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The
True Cost of Taxing and Spending
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Congressman
Charlie Rangel recently unveiled a tax plan that Republicans estimate
would raise taxes by $3.5 trillion over 10 years. Democrats questioned
the math.
Now, the Democrats
on the Joint Economic Committee have released a report on the total
costs of the military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, including
"hidden costs" such as interest on the money we're borrowing,
and long-term healthcare for vets. The bill comes to $3.5 trillion.
Republicans are, of course, questioning the math on this item.
One thing taxpayers
know is taxing and spending is expensive, and government cost estimates
tend to be on the conservative side relative to the actual bills.
However extracted and spent, $3.5 trillion is an unimaginable extra
burden on our economy.
If $3.5 trillion
is the true cost of these military adventures, $11,500 is the amount
every man, woman and child in this country pays. So, a family of
four would pay $46,000 just for this war. This is an especially
painful number to me, as the median household income of my constituency
in Texas is just $43,000 a year. In other words, war has cost more
than an entire years worth of income from each middle class
Texas family.
What
about the impact of these costs on education, the very thing that
so often helps to increase earnings? $46,000 would cover 90% of
the tuition costs to attend a four-year public university in Texas
for both children in that family of four. Obviously, it would far
outpace the cost of a community college degree, so vital to so many
in the workforce.
But, instead
of sending kids to college, too often were sending them to
Iraq, where the best news in a long time is they aren't killing
our men and women as fast as they were last month.
The Heritage
Foundation estimates a $3.5 trillion tax increase would be responsible
for 2,200 lost jobs in my district alone, over 70,000 lost jobs
across Texas. That's 70,000 Texans in unemployment lines, without
health insurance for their families. Some Democrats may not want
to spend $3.5 trillion on Iraq, but they do want to raise it in
new taxes. And, by digging our economy into a deeper hole, they
would create a lot more demand for the social programs they propose.
Tax-and-spend
policies create needs they can never satisfy. A government check
does not make up for a lost job. Americans do not want more of this.
Americans believe in hard work and self-sufficiency, not standing
in line for government hand-outs. We are supposed to be living in
a land of opportunity, but opportunities fade fast if more tax-and-spend
policies are enacted. The more Congress meddles in the economy,
the bigger the problems get.
Congress should
not increase taxes by $3.5 trillion and the administration needs
to end the occupation of Iraq with its costs of $3.5 trillion to
taxpayers. Let the hardworking American taxpayers keep their money.
Families need that $46,000 far more than government does.
See
the Ron Paul File
November
22, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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