Labels: Book Review, Politics
Jim Manis on Most Anything
Jim Manis can formulate an opinion about a good many things, including those about which he has little knowledge. (And some dude named "Lazlo.") Visit The MagicFactory.
Friday, November 26, 2010
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Labels: Politics
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Labels: The Economy
Labels: The Economy
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Labels: Politics
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Labels: Politics
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Labels: Politics
[I]f Republicans were truly interested in reducing the deficit while stimulating private-sector job creation, they would have jumped to embrace the idea floated last week by Sen. Mark Warner, the centrist Democrat from Virginia: let high-end tax rates return to where they were during the Clinton years and use the $65 billion in additional income over the next two years for tax breaks for businesses that increase investments or hire new employees. After that, the extra revenue would go toward deficit reduction.
And how many of Warner's Republican colleagues have called to express interest in his idea? So far, not a one.
- Steven Pearlstein, "GOP to jobless: Drop Dead," The Washington Post
The truth is that the "small businesses" the GOP says it represents when it wants to continue Bush's bankrupt-America tax cuts are mostly hedge funds and law firms. These groups are already awash with cash, by the way. They're part of that top percentage group that has been getting filthy rich for the past 30 years while the rest of us have been running on their treadmill.
Labels: Politics, The Economy
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Labels: Class
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Labels: Politics
Tuesday, November 09, 2010
Labels: Politics, The Economy
Saturday, November 06, 2010
Friday, November 05, 2010
Labels: Humor
Thursday, November 04, 2010
Labels: Politics, The Economy, Torture
Wednesday, November 03, 2010
Obama should take up the old Republican idea of revenue-sharing by offering states large-scale assistance to prevent layoffs and tax increases. This would be welcomed by the many new Republican governors.... push forward with an infrastructure bank, which has bipartisan support. There is no better time to rebuild our nation's crumbling public facilities than when borrowing is cheap. And he should address the decline of American manufacturing, a prime cause of the discontent that roils the Midwest.... make a full-disclosure law the first order of business in the lame-duck congressional session, and come back to it again and again if the bill is blocked.Republicans need to be pressed to put specifics behind their anti-spending, anti-deficit rhetoric. They should be confronted with budget cuts that force them to face their constituencies. Farm subsidies are not sacred, nor is spending for weapons systems the Pentagon says it doesn't need, nor are hundreds of millions in tax expenditures and preferences. And if Republicans continue to insist on tax cuts for the wealthy, they should have to identify spending cuts to cover the costs.On immigration, the president should make plain that no solution is possible absent bipartisan agreement.... press on with reforms to the bureaucracy and to the ways the federal government hires people, buys things and responds to citizens.
Labels: Politics
Tuesday, November 02, 2010
Labels: Politics