Tuesday, May 20, 2008

More Crooked Talk From The Straight Talk Express

John McCain was in Chicago yesterday to deliver a speech on the economy and explain how he's not going to just continue Bush's policies. I'm sort of hurt that I wasn't invited. Sure, I'm not a member of the National Restaurant Association, but I figured a maverick like McCain would want someone like me to be there. Oh well.

(All of the quotes from his speech in this post are from the copy provided on NBC's web site.)
I propose to bring some very different ideas to the presidency.

McCain is the candidate of change. Ignore for the moment the fact that over the past couple of years he has abandoned many of the positions that made him a "maverick." Don't pay attention to his many flip-flops and contradictions. He's all about change. Change, change, change.
As president, I will keep the current low tax rates...

Different Idea #1: Maintain Bush tax cuts.
What's more, we're going to double the size of the child tax exemption, so that moms and dads can spend and save more for their own children.

Aww, doesn't that sound good? Funny that someone who is so concerned about moms and dads having more money for their children would oppose a law that promotes equal pay for women and makes it easier for them to sue their employer over wage discrimination. Of course, something like that would be a limit on corporate activities, which McCain opposes flat out, across the board. (Unlike every other neocon in Washington -- see how different his ideas are?)

He also proposes phasing out the Alternative Minimum Tax, which will help rich people; add a flat tax system, which will help rich people; give tax credits for people to buy private insurance, which will help the rich people who run insurance companies; and reduce the capital gains tax, which helps rich people. (And before any of you fans of supply-side voodoo economics tell me about how reducing the capital gains will increase the revenue from it, read this article, which explains things like how the revenues from capital gains taxes were higher under Clinton, even though the rates were higher.)

Different Idea #2: Reduce taxes to help rich people.

McCain then goes on to explain how he wants to expand benefits to American workers who lose their jobs to globalization.
It is not enough to keep offering employment programs designed for the problems of the 1950's. We have to help displaced workers at every turn on a tough road, so that they are not just spectators on the opportunities of others. And I have made that commitment with reforms to expand and improve federal aid to American workers in need. We need to help millions of workers who have lost a job that won't come back find a new one that won't go away. As American companies invest abroad, we need to invest in our own country and in our own workers.

Different Idea #3: Expand a program of government handouts. (Keep in mind that at the beginning of the speech he said it was the Democratic candidates who would "spend more of your money in Washington.")
If I am elected president, this country will honor its international agreements, including NAFTA, and we will expect the same of others. And in a time of uncertainty for American workers, we will not undo the gains of years in trade agreements now awaiting final approval.

Different Idea #4: McCain will push for the same free-market trade agreements that have been a centerpiece of Bush's foreign policy agenda.

Then McCain did something that would be surprising if I didn't already know what a flip-flopping hypocrite he is: he lambasted Congress for giving tax breaks to huge corporations. He said, "I have proposed a reduction in the corporate tax rate..."

Oh, wait, that's the part of the speech where he was for giving tax breaks to huge corporations. In the part of the speech where he was against it, he said,
...along with the [farm] subsidies comes the usual harvest of tax breaks, bailouts, and other forms of corporate welfare. To take just a few examples, the thoroughbred industry hit it big this year with 93 million in tax breaks for race horses. The timber industry made off with 260 million dollars in tax breaks. And then there's a company that describes itself as, "the largest and most geographically diverse land owner in the nation." That doesn't sound like a hardship case to me. But the Congress has just voted to give that same company 250 million dollars in public money.

Different Idea #5: Support giving tax breaks for corporations, but don't support giving tax breaks to corporations. Don't like where "straight talk" McCain stands on an issue? Wait five minutes.

McCain then wraps up his speech with a slew of abstract promises about free markets and helping farmers and blah blah blah.

So what are the "different" ideas that McCain promises to bring to Washington? I'm not sure; from the speech he gave yesterday it sounds like he's offering more of the same: Bushonomics, flip-flopping, and empty rhetoric. Conservatives have been spouting on about how voting for Obama would be choosing the unknown, but what is their candidate offering? Which McCain would show up to any given meeting? Pro tax cut or anti tax cut? Pro handouts or anti handouts?

And the one thing that McCain didn't mention, that I really wish he did, is how he plans on paying for the occupation of Iraq. He claims he wants to bring fiscal responsibility to Washington, but Bush has been paying for the occupation on borrowed money. Would McCain do the same, or would he use tax dollars? Where would those extra few hundred billion dollars per year come from? Where's the straight talk when you need it?

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13 comments:

Nikki said...

Mike I am beginning to know how you feel. I am completely left out of the Obama love fest and am not one of the cool kids sticking my tongue down the throat of Barack. he doesn't care about me and my views. What I like about this post is the snark!! I have more to say but I am heading to a movie...Prince Caspian, you know that Christian crap. hehe :)N

Nikki said...

The only thing I wanted to add was...woohoo another Bush! I love being a minority it feels so liberating! :)N

EvilPoet said...

I'm curious Nikki - WTF does this mean exactly? "..am not one of the cool kids sticking my tongue down the throat of Barack." Are you saying that someone like myself -an Obama supporter- only supports him cause I'm somehow sexually attracted to him? If not - could you clarify? I would really appreciate it. Thanks.

Mike H said...

Nikki, I just want people to understand what McCain is -- a two-faced flip-flopping hypocrite. If he's going to say that he would bring new ideas to the presidency, then perhaps he should have some new ideas (ideally ones that don't change every 5 or 10 minutes.) The conservative media hasn't said squat about it, so I figure I should.

Nikki said...

evilpoet, just a bit of snarkish humor. An exaggerated way to make fun of the over the top support of Obama. he is a politician that lies and panders like the rest...I know there are legitimate supporters too. no need to be sensitive about it. If I was sensitive about my Bush support what a sad life I would lead. :)N


Mike, do you really think the media is conservative? :)N

EvilPoet said...

Nikki - thanks for the clarification, much appreciated.

Before I jump out of this discussion - here's a poem... it was inspired by the GOP but it applies to both parties.

The ever-gullible and faithful followers/They are much like puppets on a string/Blind faith loses all the power of reason/And gains the ability to justify anything

L8er G8ers,
EP

Nikki said...

Evilpoet, like the poem...you must be a poet! LOL, it doesn't sound to me like you are evil though just talented. :)N

EvilPoet said...

Thanks for the kind words! As far as being evil and talented goes - I think that depends entirely on who you ask. It's been my experience that both of those things are mostly in the eyes of the beholder or beer holder whatever the case might be. ;-)

L8er,
EP

Mike H said...

EvilPoet: Very nice. That poem has universal application, I'd say.

Nikki: Yes, the media is conservative.

DB said...

You have to realize why McCain is flip-flopping though. If he didn't, he would lose even more support. They will always vote for McCain, but donating to him is a whole other story. Why do you think he back-tracked on the Bush tax-cuts, torture, immigration, finance-reform, etc. If he did not retreat back to their corner, try and shed his "maverick" image, and start appealing to conservatives, no one would donate money!

Mike H said...

DB, I have no doubt that you've hit on one of the main reasons, if not the reason. I just hope that by the time November comes around, all McCain has left are the people who will vote for him just because he's not a Democrat.

Rick Frea said...

Well, one thing to note is that McCain is liberal all along on some issues. No surprise there.

A conservative media?????

What???? Expound.

Mike H said...

Freadom, McCain is an opportunist, not a liberal.

As for the conservative media, the media in America is for the most part owned by large corporations. The main purpose of any corporation is to maximize profits and return the most value possible to their shareholders (or owners, in the case of private corporations.) No corporation owns a media outlet because of some altruistic desire to inform the public. They are all there to make money. Thus, they report whatever "news" will generate the maximum profit. When it served their interest to splash Clinton's affair / legal proceedings across the front page every day, they did. When it benefited them to smear Al Gore, they did. When it increased their circulation to beat the drum for Bush's illegal war in Iraq, they stepped up. Whenever a white girl is kidnapped or a celebrity leaves rehab, they report it.

American media is all about the Benjamins. And if that's not conservative, then I don't know what is.