<<<< The TEA Party is about forcing the will of the people on our elected representatives as it relates to a balanced budget, traditional family values and free speech. Obama has just the opposite in mind.
It is clear that
Obama believes he has created enough class hatred to make “taxing the rich” a successful election year issue. Never mind that his suggested tax on the rich
will raise just enough additional revenue to cover eight days of federal
spending. Never mind the fact that
900,000 small businesses will be affected, businesses that produce 60% of all private sector
jobs, when the economy is working the way
it should. Never mind that a majority of those involved in state and municipal
governments, Democrats and
Republicans alike, understand that a recessionary period is not
the time to pass comprehensive tax legislation (ObamaCare) or suggest the
Bush era tax cuts be extended to the middle class for only one year.
Question: why would any middle class American vote for
a man who is making it clear that he intends to raise taxes on everyone who
works for a living beginning in 2014? Again, his middle class “tax cut” is good for the
year, 2013 only. He has said this, over and over in the past two weeks but, many are simply not listening.
Look, what is the greatest threat to the
continuation of the ObamaCare Tax Act;
do you know?
It’s stinking cost.
Sometime during the
first decade of ObamaCare, the Democrats
will have to raise taxes by the tune of 500 billion dollars annually – and they
admit to this. This total is already embedded
within ObamaCare via more than 20 different taxes.
Understand that this
500 billion is the cost of taxes collected in one year. What does that mean? That the anticipated 10 year cost of
ObamaCare is 5 trillion dollars, not 1.5
trillion as our Democrat politicians were telling us just 12 months ago.
This class warfare
business is nothing but talk. After the
election, Obama plans to do his own
thing and that includes an effort at raising taxes on everyone who works.
Do yourselves a
collective favor and stop thinking of Obama’s re-election as Left/Right issue.
The Left has plenty of politicians who know
what they are doing, but those people
are standing in the shadows, waiting for
this bunch of radicals to be gone. They
have already failed beyond measure;
now, it is time for them to leave
the political stage permanently. Maybe a move to
Venezuela or Cuba, or Red China or
France, is in order.
Whatever the case, let’s make sure that their departure
happens, come November 6.
I think most people look at Romney and see a guy who's platform is guided by the Republican party who is guided by the tea party whose goals are to hobble education, starve the government by slashing taxes to the rich, kneecap attempts to jumpstart the economy by fixating on debt, invite corporations to dominate political discourse, balkanize the population by demonizing minorities and immigrants and let favored religions dictate social policy.
ReplyDeleteI personally don't plan to vote for either of them because in the end they will do the roughly the same thing but with different talking points. We recently went through 8 years with a spoiled rich kid who caused about as much damage to the US economy and foreign policy as one moron could possibly cause in 4 years. Romney will be another 4 years of Bush with boring speeches replacing dumb yokel speeches.
Your conspiracy theories are only half as crazy as Glen Beck but obviously are fueled by his nutty bluster. Obama is not the great president that everyone hoped for but he's a little better than Bush.
And I say, "Give Romney a chance to prove you wrong."
ReplyDeleteOne thing you do not get, is how involved the TEA party is in this business of conservative minded politics. We conservatives all know that -- should we win this election -- that this will be our last chance to prove that we actually have solutions that will work. Bush failed the conservative cause on many levels. In today's political clime, he could not win another GOP nomination.
For TEA party types, this election is not about winning, it is about doing the right thing. For example, we know that we cannot simply repeal ObamaCare. We know that pre-existing conditions have been taken off the table forever. We believe that "portability" is the key to affordable insurance. Currently, insurance sold in New York offers coverage for per-existing illnesses. With "portability," this very insurance could be purchased by residents in Nevada or wherever. Today, that cannot happen.
We have plenty of energy sources. We do not need to raise the price at the pump to force behavioral change. That is crap and an insult to the intelligent part of the population. To pretend that Exxon (for example) will totally deplete our natural energy supplies and simply go out of the business of energy supply, is silly in a stupid sort of way.
Anyway, this "comment" section is not the place to continue my point view.
I do want to say that you are no more frustrated with all this mess than I am. You know that I have no love for "Establish Republicans." I can assure you, that after the election, should "we" win, my angst will be directed at those in power, if it turns out that they are more about party garbage than real change.
As far a me and Beck, please allow me some sense of originality and I will not accuse you of being a puppet of the Leftist cabal that is ruining this nation. I listen to Beck no more than a hour a month.
Finally, I cannot imagine why you believe Obama is a "little better" than Bush. But that is for a latter discussion, as well.