shintao
Take Down ~ Tap Out
- Aug 27, 2010
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Now the ugly republican truth starts to emerge of how the republicans plan to balanced the budget. The free ride is over cons, as suspected, the tax cuts were just a disguised social program...............LMAO~ Yet he doesn't address Corporate welfare or the war, just you low life slaves who adore the republican party.
If Republicans take control of the House, as many analysts predict, speaker-in-waiting John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) has pledged to roll back agency spending to 2008 levels and stage weekly votes to eliminate unpopular federal programs.
Those moves may appeal to conservative voters clamoring for smaller government, but they would barely dent the trillion-dollar deficits projected over the next decade by congressional budget analysts - much less fulfill the party's vow in their "Pledge to America" to chart "a path to a balanced budget."
Boehner, for instance, has embraced the possibility of higher taxes, suggesting in a speech in Cleveland this summer that lawmakers should look at clearing out the "undergrowth of deductions, credits, and special carve-outs" in the tax code that are little more than "poorly disguised spending programs." Elections put new focus on government spending
If Republicans take control of the House, as many analysts predict, speaker-in-waiting John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) has pledged to roll back agency spending to 2008 levels and stage weekly votes to eliminate unpopular federal programs.
Those moves may appeal to conservative voters clamoring for smaller government, but they would barely dent the trillion-dollar deficits projected over the next decade by congressional budget analysts - much less fulfill the party's vow in their "Pledge to America" to chart "a path to a balanced budget."
Boehner, for instance, has embraced the possibility of higher taxes, suggesting in a speech in Cleveland this summer that lawmakers should look at clearing out the "undergrowth of deductions, credits, and special carve-outs" in the tax code that are little more than "poorly disguised spending programs." Elections put new focus on government spending
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