When you’re a part of the political power structure, you lose perspective about what matters. Before you know it, the thing that’s most important is yourself, your group and your place in the power structure. Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell provides the latest example of that.
For sane people who can do math, it looks probable that the federal government is heading inevitably toward defaulting on its debts one day. It’s just not possible to keep borrowing at this rate and still pay the money back at levels of taxation that people will put up with. For years, there’s been a need for a president and a Congress to face that reality and quit borrowing money and spending more, but it’s not political reality to expect that. And it hasn’t happened.
So now the two mainstream parties are locked in the latest deathmatch over control, each hoping that the other party will blink first. Republicans are demanding modest budget cuts before they’ll agree to let the government go on borrowing. Democrats are trying to avoid the cuts and offering insane plans of their own. Neither side offers any plan that deals with long-term reality.
Dishonesty runs rampant when partisanship matters more than truth
Finding your own authentic voice is riskier than copying everybody else
Why are most fiscal conservatives ignoring Paul Ryan’s actual record?
Bernanke’s ‘helicopter drop’ gave $1.2 trillion to Wall Street banks
My programming from childhood still equates blame with shame
Why do presidents and candidates bother to release tax returns?
Super Suckers: Indy taxpayers take bath in red ink to build stadium
In England, Oxford City Council mandates video recording for taxis
It’s hard to ‘get over it’ if pain of abuse turns to rage against self