Pitchfork
Time
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
In his campaign
and inaugural address, Barack Obama cast himself as a moderate man
seeking common ground with conservatives.
Yet, his
budget calls for the radical restructuring of the U.S. economy,
a sweeping redistribution of power and wealth to government and
Democratic constituencies. It is a declaration of war on the Right.
The real
Obama has stood up, and lived up to his ranking as the most left-wing
member of the United States Senate.
Barack
has no mandate for this. He was even behind McCain when the decisive
event that gave him the presidency occurred the September collapse
of Lehman Brothers and the market crash.
Republicans
are under no obligation to render bipartisan support to this statist
coup d'ιtat. For what is going down is a leftist power grab that
is anathema to their principles and philosophy.
Where the
U.S. government usually consumes 21 percent of gross domestic product,
this Obama budget spends 28 percent in 2009 and runs a deficit of
$1.75 trillion, or 12.7 percent of GDP. That is four times the largest
deficit of George W. Bush and twice as large a share of the economy
as any deficit run since World War II.
Add that
28 percent of GDP spent by the U.S. government to the 12 percent
spent by states, counties and cities, and government will consume
40 percent of the economy in 2009.
We are
not "headed down the road to socialism." We are there.
Since the
budget was released, word has come that the U.S. economy did not
shrink by 3.8 percent in the fourth quarter, but 6.2 percent. All
the assumptions in Obama's budget about growth in 2009 and 2010
need to be revised downward, and the deficits revised upward.
Look for
the deficit for 2009 to cross $2 trillion.
Who abroad
is going to lend us the trillions to finance our deficits without
demanding higher interest rates on the U.S. bonds they are being
asked to hold? And if we must revert to the printing press to create
the money, what happens to the dollar?
As Americans
save only a pittance and have lost in the value of homes, stocks,
bonds and other assets $15 trillion to $20 trillion since 2007,
how can the people provide the feds with the needed money?
In his
speech to Congress, Obama promised new investments in energy, education
and health care. Every kid is going to get a college degree. We're
going to find a cure for cancer.
Who is
going to pay for all this?
The top
2 percent, the filthy rich who got all those Bush tax breaks, say
Democrats. But the top 5 percent of income earners already pay 60
percent of U.S. income taxes, while the bottom 40 percent pays nothing.
Those paying
a federal tax rate of 35 percent will see it rise to near 40 percent
and will lose a fifth of the value of their deductions for taxes,
mortgage interest and charitable contributions.
Yet, two-thirds
of small businesses are taxed at the same rate as individuals. Consider
what this means to the owner of a restaurant and bar in Los Angeles
open from noon to midnight, where a husband and wife each put in
80 hours a week.
At year's
end, the couple finds they have actually made a profit of $500,000
that they can take home in salary.
What is
the Obama-Schwarzenegger tax take on that salary?
Their
U.S. tax rate will have hit 39.6 percent.
Their California
income tax will have hit 9.55 percent.
Medicare
payroll taxes on the proprietor as both employer and salaried employee
will be $14,500. Social Security payroll taxes for the proprietor
as both employer and employee will be $13,243.
In
short, U.S. and state income and payroll taxes will consume half
of all the pair earned for some 8,000 hours of work.
From that
ravaged salary they must pay a state sales tax of 8.25 percent,
gas taxes for the 50-mile commute, and tens of thousands in property
taxes on both their restaurant and home. And, after being pilloried
by politicians for having feasted in the Bush era, they are now
told the tax deduction they get for contributing to the church is
to be cut 20 percent, while millions of Obama voters, who paid no
U.S. income tax at all, will be getting a tax cut i.e., a fat
little check in April.
Any
wonder native-born Californians are fleeing the Golden Land?
Markets
are not infallible. But the stock market has long been a "lead indicator"
of where the economy will be six months from now. What are the markets,
the collective decisions of millions of investors, saying?
Having
fallen every month since Obama's election, with January and February
the worst two months in history, they are telling us the stimulus
package will not work, that Tim Geithner is clueless about how to
save the banks, that the Obama budget portends disaster for the
republic.
The president
says he is gearing up for a fight on his budget.
Good. Let's
give him one.
March
4, 2009
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2009 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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