Sunday, March 08, 2009

Yeah Right...

After the Inauguration, I took a break from blogging and even the news in general for the sake of my dentist and blood pressure. The buffoons, swindlers, and elitist crooks that have managed to pass themselves as American citizens holding office in the congress and executive branch of our government were causing me to grit my teeth so bad that I had to take a break from the breathless and enthusiastic reporting of the evisceration of our republic.

Just today on CNN, Peter Orszag, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, was quoted saying: “This president will bring a halt to pork-laden bills.
He says it is too late to cut earmarks from the spending bill inherited from the Bush administration.
"[Such bills] will not happen when the president has the full legislative and appropriations process in place,"


He argued that the White House had little choice but to support the $410 billion omnibus spending bill, which it inherited from the previous administration. The bill would keep the government running through 2009.

"This is like your relief pitcher coming into the ninth inning and wanting to redo the whole game," Orszag said. "Next year we're going to be the starting pitcher, and the game's going to be completely different."


But House Minority Whip Eric Cantor rejected the argument and noted that President Obama had vowed to take action against earmarks during the presidential campaign.
"If you make a promise, people expect that you live up to it. And that's why this administration's refusal to go in and change this bill, I think, is a false position," Cantor told "State of the Union."
"There is no way anyone could take what Mr. Orszag has said with any credibility," Cantor said

Both Parties have Completely lost credibility. Mainly due to the following:
The spending bill contains nearly $8 billion in earmarks, which are pet projects of lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. The Senate postponed a planned vote on the bill Thursday after Democratic leaders came up short of the support they needed to pass it.
While many lawmakers consider at least some of the pet projects worthy, most openly reject the system of slipping earmarks into the bill to try to bring home as much "pork" as possible. But many of those who have complained about earmarks also have earmarks in the bill. They argue that until everyone is prevented from taking part in the process, their states or districts should not lose out

In a debate last September against Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, Obama discussed earmarks and vowed to go "line by line to make sure that we are not spending money unwisely."

Obama has vowed to sign the spending bill.

"Would we have written this thing differently? Absolutely," Orszag told King. "But we face a basic choice here. ... Is it uglier than we'd like? Yes. But again, this was negotiated last year. We think we should just move on. When we are engaged in the fiscal year 2010 appropriations process, it's going to look a lot different."

But Cantor, R-Virginia, said "people are expecting this administration to live up to the promises made."

Asked whether his argument is undermined by the earmarks from Republicans, Cantor responded that he and House Minority Leader John Boehner had asked their party to adopt a moratorium on the practice. Indeed, some lawmakers from both parties have
called for a moratorium.

"There is no question that we've got to change this entire process. It is a system gone bad," Cantor said.



Here's a news flash.

We don't have an economic problem. We don't have a Social Security insolvency problem, either.
Nor do we have a world image problem, a taxation problem, a national debt problem, or spending, policy, infrastructure, housing, banking, farming, poverty, unemployment, trade, fuel, commerce, or energy problems.

What we do have is a parochial, childish, corrupt, partisan, egotistical, tenure-driven, "me-based," out-of-touch, deceitful, reactive-versus-proactive, pork-laden, elitist Congress problem.

Any 535 randomly selected American citizens can do as good as or as bad as the current House and Senate.

Frankly, they can probably do better. These elected so-called "leaders" bathe in their own high self-image, mindless of what real America thinks of them.

Fix Congress and we can then start getting down to repairing the issues and challenges of our society.

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