by americandream » Sun 29 Aug 2010, 18:27:19
Actually, the far left as you characterise it is merely the supply side with a demand face. Marxists remain resolute in the belief that market economics will fall in on itself and that policies that arise naturally and organically from those ashes will prevail. The fact that those policies will be the about face of market economics is as natural as is the revulsion of a victim for the criminal.
As for Clinton and this other variant of the liberal left, remember that all Western largesse is sustained by vastly discounted barrels of energy (oil) from client states such as Nigeria and Saudi Arabia. We saw what happens with unruly ones such as Iraq. So the Clintonesque dream is another one of those subsidised ones you so evidently despise.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Outcast_Searcher', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'C')onservatives still believe in so-called "supply-side" economics, a simple-headed theory that wants to believe government may spend all it wants, as long as the tax rate for the rich is historically low, because the rich are the engine of the economy and if left unfettered, wealth will "trickle down" to the lowly unwashed common folk. It makes no more sense than any state religion.
The only popular economic philosophy less realistic than this is that of the far left. It acts like (and often states) that more taxation and wealth redistribution are always helpful. And it has the nerve to do this while damning the productive people it confiscates the earnings from. Couple this with their viewpoint that government programs running or at least controlling virtually every aspect of the economy will "fix things" and you have true fiscal madness.
The current administration, with cries of "oh, those poor people" to justify more and more unfunded spending, is the epitome of this. Naturally, this is justified by Keynsian economics, which has shown itself to be just as unreliable as trickle-down economics.
It sure would be nice to try and meet somewhere in the middle, like IMO, president Clinton did. He actually shrank the size of the federal government and ended the "welfare forever" program. If a Republican had tried fundamentally reforming welfare, there would have been rioting in the streets of various big cities.
But no, let's have $trillion plus deficits forever, greatly expand government, and blame it all on George Bush, when the results are less than promised. Yeah, that'll work, just like it has so far.
