TimothyC wrote:Fair enough.
Napoleon the Clown wrote:Okay, what concessions must he give...?
Major spending cuts - to everything (DoD included), entitlement and deficit reform. A reversion to 2007-2008 budget levels would be a good start.
But that's what
I want. Politically, he needs to come down to a budget of about $3550 billion, or lower. He needs to get serious or get out the way.
The fundamental fact is you get
15-20% of GDP in taxes - no matter what the tax levels. Everything has to fit inside of that - or the costs of servicing the debt will eat the budget up, and then there won't be any money for your precious government health care, or schools, or roads, or science, or parks, or a military or anything, because the bought classes of people who will rely on entitlements won't let us cut those.
I am not at all sure the ceiling is exactly where you think- if it is, then one thing we need to do very seriously is
think about how we can provide for continued economic growth so that 20% of our GDP allows for growth.
The problem is that these are the worst imaginable conditions to negotiate spending cuts, because we're in the middle of a hostage situation, and the guy holding the hostages places basically zero value on most government functions.
You might be willing to negotiate a resolution to your property dispute with a neighbor. You might even think it was necessary in the long run. And yet you might STILL refuse to have those negotiations at a time when the neighbor has a time bomb planted under your house and refuses to disarm it unless you come to the negotiating table.
Broomstick wrote:Because you lost the White House and the Senate, and this is supposed to be a democracy, not rule by a spoiled minority having a tantrum.
Come on Broomstick, you're smart enough to remember that the power of the purse is held in the House, not the Senate or the executive.
If control of the House means that Republicans are not responsible for the actions they take with the power of the purse, then control of the Senate and White House means that Democrats are not responsible for actions they take with the power of those offices.
TimothyC wrote:Losonti Tokash wrote:The House has a bill. If the Republicans weren't total cowards throwing a fit, they'd allow a vote on it. Their refusal to do so even with mounting public pressure to at least vote for or against it speaks volumes about their willingness to actually do their jobs.
They've voted on bills. They've passed bills.
They just happen to not be the bills you want.
Yes, the basic bill is basically the Ryan budget. The Ryan budget is
crap, based on deeply flawed assumptions. If the Democrats let such a budget pass, on the grounds that it is better to pass
any new budget rather than continue with the old one, then they are basically saying "fine, whatever, it doesn't matter who wins the elections, the Republicans get to run the country."
Those Republican-passed bills are an exercise in political theater, not a serious attempt to negotiate a resolution to a political crisis.
They include things like letting DC use local funds to fund city services like fire and police protection. Can't have that now can we! Harry Reid told the DC mayor (who ambushed him at a press conference) “I’m on your side. Don’t screw it up, okay? Don’t screw it up.”
Yes. Actually, I think Reid has a point.
The Republicans want this shutdown to last a long time, without inconveniencing any constituents they are directly responsible to. They have every reason to spin it out. So
yes, pursuing a strategy of saying "shutting down the government means
actually shutting down the government, not just the bits of it you don't care about" is a legitimate countertactic.
The shutdown is not a natural disaster caused by some kind of random misfortune. If the shutdown were a natural disaster, it would be every American's duty to try and minimize the consequences of that, for the common good.
But no, the shutdown is an artificial disaster, brought about by one faction's refusal to accept the status quo. It would be grossly irresponsible for the other faction(s) to simply legitimize this by saying "okay, we take for granted that you can do this, let's minimize the consequences to the people most likely to complain and be heard, so that you can keep doing it."
And tying this into what Covenant said- what it comes down to is that the current Republican strategy is very consistent with "win points at all costs," with 'points' being scored in the brain of Ted Cruz. It is not compatible with any kind of long-term, competent and responsible government- it's a recipe for the kind of inane bickering you get in the worst kinds of democracies, and the kind which makes people honestly start wishing for a single strongman who goes back to ruling by decree...
as long as he'll make the trains run on time.
Right now, the trains are very much not running on time. This is a sign that something is fundamentally wrong with the way the system is being governed, and that someone needs to change their behavior to make it work.
Why do you not accept this?