because it can't, only the budget (reconciliation) provisions, will acquire an authority politically which Obamacare indisputably possesses because it passed with 60 votes.
But since the non-budgetary provisions of Obamacare will remain, and will not be repealed until Republicans have 60 votes in the Senate like Democrats had in 2009, Obamacare as law will continue to tower over this fiasco.
They all know that. They just don't want to remind you of that.
It's a Rube Goldberg strategy as ridiculous as Obamacare itself, except that Democrats beat Republicans with a stick in passing Obamacare and remain able to wield it.
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Unhinged John McCain says Rand Paul is working for Vladimir Putin: The American people were right not to elect McCain
Imagine this guy in charge of the nuclear arsenal, quoted here:
“You are achieving the objectives of Vladimir Putin... trying to dismember this small country [Montenegro] which has already been the subject an attempted coup.
If they object, they are now carrying out the desires and ambitions of Vladimir Putin and I do not say that lightly.
I note the senator from Kentucky leaving the floor without justification or any rationale for the action he has just taken.
That is really remarkable, that a senator blocking a treaty that is supported by the overwhelming number—perhaps 98, at least, of his colleagues—would come to the floor and object and walk away.
The only conclusion you can draw when he walks away is he has no justification for his objection to having a small nation be part of NATO that is under assault from the Russians.
So I repeat again, the senator from Kentucky is now working for Vladimir Putin.”
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Monday, March 13, 2017
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