Posted on 08/13/2007 11:06:54 AM PDT by traviskicks
The Treasury Department reported Friday that federal revenues reached $2.12 trillion ($2,120,000,000,0000) for the first ten months of fiscal year 2007. In both current and inflation-adjusted dollars, that puts the federal government on course for the most revenue its ever collected in a year. Indeed, its the most revenue any government in the history of the world has ever collected. And yet its not enough to satisfy the voracious appetites of the spenders in Congress and the administration. Spending was $2.27 trillion for the same ten months.
It seems that the deficit problem in Washington is not a result of insufficient tax revenue but rather the inexorable growth of spending on everything from earmarks to entitlements to war.
To be sure, the U.S. economy is the largest national economy in history, and thats the main reason for record tax levels. And tax revenues are not at their peak in terms of percentage of GDPthough theyre getting close. Earlier in the year OMB estimated that revenues as a percentage of GDP would reach 18.5 percent in 2007. But as of a month ago that figure had reached 18.8 percent, approaching the levels that typically produce popular demand for relief. But as spending interests become stronger and more widespread in Washington, popular demand for lower taxes faces more resistance. It seems safe to conclude that George W. Bush will go down in history as the biggest taxer and the biggest spender ever.
In the debates, he tried to sound like a conservative.
I maintain that he partially ran as a small government conservative but, as you point out, there was plenty of evidence to the contrary. I was in college at the time and was way too busy to keep up with everything. My only exposure was Fox News and Rush. Both were acting as his cheerleaders. I also watched the debates. In every instance, he was presented as a small government guy.
Only in comparison to Al Gore. If you look at the whole election, primary and general, it is clear that he employed the same “triangulation” strategy that Bill Clinton used. (Trying to present himself as the rational moderate alternative to two radical extremes) The limited government wing of the GOP that came to power in 1994 was played off as one extreme and Gore as another.
I don’t really think he tried very hard to sale anything except Amnesty and the War. The dems and rinos would cry and he’d cave. He’d campaign for people like Spector who was instrumental in turning my party hard to the left.
“And that, liberal boys and girls, journalists and college professors, is how our tax system works.”
See, now why couldn’t the president explain it that way? He always speaks in sound bites.
You are correct about that arse specter.
LLS
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