Pages
- About Lux Libertas
- Chronology of the Current Fiscal Crisis
- Maps
- United States Government
- The Articles of Confederation
- The Federalist Papers
- The Declaration of Independence
- Constitution of the United States
- United States History
The Founding Fathers Said...
- May 17, 1875: The first Kentucky Derby was held at Churchill Downs, in Louisville, Kentucky.
- May 17, 1938: NBC aired the Information Please quiz show on the radio for the first time.
- May 17, 1954: The Supreme Court ruled unanimously against segregation in schools in Brown v. Board of Education.
- More events from This Day in History: May 17
Tags
Meta
Recent Posts
- WSJ – Pledge Week at the Fed
- Republicans See Congressional Office Break Ins….After Hours
- Health Care: No, the State Doesn’t Know Best
- Sacrificial Scams
- Will Gay Marriage Force Black Churches to Reconsider Democratic Party?
- The President’s ‘Other Gospel’
- Recent News Could Cause Panic for Obama Campaign
- CNN Plays Dirty Too
- The Menace of Bipartisanship
- Parrots and People
Categories
- America
- Book Review
- Censorship
- Civil Liberty
- Cyber War
- Economics
- Editorial
- Education
- Energy
- Environment
- Ethics
- Global Warming
- Government Waste
- Gun Control
- Health Care
- History
- Homeland Security
- Humor
- Illegal Immigration
- Inspiration
- Intelligence
- International Relations
- Judiciary
- Labor
- Media Bias
- National Defense
- Opinion
- Our Foundation
- Patriotism
- Politics
- Presidency
- Religion/Faith
- Secrecy
- Taxation
- The Constitution
- The Patriot's Journal
- the UN
- Trade
- Uncategorized
- Valor
- Veteran's Affairs
- Video
- War of Independence
- War on Drugs
- War on Terror
- We Remember
- World War I
- World War II
Archives
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
Contributors
Contact Lux Libertas

What began as a technicality has become a metaphor for the stakes in 2012.
June 30, 2011
WSJ
By DANIEL HENNINGER
Democrats say they won’t vote to raise the debt limit unless they get someone in the private sector to pay higher taxes. Republicans say they won’t raise the debt limit unless they get reductions in public-sector spending without raising taxes.
Shall we put this to a vote?
Not a vote of Congress, but of the American people—the 130 million or so who will vote for president in November 2012.
The debt-limit fight is being depicted as mostly a green-eyeshades funding technicality, dating back, not surprisingly, to 1939. It’s bigger than that. When Congressman Paul Ryan says we have arrived at a “defining moment,” this is what he means. The issues that have surfaced in the debt-limit struggle will—or should—define how this country’s people see themselves for at least a generation.
The nation’s total debt, now $14.29 trillion, is the cumulative result of budget deficits extending back at least 30 years. Republicans blame all this on “out-of-control spending.” No, that debt is the product of our politics—of open elections and successive Congresses and presidencies, some of them Republican, sifting through all sorts of public wants, such as subsidized medical care for the elderly. Running alongside, the American people went to work every day and produced the tax revenue that enabled these wants to become history’s biggest public budget.
This isn’t just numbers. It’s who we are and what we’ve become. Politics R Us. Now, after all these decades of politicking, the two parties have arrived at a $14 trillion debt limit. We are going to decide right here who we will be in the future.
Some part of the American people manifestly does not want to go further into what this debt represents. Some do want to go further. As always, we will work this out, not with tear gas in the streets, but through the two political parties. Independent voters, that great swath of Hamlets who never quite know what they want, will have to cast a vote in 2012 that matters beyond the next election cycle.
The way we watch these fights through the media suggests four guys named Obama, Boehner, Biden and McConnell will work something out, and the ship of state will groan forward. That’s not quite true. This intractable debt fight is the result of opposed forces in the body politic more powerful than this foursome.
In November 2010, an anxious American public, stunned by the wreckage caused by the 2008 financial crisis, swept Republicans into power. Absent those political forces, it’s likely a debt-limit increase, with Mickey Mouse taxes, already would have passed a status quo Congress with the Republicans waving some matador defense at the onrushing trillions. So far, that hasn’t happened.
As to the Democrats, given the huge scale of the spending numbers beneath the debt-reduction talks, how to explain the mismatch of their piddling cats-and-dogs tax proposals, such as taxing private jets? For them, the negotiation’s numbers are irrelevant. What matters is protecting the principle of raising taxes to pay for public spending in the future.
In the universe inhabited by this generation’s Democrats, public spending is life and taxes are their oxygen. The party’s base—progressives, unionists, liberal politicians, comedians—is furious over the Obama decision in December to extend the Bush tax rates. Now they’re engulfed in the math of this spending-reduction nightmare with the safety valve of big taxes shut.
The debt-limit debate has made explicit that the Democrats will address whatever debt and deficit concerns are agitating the public by matching an upward spending curve with a steadily rising stream of tax revenue. The Obama budgets have pushed spending to 24% of the nation’s total output. The party’s economists argue this is “normal” given the entitlement commitments to retiring baby boomers. This is what America wanted, they say. We gotta pay for it. A proposal this week by Sens. Joe Lieberman and Tom Coburn to cut Medicare spending by $600 billion—over 10 years—was virtually laughed out of the room by Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi.
What’s ultimately at stake here may be found in the dry pages of the Congressional Budget Office’s Long-Term Budget Outlook released this month. From 2022 through 2085, CBO projects annual GDP growth of 2.2%, and growth in real earnings per worker of 1.4%. For 63 years! In short: We become Europe.
To seal the Faustian entitlement bargain, we eventually cave and consent to higher taxes to “pay for” what we said we wanted through the politics of past decades. We concede the economic and eventually the military future to Asia. We entertain ourselves, like any slow-growth nation, by watching unemployed youth riot in the streets. Or we vote not to do it.
Read more at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304450604576415940355150676.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_BelowLEFTSecond
No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

