Matt Ortega

I'm Voting for ''That One''

"We don't throw the first punch, but we'll throw the last."
--Senator Barack Obama

McCain Economic Plan: Magic Wand Public Policy

Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) released a thirteen-page economic plan this week entitled “Jobs for America” that the campaign touts as “comprehensive” that is rife with incoherent and nonsensical plans like massive tax cuts while promising to balance the budget by 2013. Josh Marshall summed it up as such:

I think we may have come to that moment, that quick turn of events, that encapsulates the fact that there is apparently no limit to the howlers and nonsense that John McCain can throw out and still not generate collective guffaws or even scrutiny from the national political press.

Bear with me on this one because it’s genuinely mind-boggling.

Marshall continued to rip the plan as well as the silence of the media on the plan’s flaws and just pure incoherence and lack of even the most basic application of logic.

Now, the general routine is the face of this kind of candidate announcement is that journalists and economists look at the numbers to see if they add up. In most cases, the exercises generates fairly unsatisfying contradictory opinions, with some experts saying one thing and other experts another.

But here’s the thing. McCain doesn’t have any numbers. None. Not vague numbers of fuzzy math. He just says he’s going to do it. Any other candidate would get laughed off the stage with that kind of nonsense or more likely reporters just wouldn’t agree to give them a write up. But this is all over the place.

The centerpiece of this plan includes extending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy indefinitely and reaping all the savings from “victory” in Afghanistan and Iraq.

This is what’s behind McCain’s promise. I’ll do a lot of things that will get the deficit down. One of them is the the guarantee of victories in Iraq and Afghanistan and obviously that will save a lot of money.

As I said, this is the reductio ad absurdum of the mad pass John McCain gets on everything. He’s pledging to balance the budget in four years and when asked for details he says, ‘We’ll get back to you on that.’

Marshall wrote last night in prelude to the official release of the plan:

McCain’s people do realize that there is no budget mark down for ‘victory’. Whatever victory’s other merits, it is only reductions in expenditures directed (in the broadest sense) toward the war zones that get you actual budget savings.

Is McCain saying that both wars will be over by the end of his first term? And if so, is that victory with all or most of the troops staying on post-victory, as he’s implied? Or will they all have left by then? Remember, Adm. Mullen says we need more troops in Afghanistan to deal with spiraling situation developing there. But we don’t have any more because of our commitments in Iraq.

And if his four-year balanced budget promise is premised on rapid victory in both theaters, isn’t that sort of arbitrary timelines on steroids?

But, in actuality, what else could one expect from a guy who has no idea what he is talking about when it comes to economics? He may have just set the bar a bit too high for himself. I mean, thirteen full pages pages, single-spaced. Wow. Sounds like they pulled an all-nighter in Camp McCain like a lazy college student on a term paper — and the quality of product shows. To put it simply, this plan is pure imagination based on fantasyland expectations severely lacking in actual dollar figures and rife with inconsistencies — and that is a generous description.

Pop Quiz

Take the Bush-McCain Challenge. Can you tell them apart?

YouTube Preview Image

McCain Makes the Case: Third Bush Term

Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) tried to counter charges from Democrats that his candidacy is offering a third Bush term in the infamous Green Monster Speech. Unfortunately for John McCain, he argued about his strident support for President Bush three years ago. Since that interview, according to Congressional Quarterly, McCain sided with the President 89 percent (2006), 95 percent (2007) and 100 percent (2008) of the time in the U.S. Senate.

Not a whole lot of “distance” there.

YouTube Preview Image

Inhofe Ad Suggests Iraq Located in Africa

According to the latest advertisement released by the campaign for Senator Jim Inhofe (R-Oklahoma), the senator and his crack squad of admen believe Iraq is in Africa. The part of the script in question reads as follows:

Ethiopia. Zambia. Iraq. Twenty-nine intense trips in 12 years to the front — to the saddest parts of Africa.

Watch below — it may not be up for long:

YouTube Preview Image

State Senator Andrew Rice is the Democratic nominee set to meet Senator Inhofe in the fall.

Last Throes

Vice President Dick Cheney declared that we were seeing the “last throes of the insurgency” in 2005. Three years later, the insurgency is stronger now than it was then, and we are still there.

The vice president said he expected the war would end during President Bush’s second term, which ends in 2009.

October 12, 2008

Polls

  • Which party do you think will win the White House in 2008?

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...

del.icio.us

Audio

Featured Video

More Video