Of course, you knew this, so now
you say you really do plan to cut taxes by 20% but only if it can be
implemented in a way that would not impact the national debt. By this I guess
you mean that the tax cuts, if they’re implemented, will be revenue-neutral, as
Mr. Ryan has been claiming. That delightful outcome can only be realized if you
can close enough loopholes to equal the amount of the 20% tax cut. If you
actually can do this – and I doubt it – then the net effect of your tax cut
will actually be nothing. The amount of taxes paid by the American people would
remain exactly the same as they are now. I ask you: How can that sort of
so-called tax plan lead to growth? Well, it couldn’t. Growth might be brought
about by tax cuts, but if and only if they put more money in the pockets of consumers.
A so-called revenue-neutral plan doesn’t do that. So your tax plan is simply a
legislative exercise. Its only benefit, if you could call it that, would be
that tax payers wouldn’t have to be worried about keeping track of their
charitable contributions, the money paid in home mortgage interest, child care
expenses, and a score or so of other deductions tax payers currently enjoy.
But there’s a hidden danger in
this. I’m sure you’re as aware as I am that almost 99% of the Republicans
serving in the Senate and House have signed away to Grover Norquist their constitutional
right to levy taxes. If those senators and congressmen remain faithful to Mr.
Norquist, and not to the American people, taxes can never go in any direction
but down. Every cut would work kike a ratchet; once cut, taxes could never be
increased. As wonderful as this may seem to some of your supporters on the
fringes of the right, this ratcheting effect would effectively deny tax
increases even if the nation’s life were in danger. And I assure you, when I
took office; the nation’s very life was on the brink of death.
Those Republican politicians who have pledged allegiance to Grover
Norquist have, in effect, signed away one of the two means available to balance
the budget: (1) raise taxes, and/or (2) cut spending. But as you have no doubt
discovered in trying to find a way to justify your 5 trillion dollar tax cut,
there’s a limit to how much spending can be reduced without cutting the throats
of many American people or endangering the nation’s defenses and
infrastructure. When that limit is reached, when spending can be cut no
further, and when the inevitable economic downturn reduces the government’s
income (as has happened after the disastrous recession of 2008 and 9) there
remains only one way to balance the budget: tax increases. But as any sophomore
knows, in an economic slowdown the last thing you want to do is raise taxes.
That’s why I cut taxes on the middle class, and it explains why, in this
unbalanced recovery where the majority still suffers and the wealthy have
prospered, I want and intend to raise taxes on those who can afford it. I know the objection that any tax increase in
a stagnant economy is a bad thing, but if we still aim to turn the tables on
deficit spending we have to take that painful step.
Which brings up another surprise: You continue to repeat the falsehood
that I have proposed a 716 billion cut in Medicare. I honestly thought you
understood what was going on. Your running mate certainly does because in his
infamous budget proposal he “cut” Medicare by exactly the same amount. Now I
confess, I haven’t yet been able to figure out where his 716 billion is coming
from, but I know precisely where mine originates. I’m not reducing the services
delivered by Medicare; I’m only reducing the cost of those services. Take this
example: if every day you bought, say, a can of soup for $1.00, in ten years
you would have bought roughly 3,650 cans of soup at a total cost of $3650. But
if by some policy or market force the average price of soup were reduced to 90
cents, those same 3650 cans of soup would have cost you $365 less. Now a
politician trying to make hay might say, “You’ve cut the soup program by $365;”
but as Bill Clinton might say in reply, “Mitt, you still have the same amount
of soup. Are you complaining that soup is just less expensive now than before?”
Your answer was that, when such savings occur in Medicare, some hospitals and
doctors would refuse to take Medicare patients. That might happen, also might
not. That’s a problem for the hospitals and doctors to work out in their consciences.
But one thing is certain: your continued characterization of that savings as a “cut
in Medicare” is purely false. And here’s the disgusting part: I think you know
it’s false, but continue to pretend that you don’t know, otherwise you would be
compelled to give up on that particular criticism. That’s something you should
have worked out in your conscience .
. . but apparently your conscience lost.
Which brings me to the most disturbing fact that has come up in your campaign:
the fact that you believe that 47% of the people who will not vote for you are
moochers who consider themselves as victims, who desire noting but handouts –
free food, free housing, free health care, free everything – and who it is not
in your power to convince that they should take responsibility for their lives
and for whom you therefore do not care about. That’s, of course, a statement
you wish had not been made public. But in a way, you might find an excuse by
claiming that by saying that your lack of caring meant only that you would not
waste campaign dollars seeking their votes. Politicians – all of us – have to
make hard decisions of that sort. But that excuse will not forgive you of
feeling about those people the way you do. It’s certainly not a political necessity
that you think these people are all moochers, not a political necessity that
you think of them as people who will not take responsibility for their lives.
Those are personal feelings that have meaning only if they are sincerely felt.
Those words tell us about Mitt Romney. “Oh but,” you might say, “I was doing
something most politicians do at one time or another. I was just telling that
audience what they wanted to hear.” Well, Mitt let me tell you: that’s absolutely
the least politically brilliant statement you might make. When you made your
47% remark you were speaking to what might symbolically be referred to as the
heart and soul of your party – the fat cats who finance it. If you were simply
telling them what they wanted to hear, then you have politically crucified your
entire party. You have said, in effect, that the moral imperative driving the
Republican Party bears no relationship whatsoever to the ethics preached by Jesus
of Nazareth. Your party would reduce Jesus’s parable of the Good Samaritan to a
mere fairy tale, not intended to taken seriously as a guide to moral behavior.
Better, Mitt, that you should simply apologize for your unchristian remark and
let the chips fall where they may. That’s what a noble man would have done . .
. if in fact he had made such an ignoble statement.
I wish I had said these things to you last Wednesday evening. I thought
to, but didn’t. Forgive me. In remaining less than forthright on these issues I
have rendered you a disservice: I’ve left you the man you were when you walked
onto the stage, when I could have, by moral conviction, perhaps opened your eyes to a nobler self
within and to a new way to live your life. By remaining relatively silent on
these matters, I left you in a make-believe world where, if someone doesn’t
soon set you right, your mental health will surely deteriorate.
I don't know why Obama didn't show up, but I don't think it matters a hill of beans. He's on fire now and his numbers are up all around. I was embarrassed for him on the debate stage, and just as embarrassed for pasty-faced, smiling and lying Romney. I think we just should skip the debates and hold the election two weeks ago. However, if the polls are to be believed, American voters are bright enough to know when they're being lied to and whom to trust.
ReplyDeleteVery eloquent, Frank, although I didn't quite like the mental health suggestion at the very end, where I thought you got a bit more cavalier.
ReplyDeleteBut nicely put together.
Frank, your remarks are well done. send them to O'bama. Regarding Romney's mental health. I haven't a clue. I do believe that we should focus more on his advisors. The guy who I think is running the romney campaign said O'bama was lazy. Others of his campaign call it a failed presidency. Others take things out of context. They add up to a failed Romney campaign when judged on honesty and ethics. The Republicans also have bullies, grinning tom tom beating bullies. The economic calculations going back and forth are like vollies in a ping pong game. I know us democrats don't like to get into ethics and morality yet I think we should. The republicans talk up religion as if religion does not include anything other than standing up and loudly shouting, I believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and I believe that every word in the bible is true. Any of us can scrutinize a 2000 year old book and loudly proclaim what it says. It is enough to make all of us candidates for mental health counseling and just a wee bit of electric shocks.
ReplyDeleteFrank,
ReplyDeleteYour well-written post belongs on the Op-Ed page.
Actually, I admire your fortitude as well as your prose style. You can bear to sit through Mitt's presentation of his world view. I, on the other, bolt when his mask-like face appears on the television screen.
He's such a chameleon and now, it seems, the consensus is that he won the debate with Obama hands down. I am dismayed.
When "W" was threatening to win the presidency, my husband and i contemplated leaving the country. I even renewed my passport. We didn't. If Romney wins, we will revisit our decision.
Clay
I agree with Clay Fulghum who said s/he bolts when Romney's mask like face appears on the TV screen. I guess I was too busy to think about getting out of this country right before Bush, but, I too, may consider that! In all seriousness !!!A friend of mine saw the devil when they looked at GW's face, heaven help us with Romney. To have to leave my own country... so sad, many of my ancestors fought for this country's freedom. As many American's ancestors have.
ReplyDeleteBarb P