Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Why are they allowed to get away with it?

Consider this: If I were to tell you that, because I had to change my plans to add on new room to my home this year, it would actually be smaller next year, you would most likely laugh at me. If I were to tell you that, because I decided to continue buying my kids a Happy Meal during our weekly visit to McDonalds rather than move them up to an adult meal, I had actually reduced their food intake, you would probably wonder about my ability to reason. If I was to then tell you that, because I decided against expanding my cable package to include the Showtime movie pack, that I am actually reducing my service, you would most likely begin to wonder about my grasp of reality. If I then went on to explain that deciding to extend the current tax rates/policies in this country would be a tax cut, you might think [rather than questioning my sanity] that I was simply restating the beliefs of any number of liberal politicians or commentators speaking on the issue today.

I call this to your attention because recently I have heard many on the left argue against an extension of the current tax rate/policy in this country by calling it a tax cut for the wealthy. In their argument, an extension of what exists today will somehow be giving new money to those people they have defined as wealthy.

For those who hear this argument, accepting their premise makes accepting their argument all the more understandable. The problem here, as I have shown above, is that the premise is fundamentally flawed.

What is happening here is that the left [in this case] is framing the argument to try to pull attention away from the facts of the situation:

Fact: Keeping the current tax rate neither raises or lowers taxes

Fact: Allowing the current tax rate to go up raises taxes.

Fact: Lowering the current tax rate would lower taxes.

These facts cannot be argued [this uncontestability is actually the defining feature of what constitutes a fact.] Because this is the case, however, [and because those on the left understand that “We are against continuing the current tax rates because it neither lowers or raises taxes on the wealthy in this country” is a losing argument] it is clear that the left have decided to ignore those pesky little things called facts and simply argue fantasy.

This decision to argue fantasy, however, is nothing new. In the past I have heard politicians claim that the only way to know what is in the bill is to pass it [while any first grader would know that reading the bill and discussing it is another, and in this case better, way.] I have heard the President state that Comprehensive Healthcare Reform would actually lower our deficit [even though it would add millions of people to the rolls of a taxpayer funded program.] I continue to hear that the only way we can reduce the deficit by raising taxes [even though deficits are ongoing decisions that can be stopped tomorrow by deciding to only pass budgets are balanced.] These positions are clearly flawed but are all the more palatable for those who hear them because the arguments are framed to argue fantasy in an attempt to make each of them more believable.

The answer for those who are actually looking for a return to reason is to break down these frames in a very public way. Remind those who hear these flawed arguments of the obvious. Hold a press conference with a three year old child, show them a copy of the healthcare reform bill, and ask them how you could know what is written into it. [I guarantee the child will say to read it.] Hold a press conference with a dog and give it a piece of bacon. Watch the dog eat the bacon. Next put a bowl of bacon in front of the dog and watch it eat all of the bacon. Explain that without restraint, the dog will most likely continue to eat all of the bacon you give it while wanting more the same way that Congress will continue to spend all of the tax you give it while still wanting more.

Honesty dictates that we should never let those who have decided to ignore facts for fantasy get away with doing so.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Perhaps he needs a thesaurus…

With the Bush tax cuts set to expire, one can only imagine the comfort the average taxpayer in this country felt when the President stated, in his first post election interview with Steve Kroft of 60 Minutes, that his “number one priority coming into this is making sure that the middle class families don’t see their tax rates go up January 1.”

Clearly, with such little time remaining for such legislation to take place, the idea of the President making it his number one priority to ensure that rates will not go up should go a long way towards allaying the fears of those who have seen rising food and fuel costs over the last year with little prospects of new jobs or increasing wages in the near future. What decisive actions, what intense meetings, what impassioned pleas must be planned in the next few days that would allow the President to work towards achieving his number one goal? How many long hours would he be working in the Oval Office to be sure that his priorities are realized? Well, as it turns out, the answer to each of these questions is “none.”

That’s right. Apparently, in order to achieve his “number one priority” in the very short time available to him this year, President Obama felt that an extended trip to Asia was in order.

Yes, that is correct. It would seem that his “number one priority” could only be accomplished by a 10 day travel itinerary including such stops as Mumbai, New Delhi, Jakarta, Seoul, and Japan. Apparently we should all take heart in understanding that visits to the Great Buddha statue, the Gandhi Museum, the Taj Majal Palace, the Tower Hotel, Jumayun’s Tomb, the Mahatma Gandhi memorial, and the National Handicrafts and Handloom Museum (this one for Michelle but apparently important as well) are an integral part of his overall strategy.

Sure, to the layperson this may seem as if the extension of the tax cuts are not his “number one priority;” but, rather that his “number one priority” was simply the use taxpayer money to remove himself from the political scene for a bit after his party suffered such a crushing defeat in the November elections, however, I am sure that the President could certainly explain how this is not the case if we gave him the chance. Who knows, it may even be his number one priority.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

We will just have to wait and see…

So the election has taken place and the GOP turned out to be the big winners.

I only hope that Republicans do not think that this election was due, in any real part, to their recent actions. In fact, if I had to describe what the strategy of the majority of the party was in the last couple of months, I would have to say it was to try to keep quiet and avoid saying anything too stupid. Ultimately, most of the winners [with a few exceptions] were simply happy to sidestep the anger of the American voters and quietly slip into the seats of those who were pushed out by that anger.

In this one I have to give it to Marco Rubio [Senator Elect from Florida] who said it would be a mistake to interpret the results of the election as being an embrace of the Republican Party. Here is a rising member of the Republicans who is willing to speak the truth even when it may not cast his party in the best possible light. Rubio was correct in his understanding that this election, for many, was simply a choice between what they viewed as the lesser of two evils.

We will see if the new batch of Republicans will rise to Rubio’s call that they become “what they said they were going to be not so long ago” or if they will fall back into the trap of simply talking like true conservatives while acting the opposite way. Should the Republicans fail to follow Rubio’s call to action, there is little doubt that they will soon find themselves on the receiving end of the same anger they were just able to avoid.

Now is the time to lead. The question is whether they will have the strength to do it.