By rejecting the tough choices this week, Senate Republicans have guaranteed a future President will face much more difficult budget choices, as they try to explain how their actions support smaller, more responsive government, a claim that those who pay attention will find harder and harder to believe.
Read more ›Post Tagged with: "spending"
Now is the Time to Fight for Freedom
It is not delusional to expect elected officials to keep their word. When a politician says they will fight tooth and nail for something, it is reasonable to expect that they will. It is not delusional to expect an elected official who put his or her hand on a Bible and swore an oath to defend and protect the Constitution of the United States to do that.
Read more ›Gov. Daugaard Signs $4.3 Billion Dollar SD Budget
South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard today signed the General Appropriations Act, which sets the budget for Fiscal Year 2016. Including general, federal and other funds, the total budget for Fiscal Year 16 is set at $4.3 billion dollars.
Read more ›Overturning the Election Results This Week?
In November, America believed it had elected a conservative House and Senate to provide checks on the Obama Administration. This upcoming week, the results of that election may effectively be overturned.
Read more ›Budgeting for Dependency and Big Government
You can tell a lot about someone’s priorities by sneaking a peak at their budget. From churches and charities to Fortune 500 companies and individual households, financial statements show true colors, not just lip service. President Obama’s recently-released budget is no different and it showed the world what we already knew — he’s a tax-and-spend liberal with out-of-whack priorities.
Read more ›Don’t Tell Someone Else
In our new Omerica, I think I’ll join the winning side and try spending more than I make every day for the rest of my life and see how that works out. If I can just manage to get to where I owe so much that I’m too big to fail, I can start really living large on federal handouts, excuse me bailouts, excuse me stimulus.
Read more ›How a Deficit Doubles Itself Into $1 Trillion in Debt
The budget deficit for Fiscal Year 2014 was only $484 billion. In 2015, it will rise to $583 billion, after which it will return to below the $500 billion mark. There’s only one problem. It bears little resemblance to how much money the U.S. Treasury will actually need to borrow to pay for all of the obligations of the federal government over the coming years. In fact, in the 2014 Fiscal Year, the national debt rose by almost $1.1 trillion.
Read more ›Taxpayer-Paid Lobbyists in Pierre
One can understand and accept that private individuals and organizations should be able to make an appeal to their own government in protection of their own interest. But what about government appealing to government in its own interest? When it comes to taxpayer-funded lobbyists in Pierre, the taxpaying public doesn’t have a chance against this crew. Here’s why.
Read more ›Bankrupt? Who’s Bankrupt?
A few years ago, with tongue securely in cheek, I wrote about the Fed buying treasury bonds. I tried using the absurd to make a point. I explained this would be like issuing your own credit card, buying everything you want, paying for the credit card with your checking account, and filling the checking account with cash advances from the credit card. I was just kidding. I never thought this would actually happen. It has. My problem is that it’s getting hard to be absurd in America today.
Read more ›Conservatives Were Right to Oppose CRomnibus
Speaker John Boehner passed the last government funding bill by appealing to Democrat votes in the House to offset the more than 25 percent of his Republican Conference which refused to support him. After the benefit of time to review some of the specifics of the so-called Cromnibus, the only surprise is that a majority of House Republicans voted for it.
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