Click here to view this media As our friend Jed Lewinson pointed out over at the Daily Kos, GOP candidate and so-called “moderate” Jon Huntsman called for some “shared sacrifice” from the rich on the PBS Newshour this Thursday, but of course that “sacrifice” should not come in the form of a tax increase. I agree completely with this assessment of that statement by Huntsman during the interview: Excuse me, but isn’t punting on that question pretty much the definition of hesitating? And how can you be taken seriously if you simultaneously rule out tax increases? Sure, Huntsman talks a good game, and he’s great at delivering “adult in the room” soundbites, but when comes down to it, on the most important issues, he’s every bit as big a baby as every other Republican in the field. What Lewinson left out was some of the claptrap we heard leading up to that. This guy is supposed to be what’s considered a “moderate” candidate in the GOP presidential primary field, but what was he touting here? The same old tired talking points we’ve heard out of the rest of them. Flatten our tax structure and raise taxes on lower income earners, meaning the poor and the middle class. Qualified with weasel words like we could take a “progressive approach” to raising income taxes on those who don’t make enough money to be paying them now. During this interview he also promoted means testing Social Security which would turn it into a welfare program, which of course is just one step in getting rid of it altogether. He also promoted lowering taxes on corporations to make us “more competitive” and to “attract investment” which just equals another race to the bottom on wages and rewarding our under taxed corporations who still would have no incentive to put Americans back to work if we don’t do something to fix our trade laws and our tax structure which rewards companies for offshore tax havens and for hiring slave labor overseas. I don’t know how much worse things are going to have to get before we move both parties back over to the left instead of what passes for the “center” these days and either party starts enacting policies where they do the right thing and help the unemployment problem we’ve got here before we end up as some third world country with nothing but rich and poor. Sadly the only group of politicians I’ve seen that from who look like they genuinely have the interests of the American worker at heart is the Progressive Caucus in the House. All I heard from this supposedly “moderate” Republican candidate was more of the same promoting the policies that got us to where we are now with our economy being in horrible shape, more tax cuts for those that don’t need them, and more dismantling of our social safety nets. Transcript via PBS below the fold: JEFFREY BROWN: Now, on the main issue of the day, the economy, jobs, you have talked about reforming the tax code – a flat or a flatter tax. JON HUNTSMAN: Right. JEFFREY BROWN: Does that mean that you oppose, or would you like to end the progressive tax code that we have? JON HUNTSMAN: I think that what we have is dated. I think 17,000 pages that make up our tax code make it a little top-heavy and a little unpredictable for a lot of people longer-term, particularly on the business side. I would like to do what we did in the state of Utah, which is: phasing out the deductions; phasing out the loopholes; phasing out corporate welfare, the biases that are inherent at this very top-heavy tax code; buying down the rate in a revenue-neutral fashion, broadening the base and leaving the tax code a whole lot more competitive for the 21st century. JEFFREY BROWN: But does broadening the base bring lower-end lower-wage earners into paying taxes, many who don’t today? And does it end the, as I said, the progressive nature of our tax code, or does it change it so that lower-wage earners pay more in taxes and upper-end come down? JON HUNTSMAN: You – it – it would change elements of the tax code to that end. It would bring more people into the tax code who would then become taxpayers. You could bring that in gradually. I mean, there could be a progressive approach to bringing a certain segment of the population in. But basically, it does – it lowers the rate, flattens the rate, and I think leaves it a whole lot more competitive for where this country needs to be in the future. JEFFREY BROWN: Competitive but fair. I mean, one of the things people would say is, the nature of our tax code has benefited those lower-wage earners. JON HUNTSMAN: Well, the tax code going forward has got to benefit everyone in this country. One of our problems is, we’re not attracting investment, we’re not necessarily attracting brain power, we’re not expanding our economic foundation because our tax code is not up-to-date. It isn’t competitive. And I believe if we’re going to help everybody and bring more people the opportunity that this country traditionally has, we got to have a different tax code. It just can’t continue on as it is. So I look at the options out there, and I think, you know, you can phase out the deductions and the loopholes and the biases, and you can use that revenue to buy down the rate. And I say that because that’s where I’ve been, and that’s what we did in our state. And I think it is applicable here at the national level. And that’s the conversation I would like to have with the people of this country. JEFFREY BROWN: One specific current issue is the question of the extension of the payroll tax cuts. Now, these cuts were made last year to try to get more money into the pockets of working people. They – they’re due to end in January, and there is a question of whether they should be extended. A number of Republicans have suggested that that’s not a priority. What – where do you come down? JON HUNTSMAN: I think the payroll tax cut is a good thing. I think it helps a whole lot of people, and I think it’s something that would serve to stimulate this economy going forward. So it’s something I would – JEFFREY BROWN: So it should be extended. JON HUNTSMAN: I would consider extending it. JEFFREY BROWN: Another on the tax issue – the investor and philanthropist Warren Buffett has written recently of how those at the very, very high end can and should pay more in taxes. Is he right? JON HUNTSMAN: Well, I would say that there’s going to have to be a shared sacrifice in this country. And I think that people at all levels are going to have to step up, whether it’s recognizing that Medicare is going to be done a little differently; Social Security is going to be done a little differently. And as president, I wouldn’t hesitate to call on sacrifice from all of our people, even those at the very highest end of the income spectrum. I think there’s – JEFFREY BROWN: Higher taxes for those at the highest – JON HUNTSMAN: There’s – there is – well, I’m not saying – (chuckles) – higher taxes. I’m saying that there are contributions that they can make, too. And as president, when you look at the full spectrum of options at where this country is and what we need to deliver – a truly competitive economy for our people – we’re going to have to ask for sacrifice. And I’m not going to hesitate to do that. JEFFREY BROWN: What does that mean, though, specifically? JON HUNTSMAN: Over time, we’re going to figure that out. But I’m not going to give a one-size-fits-all scenario there. I know that there are people who can give, perhaps, more than others maybe as it relates to the means testing around Social Security and Medicare – people who don’t need these programs. And I think we need to look realistically at where we are, where our vulnerable spots are, where our vulnerable populations are, recognize that for what it is and recognize those populations that don’t need these programs, and make some choices around that. JEFFREY BROWN: On the foreign policy front, as we sit here today, rebels in Libya have taken Tripoli. Moammar Gadhafi is on the run, and it looks as though his long dictatorship is over. Now, you opposed originally President Obama’s decision to intervene – or working with NATO. Were you, in retrospect, wrong about that? JON HUNTSMAN: I don’t think so. I don’t – I cheer on the rebels. I don’t yet know what that means in terms of leadership going forward. I don’t know what it means in terms of respecting human rights. Although with the National Transition Authority, I heard some of the right language. But there are a lot of question marks, still, about how this is going to play out: what it means to the people of Libya; what it means to the economy and regional stability longer term. So my original premise was based on Libya not being a core U.S. national security interest. And I maintain that view today. Although I cheer on the rebels, and I think it’s terrific, Tunisia and Egypt kind of did it on their own. They didn’t need the United States to move those transitions forward. I think the same is true in Libya. We applaud the rebels, but I have to tell you, the future of the United States is not tied to Libya – and it’s not tied to Afghanistan, and it’s not tied to Iraq. I hate to – I hate to inform you, it’s really tied to whether or not this country is up for the competitive challenges of the 21st century. And that’s an economic battle that’s going to play out across the Pacific Ocean more than anything else.
Continue reading …Is there an end to the stupid? It’s a rhetorical question, don’t answer. Eric Cantor’s remarks about federal aid and Tuesday’s earthquake centered in his district transcend stupid and go straight to dense. Via ThinkProgress : “There is an appropriate federal role in incidents like this,” Cantor said. That role? The bare minimum. According to Cantor, Congress’s traditional practice of providing disaster relief without strings attached — a policy its followed for years — is going way beyond the call of duty. If Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) asks for federal aid, Cantor insists that the relief be offset elsewhere in the federal budget: The next step will be for Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) to decide whether to make an appeal for federal aid, Cantor said. The House Majority Leader would support such an effort but would look to offset the cost elsewhere in the federal budget. But that’s not the worst of what he said. It’s quite similar to what he said after Joplin, MO was devastated by a tornado. No, the real stupid came after the initial selfish, heartless, disgusting, cynical denial of federal aid. While touring the damage in his district, Cantor surmised, “Obviously, the problem is that people in Virginia don’t have earthquake insurance. ” As the Insurance Information Institute notes, “earthquakes are not covered under standard U.S. homeowners or business insurance policies, although supplemental coverage is usually available.” So, for Cantor, the problem here is that Virginians didn’t have the foresight to predict an exceedingly rare natural disaster and pay out of their own pocket in advance. Until last Tuesday, the largest earthquake to hit that region was a 3.2 magnitude quake in 2010. Buildings along that corridor are not built to be earthquake-safe. This is because earthquakes are rare. If one were to buy supplemental disaster insurance, it would more likely be insurance to cover damage due to hurricanes, not earthquakes, assuming any insurer would actually sell earthquake insurance in a non-earthquake zone where buildings are not built to withstand earthquakes. How stupid is this? We all know Cantor is the insurance and financial industry golden boy, but I’d be embarrassed to have bought and paid for such a stupid politician if I were his keepers. What’s next? Denying federal aid to people in Hawaii for not buying insurance against blizzards?
Continue reading …Asked the biggest difference between himself and George W. Bush, Texas governor and new Republican White House front runner Rick Perry answered, “I went to Texas A&M. He went to Yale.” Which isn’t far from the truth. After all, their pronouncements on policies and personal beliefs are eerily similar . And when it comes to donning the executioner’s hood in the death penalty mecca that is Texas , Rick Perry and George W. Bush are almost indistinguishable. As the Washington Post documented, Governor Perry is America’s reigning death penalty champion, exceeding the body count of his predecessor in Austin: In his nearly 11 years as the state’s chief executive, Perry, now running for the Republican presidential nomination, has overseen more executions than any governor in modern history: 234 and counting. That’s more than the combined total in the next two states — Oklahoma and Virginia — since the death penalty was restored 35 years ago. Perry’s apparent enthusiasm for Texas’ popular death penalty process doesn’t end there: He vetoed a bill that would have spared the mentally retarded, and sharply criticized a Supreme Court ruling that juveniles were not eligible for the death penalty. He has found during his tenure only one inmate on Texas’s crowded death row he thought should receive the lesser sentence of life in prison. If this all sounds hauntingly familiar, it should. During the 2000 campaign, Americans were introduced to another Texas governor who was unapologetic about condemning his state’s residents to death. George W. Bush carried out 152 executions during his days as Governor of Texas, sparing only one death row inmate after his routine 15 minute clemency review . Even those similarly adopting Jesus as their favorite philosopher could expect no leniency from Bush. When his allies on the religious right pressured him to spare murderess turned jailhouse born-again Christian Karla Faye Tucker , Governor Bush displayed his trademark resolve – and compassion. As Time recounted in 1999: Tucker Carlson of Talk magazine described the smirk Bush wore as he mimicked convicted murderer turned Christian Karla Faye Tucker begging, “Please don’t kill me,” something she never actually did. Bush’s seeming bloodlust towards criminal defendants almost derailed his 2000 presidential campaign. During his second debate against Al Gore in October 2000, Bush was asked about his position on hate crimes laws in the wake of the brutal dragging death of African-American James Byrd in his home state of Texas. His disturbing response – accompanied by a sickening grin – produced gasps among the audience: “The three men who murdered James Byrd, guess what’s going to happen to them? They’re going to be put to death. A jury found them guilty. It’s going to be hard to punish them any worse after they get put to death.” Even the tone-deaf Bush sensed he had crossed the line. In the third debate , he wisely retreated, acknowledging he was “not proud” of Texas’ number one ranking in executions. As President, George W. Bush maintained his hard line towards criminals and upholding their punishments. His administration argued – unsuccessfully – before the Supreme Court that developmentally-disabled and under-18 death row inmates too deserve their chance at the gallows. Attorney General Gonzales announced that the Bush department of Justice would push for new, harsher mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Booker decision. Shortly before his resignation, Gonzales unveiled new federal regulations enabling the Attorney General to “fast-track” executions in state capital punishment cases. If anything, Rick Perry has been even more zealous than George W. Bush when it comes to flipping the switch on Texas’ death row inmates. While President Bush sought to intervene in 2007 on behalf of Jose Ernesto Medellin and 50 other Mexican citizens facing execution in Texas, Governor Perry took the other side and won: Still, Perry has been an aggressive advocate. He battled the Bush administration in the Supreme Court when the president tried to force state courts to review the death sentences of 51 Mexican nationals who had not been allowed to consult Mexican authorities. The court ruled in Perry’s favor, 6 to 3. More disturbing still, Perry’s dead men walking has apparently included innocent men . As the Post reported, “death penalty opponents say 12 men on Texas’s death row have been exonerated.” And as Mother Jones detailed: He refused to stay the execution of Cameron Todd Willingham, and, after the fact, when the evidence began to overwhelmingly suggest that Willingham had been innocent, he replaced three members of the commission that had been reviewing the case. (Perry stands by the execution, insisting that Willingham was a “monster.”) After two decades on death row, Anthony Graves was released only after a lengthy investigation from Texas Monthly showed that he had been wrongfully convicted. For Perry, the Graves case was a feature and not a bug. “He’s a good example of, you continue to find errors that were made and clear them up,” Perry told the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. “So I think our system works well.” George W. Bush couldn’t have said it better. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …Help could be on the way for struggling homeowners with government-backed mortgages: The Obama administration is considering a proposal that would allow such homeowners to refinance their mortgages at today’s interest rates, which hover around a low 4%. Many homeowners can’t currently refinance because they owe more than their house’s…
Continue reading …Pretty much everyone seems to agree : A video love note Jim Carrey recorded for the actress Emma Stone, apropos of nothing, is creepy. An apparently serious Carrey tells Stone how beautiful she is and envisions the “chubby little freckle-faced kids,” not to mention the sex, they would have if only…
Continue reading …Rep. Paul Ryan is so afraid of his constituents he had his office doors locked against those who came to get some answers. Daily Kos: Afraid of the protesters he would draw for his plan to slash the social safety net in order to make the rich richer, this month Rep. Paul Ryan cancelled public town halls in favor of events requiring paid tickets . In response, unemployed constituents in Ryan’s district are asking for face-to-face meetings by conducting sit-ins at his local offices . So far, Ryan’s staff has twice threatened to call the police on those protesters. The protests are continuing despite these threats, and so is the escalation from Paul Ryan’s office. Yesterday, cameras were banned at one of his local offices, as Wisconsin Jobs Now showed through the photo on the right. Further, one of the protesters, Andrew Cole, was told by the police that Ryan’s office has now restricted parking , with tickets and towing threatened. Now today, numerous reports have emerged that the protesters have been locked out of the office . Wisconsin Jobs Now has more: Long story short, the protest will go on outside for the moment. But why is the Congressman bringing in the police to kick a bunch of peaceful and unemployed constituents that want nothing more than for the representative to schedule a public town hall like he has dozens of times before. Is he just tired of them asking? Or is he somehow offended by the their message: that we need real job-creation legislation and not just tax breaks for corporations and billionaires. Indeed. Without a House of Representatives that takes job creation seriously, there isn’t a lot the President can do on his own. As long as Paul Ryan and his gang of Republican thugs thinks the economy will grow by gutting the social safety net while transferring even more of this nation’s wealth to the wealthy, jobs will remain on the back burner. We’re on the fifth day of the protests. How long will Paul Ryan duck his own constituents’ concerns?
Continue reading …Home Office and police reject proposals including banning suspected rioters from using social networking sites during civil unrest The government has climbed down on plans to ban suspected rioters from social networking websites including Facebook and Twitter in times of civil unrest. Unprecedented measures such as shutting down websites and banning users are understood to have been dismissed by all sides early at a Home Office summit between the home secretary, Theresa May, and the major social networks on Thursday afternoon. The one-hour discussion focused on how law enforcement can better use Twitter and Facebook as part of day-to-day operations as well as in emergencies. A Home Office spokeswoman said: “The home secretary, along with the culture secretary and Foreign Office minister Jeremy Browne, has held a constructive meeting withthe Association of Chief Police Officers, the police and representatives from the social media industry. “The discussions looked at how law enforcement and the networks can build on the existing relationships and co-operation to prevent the networks being used for criminal behaviour.” The notion of banning suspected rioters from social networks was first raised by David Cameron a fortnight ago when he vowed to do “whatever it takes” to prevent a repeat of the unprecedent riots and looting across England. The prime minister announced that the social networks, including BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion, had been summoned to a Home Office meeting when responding to questions from MPs in the House of Commons. A Twitter spokeswoman said: “Governments and law enforcement agencies around the world use Twitter to engage in open, public communications with citizens. “We’ve heard from many that Twitter is an effective way to distribute crucial updates and dispel rumours in times of crisis or emergency. “People also use Twitter as a the first place to get information, monitor quickly changing events in real-time, and connect with friends, family and their communities. “We are always interested in exploring how we can make Twitter even more helpful and relevant during times of critical need.” Social networking Crime UK riots Police Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk
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