Figures don't lie: Democrats do

rollinbud

Active Member
May 23, 2012

It's been breaking news all over MSNBC, liberal blogs, newspapers and even The Wall Street Journal: "Federal spending under Obama at historic lows ... It's clear that Obama has been the most fiscally moderate president we've had in 60 years." There's even a chart!

I'll pause here to give you a moment to mop up the coffee on your keyboard. Good? OK, moving on ...

This shocker led to around-the-clock smirk fests on MSNBC. As with all bogus social science from the left, liberals hide the numbers and proclaim: It's "science"! This is black and white, inarguable, and why do Republicans refuse to believe facts?

Ed Schultz claimed the chart exposed "the big myth" about Obama's spending: "This chart -- the truth -- very clearly shows the truth undoubtedly." And the truth was, the "growth in spending under President Obama is the slowest out of the last five presidents."

Note that Schultz also said that the "part of the chart representing President Obama's term includes a stimulus package, too." As we shall see, that is a big, fat lie.

Schultz's guest, Reuters columnist David Cay Johnston confirmed: "And clearly, Obama has been incredibly tight-fisted as a president."

Everybody's keyboard OK?

On her show, Rachel Maddow proclaimed: "Factually speaking, spending has leveled off under President Obama. Spending is not skyrocketing under President Obama. Spending is flattening out under President Obama."

In response, three writers from "The Daily Show" said, "We'll never top that line," and quit.

Inasmuch as this is obviously preposterous, I checked with John Lott, one of the nation's premier economists and author of the magnificent new book with Grover Norquist: Debacle: Obama's War on Jobs and Growth and What We Can Do Now to Regain Our Future.

(I'm reviewing it soon, but you should start without me.)

It turns out Rex Nutting, author of the phony Marketwatch chart, attributes all spending during Obama's entire first year, up to Oct. 1, to President Bush.

That's not a joke.

That means, for example, the $825 billion stimulus bill, proposed, lobbied for, signed and spent by Obama, goes in ... Bush's column. (And if we attribute all of Bush's spending for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and No Child Left Behind to William Howard Taft, Bush didn't spend much either.)

Nutting's "analysis" is so dishonest, even The New York Times has ignored it. He includes only the $140 billion of stimulus money spent after Oct. 1, 2009, as Obama's spending. And he's testy about that, grudgingly admitting that Obama "is responsible (along with the Congress) for about $140 billion in extra spending in the 2009 fiscal year from the stimulus bill."

Nutting acts as if it's the height of magnanimity to "attribute that $140 billion in stimulus to Obama and not to Bush ..."

On what possible theory would that be Bush's spending? Hey -- we just found out that Obamacare's going to cost triple the estimate. Let's blame it on Calvin Coolidge!

Nutting's "and not to Bush" line is just a sleight of hand. He's hoping you won't notice that he said "$140 billion" and not "$825 billion," and will be fooled into thinking that he's counting the entire stimulus bill as Obama's spending. (He fooled Ed Schultz!)

The theory is that a new president is stuck with the budget of his predecessor, so the entire 2009 fiscal year should be attributed to Bush.

But Obama didn't come in and live with the budget Bush had approved. He immediately signed off on enormous spending programs that had been specifically rejected by Bush. This included a $410 billion spending bill that Bush had refused to sign before he left office. Obama signed it on March 10, 2009. Bush had been chopping brush in Texas for two months at that point. Marketwatch's Nutting says that's Bush's spending.

Obama also spent the second half of the Troubled Asset Relief Fund (TARP). These were discretionary funds meant to prevent a market meltdown after Lehman Brothers collapsed. By the end of 2008, it was clear the panic had passed, and Bush announced that he wouldn't need to spend the second half of the TARP money.

But on Jan. 12, 2009, Obama asked Bush to release the remaining TARP funds for Obama to spend as soon as he took office. By Oct. 1, Obama had spent another $200 billion in TARP money. That, too, gets credited to Bush, according to the creative accounting of Rex Nutting.

There are other spending bills that Obama signed in the first quarter of his presidency, bills that would be considered massive under any other president -- such as the $40 billion child health care bill, which extended coverage to immigrants as well as millions of additional Americans. These, too, are called Bush's spending

Frustrated that he can't shift all of Obama's spending to Bush, Nutting also lowballs the spending estimates during the later Obama years. For example, although he claims to be using the White House's numbers, the White House's estimate for 2012 spending is $3.795 trillion. Nutting helpfully knocks that down to $3.63 trillion.

But all those errors pale in comparison to Nutting's counting Obama's nine-month spending binge as Bush's spending.

If liberals will attribute Obama's trillion-dollar stimulus bill to Bush, what won't they do?
http://www.anncoulter.com/columns/2012-05-23.html
 

problemsolver

Active Member
Right. The Democrats, statistics and facts are all lies because Man Coulter said so.
With all due respect, allow me to moderate this. Rollinbud opened up the thread with citations of real statistics. Carne Seca replied with a bit of sarcasm. When an argument is presented with facts they must be countered on that same level to be held credible. That's not bias, that's reason.
 

overgrowem

Well-Known Member
May 23, 2012

It's been breaking news all over MSNBC, liberal blogs, newspapers and even The Wall Street Journal: "Federal spending under Obama at historic lows ... It's clear that Obama has been the most fiscally moderate president we've had in 60 years." There's even a chart!

I'll pause here to give you a moment to mop up the coffee on your keyboard. Good? OK, moving on ...

This shocker led to around-the-clock smirk fests on MSNBC. As with all bogus social science from the left, liberals hide the numbers and proclaim: It's "science"! This is black and white, inarguable, and why do Republicans refuse to believe facts?

Ed Schultz claimed the chart exposed "the big myth" about Obama's spending: "This chart -- the truth -- very clearly shows the truth undoubtedly." And the truth was, the "growth in spending under President Obama is the slowest out of the last five presidents."

Note that Schultz also said that the "part of the chart representing President Obama's term includes a stimulus package, too." As we shall see, that is a big, fat lie.

Schultz's guest, Reuters columnist David Cay Johnston confirmed: "And clearly, Obama has been incredibly tight-fisted as a president."

Everybody's keyboard OK?

On her show, Rachel Maddow proclaimed: "Factually speaking, spending has leveled off under President Obama. Spending is not skyrocketing under President Obama. Spending is flattening out under President Obama."

In response, three writers from "The Daily Show" said, "We'll never top that line," and quit.

Inasmuch as this is obviously preposterous, I checked with John Lott, one of the nation's premier economists and author of the magnificent new book with Grover Norquist: Debacle: Obama's War on Jobs and Growth and What We Can Do Now to Regain Our Future.

(I'm reviewing it soon, but you should start without me.)

It turns out Rex Nutting, author of the phony Marketwatch chart, attributes all spending during Obama's entire first year, up to Oct. 1, to President Bush.

That's not a joke.

That means, for example, the $825 billion stimulus bill, proposed, lobbied for, signed and spent by Obama, goes in ... Bush's column. (And if we attribute all of Bush's spending for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and No Child Left Behind to William Howard Taft, Bush didn't spend much either.)

Nutting's "analysis" is so dishonest, even The New York Times has ignored it. He includes only the $140 billion of stimulus money spent after Oct. 1, 2009, as Obama's spending. And he's testy about that, grudgingly admitting that Obama "is responsible (along with the Congress) for about $140 billion in extra spending in the 2009 fiscal year from the stimulus bill."

Nutting acts as if it's the height of magnanimity to "attribute that $140 billion in stimulus to Obama and not to Bush ..."

On what possible theory would that be Bush's spending? Hey -- we just found out that Obamacare's going to cost triple the estimate. Let's blame it on Calvin Coolidge!

Nutting's "and not to Bush" line is just a sleight of hand. He's hoping you won't notice that he said "$140 billion" and not "$825 billion," and will be fooled into thinking that he's counting the entire stimulus bill as Obama's spending. (He fooled Ed Schultz!)

The theory is that a new president is stuck with the budget of his predecessor, so the entire 2009 fiscal year should be attributed to Bush.

But Obama didn't come in and live with the budget Bush had approved. He immediately signed off on enormous spending programs that had been specifically rejected by Bush. This included a $410 billion spending bill that Bush had refused to sign before he left office. Obama signed it on March 10, 2009. Bush had been chopping brush in Texas for two months at that point. Marketwatch's Nutting says that's Bush's spending.

Obama also spent the second half of the Troubled Asset Relief Fund (TARP). These were discretionary funds meant to prevent a market meltdown after Lehman Brothers collapsed. By the end of 2008, it was clear the panic had passed, and Bush announced that he wouldn't need to spend the second half of the TARP money.

But on Jan. 12, 2009, Obama asked Bush to release the remaining TARP funds for Obama to spend as soon as he took office. By Oct. 1, Obama had spent another $200 billion in TARP money. That, too, gets credited to Bush, according to the creative accounting of Rex Nutting.

There are other spending bills that Obama signed in the first quarter of his presidency, bills that would be considered massive under any other president -- such as the $40 billion child health care bill, which extended coverage to immigrants as well as millions of additional Americans. These, too, are called Bush's spending

Frustrated that he can't shift all of Obama's spending to Bush, Nutting also lowballs the spending estimates during the later Obama years. For example, although he claims to be using the White House's numbers, the White House's estimate for 2012 spending is $3.795 trillion. Nutting helpfully knocks that down to $3.63 trillion.

But all those errors pale in comparison to Nutting's counting Obama's nine-month spending binge as Bush's spending.

If liberals will attribute Obama's trillion-dollar stimulus bill to Bush, what won't they do?
http://www.anncoulter.com/columns/2012-05-23.html
.......Recently the House had a chance to defund Obama's raids on MMJ. clinics.The Dems. supported it,the Repubs. did NOT. As far as a choice between Dems. or Repubs., that should be all that a "End the war on MJ."supporter needs to know.
 

rollinbud

Active Member
.......Recently the House had a chance to defund Obama's raids on MMJ. clinics.The Dems. supported it,the Repubs. did NOT. As far as a choice between Dems. or Repubs., that should be all that a "End the war on MJ."supporter needs to know.
Cute, but you are making a total distortion of the facts... The resolution was a bipartisan effort. The amendment was defeated with the amendment failing 163-262 -- 50 Democrats opposed it and 28 Republicans supported it. You make it sound like all Repubs. were against it when in fact they were not and not all the Democrats supported it either. What the "End the war on MJ."supporter needs to know is that as a presidential candidate, then-Senator Obama said his administration would not use its resources to undermine state medical marijuana laws but according to the medical marijuana defense group Americans for Safe Access, the DEA has undertaken more than 200 raids against medical marijuana dispensaries and associated businesses since it took office in 2009.
Why did Obama say one thing and do another?
Here more reading for you:
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2012/may/09/house_representatives_votes_down
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Cute, but you are making a total distortion of the facts... The resolution was a bipartisan effort. The amendment was defeated with the amendment failing 163-262 -- 50 Democrats opposed it and 28 Republicans supported it. You make it sound like all Repubs. were against it when in fact they were not and not all the Democrats supported it either. What the "End the war on MJ."supporter needs to know is that as a presidential candidate, then-Senator Obama said his administration would not use its resources to undermine state medical marijuana laws but according to the medical marijuana defense group Americans for Safe Access, the DEA has undertaken more than 200 raids against medical marijuana dispensaries and associated businesses since it took office in 2009.
Why did Obama say one thing and do another?
Here more reading for you:
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2012/may/09/house_representatives_votes_down
It is hard for people to admit they voted in a person who mostly just panders to them.
 

overgrowem

Well-Known Member
Cute, but you are making a total distortion of the facts... The resolution was a bipartisan effort. The amendment was defeated with the amendment failing 163-262 -- 50 Democrats opposed it and 28 Republicans supported it. You make it sound like all Repubs. were against it when in fact they were not and not all the Democrats supported it either. What the "End the war on MJ."supporter needs to know is that as a presidential candidate, then-Senator Obama said his administration would not use its resources to undermine state medical marijuana laws but according to the medical marijuana defense group Americans for Safe Access, the DEA has undertaken more than 200 raids against medical marijuana dispensaries and associated businesses since it took office in 2009.
Why did Obama say one thing and do another?
Here more reading for you:
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2012/may/09/house_representatives_votes_down
...28 yea and 212 nay for a chance to end the raids and a chance to put Obama down on the national stage, but the Repubs. would rather continue the raids by a wide margin over Dems.A cold shower might have cooled his zeal for future attacks.
 

Fungus Gnat

Well-Known Member
That means, for example, the $825 billion stimulus bill, proposed, lobbied for, signed and spent by Obama, goes in ... Bush's column
Incorrect the stimulus is added to Obama.

Nutting's "analysis" is so dishonest, even The New York Times has ignored it.
Incorrect they even criticized that spending has been cut under Obama.
The MarketWatch piece isn’t really a surprise to anyone who has kept an eye on budgets and spending for the last few years. It says spending under Mr. Obama (including the stimulus) has grown by about 1.4 percent a year, compared to 7.3 percent in George W. Bush’s first term, 3.2 percent in Bill Clinton’s first term, and 8.7 percent in Ronald Reagan’s first term. When inflation is taken into account, spending is now actually falling, the first decline since Richard Nixon.The reason for this decline is that Republicans in Congress have successfully constrained Mr. Obama’s desire to spend more. By threatening a government shutdown a year ago, for example, they won spending cuts of about $25 billion over a decade. Then they threatened to send the government into default, and achieved cuts of more than $2 trillion over a decade. More extortion can be expected later this year.
rest here: http://takingnote.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/23/the-spending-binge-that-wasnt/
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
lol @ New York times. Trying to fool you all with some kind of inflation trick to make you think Obama isn't spending anything at all. "Official" inflation is less than 2.3%. During Reagan's 1st term it was nearly 12%, So I guess that means Reagan actually saved 4% and never spent a dime? Some of NY Times readers would actually believe that.

5% inflation during Clinton
4% during GWB


BTW Inflation is not controllable by the US Government. Inflation is controlled by the Fed. Presidents don't have any say over what the Fed does.
 

londonfog

Well-Known Member
With all due respect, allow me to moderate this. Rollinbud opened up the thread with citations of real statistics. Carne Seca replied with a bit of sarcasm. When an argument is presented with facts they must be countered on that same level to be held credible. That's not bias, that's reason.
says the puppet with the brand spanking new account. Its like damn....Does RIU really only have like 25 members, the rest are extra accounts from members who can't get their point across with one account, so they make extra accounts thinking that truth is in numbers. Now thats fuckin lame.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Cute, but you are making a total distortion of the facts... The resolution was a bipartisan effort. The amendment was defeated with the amendment failing 163-262 -- 50 Democrats opposed it and 28 Republicans supported it.
doing a little math, that means 135 democrats supported it, and 212 republicans opposed it.

so that makes it 135-50 for the democrats, and 28-212 for the republicans.

take your copy and pastes and your sock puppet accounts, shove them up your ass. maybe you'll get a little smarter, since that seems to be where you speak from.
 

rollinbud

Active Member
I see you just glossed over the fact that the original resolution was a bipartisan effort...
You can keep your sock puppet, I'm sure you need it.

by the way it wasn't a copy/paste job entirely.

I guess the rest is just over your head.
The thread isn't about this amendment to start with and if you are voting for your hero zero solely because of this you probably shouldn't be voting. Next time try to stay on topic and now, go play in the street.
 
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