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Question for Paul Krugman: Are Things Better Today Than In January 2007?

A recurring theme from liberal media members as we approach the midterm elections is that Americans have to vote for Democrats in November so the nation doesn’t go back to the way things were when Republicans ran everything. A perfect example is New York Times columnist Paul Krugman who on Friday penned a piece called “Downhill With the G.O.P.”: Never mind the war on terror, the party’s main concern seems to be the war on arithmetic. And this party has a better than even chance of retaking at least one house of Congress this November. Banana republic, here we come. In the midst of all this ” Do you really want to go back to those days ” talk is a staggering ignorance concerning how ” those days ” compare to now: In January 2007 before the Democrats took over Congress, unemployment was 4.6 percent; now it’s 9.6 percent. In January 2007 there were 7.1 million unemployed people in America; now there are 14.9 million. In January 2007 the median home price was $210,600; today it’s $179,300. In January 2007 the Dow Jones Industrial Average was at 12,500; today it’s at 10,840. In January 2007 the gross federal debt was $9 trillion; today it’s $13.5 trillion. The poverty rate in 2006 was 12.3 percent; now it’s 14.3 percent In the final budget created by a GOP-controlled Congress, the deficit was $160 billion; now it’s $1.6 trillion. Add it all up and: there were half as many people out of work then; houses were worth 17 percent more; stocks were 16 percent higher; the federal debt was 33 percent lower; poverty was 14 percent lower, and; the deficit was 90 percent lower!  As such, I ask Mr. Krugman and all liberal media members stumping for Democrats: is America really better off today than it was in January 2007? If so, how ?

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Question for Paul Krugman: Are Things Better Today Than In January 2007?

Paul Ryan Strikes Back at ‘Intellectually Lazy’ Paul Krugman

Republican Congressman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin has struck back at Paul Krugman calling the New York Times columnist “intellectually lazy.” As NewsBusters reported Saturday, Krugman wrote an article the previous day castigating Ryan as ” The Flimflam Man ” calling the Congressman a “charlatan” and a “fraud” while claiming his “Roadmap” to balance the nation’s budget was “drenched in flimflam sauce.” Krugman’s criticisms of the Republican rising star were of course praised by all manner of media member from the shills at MSNBC to the sycophants in the liberal blogosphere. Since then, Ryan has responded and responded well, first at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on Saturday: The assertion by Krugman and others that the revenue assumptions in the “Roadmap” are overly optimistic and that my staff directed the Congressional Budget Office not to analyze the tax elements of the “Roadmap” is a deliberate attempt to misinform and mislead. I asked the CBO to analyze the long-term revenue impact of the “Roadmap,” but officials declined to do so because revenue estimates are the jurisdiction of the Joint Tax Committee. The Joint Tax Committee does not produce revenue estimates beyond the 10-year window, and so I worked with Treasury Department tax officials in setting the tax reform rates to keep revenues consistent with their historical average. What critics such as Krugman fail to understand is that our looming debt crisis is driven by the explosive growth of government spending – not from a lack of tax revenue. Krugman also recycles the disingenuous claim that the “Roadmap” – the only proposal certified to make our entitlement programs solvent – would “end Medicare as we know it.” Ironically, doing nothing, as Democrats would prefer, is certain to end entitlement programs as we know them, and in the process, beneficiaries would face painful cuts to these programs. Conversely, the “Roadmap” would pre-empt these cuts in a way that prevents unnecessary disruptions for current beneficiaries. It reforms Medicare and Social Security so those in and near retirement (55 and older) will see no change in their benefits while preserving these programs for future generations of Americans. As Ryan noted, his recommendations are hardly as extreme as liberal shills like Krugman claim: Far from the “radical” label that critics have tried to pin on it, the Medicare reforms in the “Roadmap” are based on suggestions made by the National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare, chaired by Sen. John Breaux (D-La.). That commission recommended in 1999 “modeling a system on the one members of Congress use to obtain health care coverage for themselves and their families.” With respect to Medicare and Social Security, the “Roadmap” puts in place systems similar to those members of Congress have. There has been support across the political spectrum for these types of reforms. By dismissing credible proposals as “flimflam,” critics such as Krugman contribute nothing to the debate. Standing on the sidelines shouting “boo” amounts to condemning our people to a future of managed decline. Absent serious reform, spending on entitlement programs and interest on government debt will consume more and more of the federal budget, resulting in falling standards of living and higher taxes as we try to sustain an ever larger social welfare state. The American people deserve a serious and civil discussion about how to reduce our exploding debt and deficit. By relying on ad-hominem attacks and discredited claims, Krugman and others are missing an opportunity to contribute to this discussion and are only polarizing and paralyzing attempts to solve our nation’s fiscal problems. On Sunday, Krugman replied at his Times blog: As I predicted , a snow storm of words, dodging the math questions. Notice that Ryan does not address the issue of the zero nominal growth assumption, and how that assumption – not entitlement reforms – is the key to his alleged spending cuts by 2020. By the way, if you look at the artful way his excuses are constructed – giving the false impression that he couldn’t get a revenue score for love nor money – how is that not flimflam? On Monday, Ryan spoke with The Weekly Standard’s John McCormack to further clarify the situation: “I realize he’s a columnist and not a journalist, yet he could have easily tried to have verified his claims with a phone call or an email,” Ryan said of Krugman. “Instead he went with his confusion and chose to impugn motives,” said Ryan, “which strikes me as a very intellectually lazy exercise or style.” Krugman wrote on his blog on Saturday that “Ryan could have gotten JCT to do a 10-year estimate; it just wouldn’t go beyond that. And he chose not to get that 10-year estimate.” Ryan says that’s not true. “We asked Joint Tax to do it,” Ryan told me. “They said they couldn’t. They don’t do them long-term outside the 10 year window. They couldn’t do it in the first 10 years because of just how busy they were.” Ryan says Krugman could have cleared this confusion up with a simple phone call. “Megan McArdle figured it out on her own,” Ryan said, referring to a blog post by The Atlantic ‘s business and economics editor.  Clearing up confusion is never Krugman’s modus operandi, as he’s made a living misinforming the public on such issues. But Ryan wasn’t done: Ryan also responded to Krugman’s criticism that his domestic discretionary spending freeze is impractical and doesn’t spell out exactly which programs would be cut. “Domestic discretionary spending went up 84 percent last year,” said Ryan. “There has been such a gusher of domestic discretionary spending that I think we can live with a freeze for a long time to come.” The point of a spending freeze, said Ryan, is to put “strong enforceable controls in place and then make the experts, whether it be the appropriators or the agencies, come up with a way to live within their means.” Ryan marvelously concluded: “The Roadmap is designed to maintain a limited government in the 21st century, and it is the antithesis of the progressivist vision which [Krugman] subscribes to. That’s fine. I understand it violates his vision for a progressivist society,” Ryan continued. “What I think is rather bizarre is his strange personal attack and ad hominem attacks based upon his confusion surrounding the scoring process, which could have been easily clarified with a simple phone call or email.” “I’m not going to descend into the mudpit with Krugman on this stuff,” Ryan said. “I want to stay on policy and ideas.” Actually, mudpit would be an uptick considering the nether regions folks like Krugman propagandize from, for his attacks on Ryan were typically devoid of facts. As NewsBusters reported Saturday, the primary statistical source for Krugman’s “Flimflam” piece, the liberal Tax Policy Center, quickly corrected the record on Friday surprisingly defending Ryan. But Krugman isn’t concerned with that. As Hot Air’s Allahpundit noted Tuesday, the Times columnist is part of an orchestrated strategy by the Left to attack all on the Right that are gaining traction with the American people: It’s the same reason why Chris Matthews went to such pains to make Ryan look unserious and why the DNC is now lumping him in with candidates like Sharron Angle in an attempt to make him seem kooky . According to the Narrative, today’s conservatives are a horde of feral, brainless bigots following whatever primitive impulses their political id generates. Ryan, being both soft-spoken and very intellectually serious about the unsustainability of entitlements, is both a threat to that narrative and to the welfare state itself. As such, frankly, he’s lucky he’s gotten off as easy as he has thus far. Potentially, he’s progressive public enemy number one.  Indeed. What also makes Ryan so dangerous to folks like Krugman is that he represents a new breed of young, extremely intelligent, and attractive conservatives that could very well be presidential material in the future. As such, the liberal attack machine in the media feels it’s necessary to bash him whenever possible and without any concern for the facts. As the fabulous David Byrne sang decades ago, “Same as it ever was.” 

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Paul Ryan Strikes Back at ‘Intellectually Lazy’ Paul Krugman

CBS ‘Evening News’ Bemoans Lack of Diversity in FDNY

On Monday’s CBS Evening News, anchor Katie Couric praised the heroism of the New York City Fire Department but fretted: “…a federal judge says something is missing in their ranks: Diversity.” Correspondent Jim Axelrod began a report on the topic by noting: “Fire Captain Paul Washington has a big problem with his department.” Washington declared the FDNY to be “all-white, lily white.” Axelrod described how “Eight years ago, the fire department was 92 percent white and only 2.8 percent black, in a city that was 24 percent black. A disparity that remains largely unchanged.” A sound bite was featured from Columbia Law School Professor Suzanne Goldberg, who like Couric, noted the department’s heroism, but went on to describe the lack of diversity as a “singular embarrassment.” Touting how “a federal judge agreed” with Goldberg, Axelrod explained: “…the hiring test to become one of New York’s bravest was not just discriminatory, but illegal. [The judge] ordered the city to fix it.” As Axelrod mentioned the judge’s ruling, a few sample questions from the supposedly discriminatory test appeared on screen. One set of questions asked applicants to respond to a particular firefighting scenario: “What would be the most direct entrance for firefighters to take to save the children?…The probable cause of the fire was?…How many ways can firefighters enter the house?” Axelrod never cited any specific criticisms of the entrance exam. Even so, a clip was played of Washington claiming: “Blacks don’t fare as well as whites on this test, probably due to the disparity in education.” Axelrod added: “Now the judge says the city has been dragging its feet and tightened the screws, appointing a special master to ensure New York does what big cities like Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami did long ago when they were sued.” Acknowledging opposition to the judge’s ruling, Axelrod mentioned: “FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix doesn’t think New York needs to follow their example.” In an exchange with Mannix, Axelrod pressed: “Look at Los Angeles. Look at Philadelphia. Look at Boston.” Mannix replied: “Quotas. Quotas. Quotas.” Axelrod insisted: “Whatever your method, they corrected racial imbalance.” Mannix responded: “By using quotas, and we are against quotas.” Axelrod continued: “Mannix believes the current FDNY test focuses too much on producing a racially diverse department and not enough on identifying the strongest candidates regardless of race.” Mannix explained: “You’re asking me to make my job more dangerous to – to satisfy a social engineering experiment.” Axelrod’s report concluded with another sound bite from Goldberg: “I find it shocking that the fire department looks like it does today. And the city is fighting the decision and threatening appeal rather than going ahead and giving the city the fire department that it deserves.” A final sound bite of Washington was also played: “I want to see black New Yorkers share in this job, because, as I say, it’s not a good job, it’s a great job.” Axelrod proclaimed: “The only thing Paul Washington wants to change about this great job is the way New York City decides who gets it.” Here is a full transcript of the segment: 6:44PM KATIE COURIC: The fire department here in New York City is one of the most respected in the world and second only to Tokyo in size. The FDNY has well over 11,000 firefighters and officers, and their heroism on 9/11 and on many other occasions is legendary. But as Jim Axelrod reports, a federal judge says something is missing in their ranks: Diversity. JIM AXELROD: New York City Fire Captain Paul Washington has a big problem with his department. PAUL WASHINGTON: This fire department has been all-white, lily white, for almost 150 years now. And I mean, it has to end. AXELROD: Eight years ago, the fire department was 92 percent white and only 2.8 percent black, in a city that was 24 percent black. A disparity that remains largely unchanged. A group of African-American firefighters sued. SUZANNE GOLDBERG [COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL]: The fire department in New York on the one hand is tremendously heroic, and the whole world knows about its heroism. And on the other hand, we have this kind of singular embarrassment. AXELROD: Last January, a federal judge agreed, ruling the hiring test to become one of New York’s bravest was not just discriminatory, but illegal. He ordered the city to fix it. WASHINGTON: Blacks don’t fare as well as whites on this test, probably due to the disparity in education. AXELROD: Now the judge says the city has been dragging its feet and tightened the screws, appointing a special master to ensure New York does what big cities like Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami did long ago when they were sued. They now have much greater diversity, but FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix doesn’t think New York needs to follow their example. Look at Los Angeles. Look at Philadelphia. Look at Boston. PAUL MANNIX: Quotas. Quotas. Quotas. AXELROD: Whatever your method, they corrected racial imbalance. MANNIX: By using quotas, and we are against quotas. AXELROD: Miami, in particular, expanded recruitment by targeting young minorities still in public schools with high school EMT training classes. Today they have firefighters like Maurice Kemp to show for it. That’s Chief Maurice Kemp, the department’s first African-American in charge. MAURICE KEMP: Like all other major city departments, it doesn’t come without a struggle. I mean, we have to be conscious of the fact that we need to be diverse. AXELROD: Mannix believes the current FDNY test focuses too much on producing a racially diverse department and not enough on identifying the strongest candidates regardless of race. MANNIX: You’re asking me to make my job more dangerous to – to satisfy a social engineering experiment. AXELROD: Mannix doesn’t officially speak for the city, but both the fire department and the mayor declined our request for an interview. In a statement, the city said that it disagrees with the court’s findings that these tests were discriminatory and intends to appeal. The city says next time it hires, the incoming class will be one-third minority. But no new firefighters have been hired in the last two years and no one knows when the city will hire again. GOLDBERG: I find it shocking that the fire department looks like it does today. And the city is fighting the decision and threatening appeal rather than going ahead and giving the city the fire department that it deserves. WASHINGTON: I want to see black New Yorkers share in this job, because, as I say, it’s not a good job, it’s a great job. AXELROD: The only thing Paul Washington wants to change about this great job is the way New York City decides who gets it. Jim Axelrod, CBS News, New York.

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CBS ‘Evening News’ Bemoans Lack of Diversity in FDNY

Video: The Broken Window Fallacy

Liberals are constantly insisting that government spending will stimulate the economy and create lots of jobs. Here is all you need to know to realize how wrong that theory is: For more on the video and how absurd liberal economic policies are make sure you check out this post at the Eyeblast blog.

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Video: The Broken Window Fallacy

Calls to ‘Rein in the Federal Government’ Are ‘Not Very Rational,’ Al Hunt Declares on ABC

“The side that talks about the need to rein in the federal government” is “not very rational,” yet “is winning” the debate over whether to pass another “stimulus” bill, Al Hunt regretted on Sunday’s This Week on ABC. The former Washington Bureau Chief for the Wall Street Journal, who’s Washington Editor for Bloomberg where he hosts Bloomberg TV’s Political Capital show, fretted over how “right now, that argument – that we have to rein in because the stimulus didn’t work — well, I think most economists would say the stimulus did work in the sense it would have been a lot worse if there hadn’t been one.” Hunt’s assessment came in reaction to an outnumbered Dan Senor, the lone voice on the panel against additional government spending to spur the economy and who warned of a Greece in our future. New York Times columnist Paul Krugman charged the 2009 stimulus bill wasn’t big enough and proposed that in the face of a likely $20 trillion debt in ten years, “whether we borrow another $500 billion now” is “really trivial,” Cynthia Tucker of the Atlanta Constitution yearned for a new “robust stimulus” and Jorge Ramos of Univision declared: “We need more government intervention.” Hunt ( columns ), however, took aim at the rationality of anyone opposed to massive additional government spending, as he expounded on the July 4 This Week: AL HUNT: I think the fundamental problem here, Jake [Tapper], and Dan [Senor] I think what you’re talking about is five, seven, ten years out, not right now. We can’t walk and chew gum at the same time. We ought to be dealing with long-term deficits in the long-term, and short-term stimulus, which this incredibly sluggish economy needs right now. The politics just are lousy, though Jake. I don’t know if it’s Republicans, if it’s conservative Democrats, but the side that talks about the need to rein in the federal government – this is not very rational, has really, is winning that debate. And when you talk to people about the stimulus, Paul [Krugman] may be right there should have been a bigger stimulus. Barack Obama thinks there should have been a bigger stimulus. The reason there wasn’t is you couldn’t get it through even a year ago. I mean, meet Ben Nelson, but- JAKE TAPPER: Or Susan Collins or Olympia Snowe or Arlen Specter. HUNT: But right now, that argument – that we have to rein in because the stimulus didn’t work — well, I think most economists would say the stimulus did work in the sense it would have been a lot worse if there hadn’t been one. But when people talk about the stimulus, they associate it with bank bailouts and auto bailouts which had nothing to do with this. From April: “ Bloomberg Editor Al Hunt Attacks Tea Partiers: ‘That’s Not America ‘”

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Calls to ‘Rein in the Federal Government’ Are ‘Not Very Rational,’ Al Hunt Declares on ABC

Media Defend Obama’s Call for More Spending, Despite G-20 ‘Rift’

In the wake of a European debt crisis, the recent G-20 meeting in Toronto revealed the intention of many European nations to begin dramatically tightening their fiscal belts. The world leaders agreed to cut deficits in half by 2013 and “start to stabilize their debt-to-output ratios by 2016,” according to Bloomberg Businessweek. That goal conflicted with President Barack Obama’s wishes. During the economic summit, he ” urged continued spending to support growth .” Overall, the news media have been supportive of the Obama’s spending requests, a trend some continued in reports about the summit. An “American Morning” segment painted a flattering picture of Obama at the G-20 summit by ignoring the “rift” between Obama’s push for more stimulus and Europe’s desire to slash budgets. Christine Romans made it sound as if everyone came to an agreement. John Roberts introduced Romans segment saying, “The G-20 summit final communiqué was issued yesterday with a big nod toward both deficit reduction and continuing stimulus and you’ve got to wonder how do you have both.” Romans replied that the group was “saying that they can do both. In the very near term keep the stimulus going, but longer term they have to look to cutting deficits.” In contrast, CBS “Evening News” declared that Obama “for the most part did not succeed” at convincing European leaders to agree to more spending. ABC “World News Sunday” reported that Obama had “lost an argument,” but sided with his calls for greater spending by warning that “some economists say that (budget cutting) could plunge the world into a second recession.” While other economists “say” that stimulus is not the answer, “World News” didn’t include any of those voices and had only one economist on that night to support additional spending. Liberal New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman went even further than “World News” in an attempt to scare up support for more spending. Krugman’s June 28 column warned that the economy is in the beginning stages of a ” third depression ,” and austerity would push us into one. His claims were promoted by the fill-in host of “The Ed Show” on MSNBC and his guest, left-wing economist Dean Baker, on June 28. Few people in the news media have challenged such calls for government spending, but some people on the financial network CNBC have supplied other views. CNBC’s Larry Kudlow and Steve Forbes debunked Krugman’s claim on June 28. Kudlow said, “But Steve, the so-called spending cuts or tax increases or deficit reduction hasn’t happened yet. In the last two years, we’ve had gargantuan spending and ultra-easy money, which is what Professor Krugman has been advocating the whole time. And he still thinks we’re in a depression. So I need to ask you, maybe his policies are what threaten the depression.” Forbes agreed and replied, “It’s like the old physicians who continue to bleed the patient and wonder why the patient isn’t getting better and then bleeds the patient even more.” Forbes argued that the U.S. needs spending cuts, tax cuts (or at least maintaining tax rates) and the stabilization of the dollar. CNBC’s Rick Santelli had a much different recipe for economic recovery than Krugman, shouting on June 28, “I want the government to stop spending! Stop spending, stop spending, stop spending, stop spending! That’s what we want, stop spending!” After a heated debate with CNBC’s Steve Liesman, Santelli declared: “Our deficit is too big and we need to knuckle under and we need to live too prudently, prudently.” Obama Wants to Spend Now, Pay Later Obama urged countries at the G-20 summit to continue spending, but CBS “Morning News” reported June 28 that “even before the summit, President Obama says he intended to slash deficit spending in half by 2012.” That would be an enormous challenge since the federal deficit is projected to reach $1.6 trillion this year, according to Reuters. ” I’m serious about it ,” Obama said at a G-20 news conference. Reuters reported that Obama’s special deficit commission will make recommendations Dec. 1, after the 2010 congressional elections. “I’m doing it because I said I was going to do it,” Obama said. “People should learn that lesson about me, because next year, when I start presenting some very difficult choices to the country, I hope some of these folks who are hollering about deficits and debt step up, because I’m calling their bluff.” Ryan Ellis, tax policy director for Americans for Tax Reform, pointed out the timing of Obama’s “difficult choices.” Ellis told the Business & Media Institute, “Why isn’t he proposing these ‘very difficult choices’ now, before the election? Is he afraid that his tax increases (which are all he could be talking about) would be unpopular?” Another tax expert, Andrew Moylan of the National Taxpayers Union, told BMI “‘Difficult choices’ is thinly veiled code for massive tax hikes that would be necessary to pay for Washington’s unconscionable spending spree.” Moylan said he thought “we’re likely to see proposals to eliminate at least some of the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts (in all likelihood, raising the top rate back to 39.6 percent, reinstating a death tax of something like 45 percent, and eliminating the lower capital gains and dividends tax rate of 15 percent).” And that’s “on top of the myriad other tax hike proposals,” Democrats have suggested like an energy tax and financial transaction tax, Moylan said. What sort of impact would those tax hikes have on an economic recovery? Moylan told BMI no tax hikes improve economic growth so “we can say with confidence that those tax hikes would make the recovery slower than it might otherwise be.” Media Embraced Obama’s Spendy Ways, Blamed Deficit on Bush Obama has spent like no other since he became president. In 2010, he submitted the largest federal budget ever at a whopping $3.8 trillion. To put this in perspective: Obama is proposing a budget $700 billion larger than big spender Pres. George W. Bush’s last budget. It’s twice the size of Pres. Bill Clinton’s last budget of $1.9 trillion, who was credited with generating a budget surplus. Despite that “staggering” budget, at the time broadcast networks managed to paint Obama as a fiscal conservative and deficit slasher. The news media, with few exceptions, promoted Congress and Obama’s spending spree by favorably reporting the $ 787 billion stimulus , the auto bailout , the Cash for Clunkers program and rarely asking how it would all be paid for down the road. Now that government stimulus is unpopular with Americans, the networks barely reported Obama’s request for $50 billion to bail out state and local governments. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., is also asking for $165 billion to bail out labor union pensions. Journalists have used multiple tactics to shift blame away from Obama’s spendthrift ways. In some cases, reports have simply ignored massive deficits. Others have agreed that Obama needed to spend in order to fix the economy, despite the deficits that would be incurred. Still others have repeated the White House’s own claim that the previous administration is to blame for the huge debt. On Oct. 8, 2009, CBS “Evening News” ignored the fact that the federal deficit had risen to $1.4 trillion , three times what it was one year earlier. But on Oct. 7, 2008, under President George W. Bush, Katie Couric made sure to mention the “record federal deficit” had tripled from the prior year. In 2010, after Obama submitted the largest federal budget in history, with a projected deficit of $1.6 trillion, the networks showed their support. NBC’s Savannah Guthrie portrayed all the excess spending as a way to get the economy back on track saying: “He’s asking for $100 billion to spur job growth – things like tax cuts for small business, tax breaks to increase wages – and he’s doing this knowing that it will drive up the deficit, certainly even more in the short term. But all economists agree the real way to get a chunk out of the deficit is to increase hiring.” Guthrie was highlighting only a tiny fraction of the overall budget and failed to criticize the administration for not finding ways to cut more waste. Taking a slightly different tack to express support, CBS’s Bill Plante agreed with the president’s spending priorities on Feb. 1, 2010, saying Obama “needs’ to spend right now. “He needs to spend more money in the short-term to create jobs, but he desperately needs to spend a lot less over the long-term,” Plante said on “The Early Show.” Stories also followed Obama’s lead in blaming his predecessor for the huge deficit. Many reporters pointed their fingers at the Bush administration, including ABC’s David Muir. His Feb. 1 “World News” report nearly copied Obama’s budget announcement right down to the blame on “previous administrations.” Muir pinned the record deficits on President Bush’s tax cuts and war spending when he answered the question: “How did we get here?” His timeline of the expanding federal deficit began with an image of Bush signing a bill and the words “Tax relief for America.” This has long been the claim of the national news media. While Bush was certainly responsible for helping balloon the federal deficit, ATR’s Ellis told the Business & Media Institute the tax cuts weren’t the problem, overspending was. Like Muir, CNN’s Fareed Zakaria demonstrated his economic ignorance by claiming that the Bush tax cuts were “the single largest part of the black hole that is the federal budget deficit.” But the facts don’t bear out Zakaria’s claim. According to Ellis, tax revenues were higher than the average when Bush took office, but fell before the tax cuts because of the dot-com bust and the 2001 recession. “Federal tax revenues are much more dependent on the economy than they are on tax policy. Tax revenues ROSE as a percent of the economy in the years after the BTC (Bush Tax Cuts) became law. They only fell again when the economy imploded,” Ellis explained.

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Media Defend Obama’s Call for More Spending, Despite G-20 ‘Rift’

Krugman Tries to Scare Up More Government Spending with ‘Third Depression’ Rhetoric

According to liberal economic Paul Krugman, a “third depression” will occur if nations tighten their belts and attempt to balance their budgets. Forget about the riots in Greece over a social welfare system the government couldn’t maintain or a $1.4 trillion annual U.S. budget deficit. Krugman claimed that the threat of deflation supersedes both of those results of runaway government spending – that is higher taxes in the long run and a debt to future generations. In his June 28 column for The New York Times , Krugman wrote: “We are now, I fear, in the early stages of a third depression. It will probably look more like the Long Depression than the much more severe Great Depression. But the cost – to the world economy and, above all, to the millions of lives blighted by the absence of jobs – will nonetheless be immense.” At the G-20 meeting in Toronto last week, European leaders encouraged fiscal discipline from the United States, while President Barack Obama pushed an opposite approach. That disappointed the Times columnist. “And this third depression will be primarily a failure of policy,” Krugman continued. “Around the world – most recently at last weekend’s deeply discouraging G-20 meeting – governments are obsessing about inflation when the real threat is deflation, preaching the need for belt-tightening when the real problem is inadequate spending.” Krugman has rarely been concerned by government debt, unless it was for a war or could be used to bash former President George W. Bush. Maintaining his spendthrift perspective, he insisted the concerns raised over government spending have nothing to do with a genuine concern for the financial insolvency of the government or the threat of runaway inflation, but were part of an irrational “orthodoxy.” “So I don’t think this is really about Greece, or indeed about any realistic appreciation of the tradeoffs between deficits and jobs,” Krugman wrote. “It is, instead, the victory of an orthodoxy that has little to do with rational analysis, whose main tenet is that imposing suffering on other people is how you show leadership in tough times. And who will pay the price for this triumph of orthodoxy? The answer is, tens of millions of unemployed workers, many of whom will go jobless for years, and some of whom will never work again.” For 2010, the federal deficit , as a percentage of U.S. gross domestic product is a whopping 10.64 percent, the highest since 1945 in the midst of World War II – an imbalance that worries many people, just not Krugman. Over the past couple years, Krugman has been an outspoken advocate of government stimulus spending, criticized a $775 billion stimulus plan for being too small , called for a second stimulus , and even claimed in 2008 that “we probably have $10 trillion of running room ” when asked how much the government could spend to turn the economy around.

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Krugman Tries to Scare Up More Government Spending with ‘Third Depression’ Rhetoric

Secrets of The New York Times’ Most-Emailed List, Revealed

Ever since Andrew Wiles solved Fermat’s Last Theorem, the greatest intellectual puzzle facing humankind has been: How does The New York Times ‘ “Most-emailed” list work? Science has finally given us the answer! A team of sociologists at the University of Pennsylvania undertook an exhaustive study of the New York Times most-emailed list. They first assembled a data set based on the contents of the list over more than six months. Then they dug in to see why stories ended up there. Thus they unlocked the secret of journalism’s holy grail— and perhaps even of virality itself. Their findings, as reported by the Times’ John Tierney , are a mix of the totally obvious and the Slate -y counter-intuitive. The obvious: A prominently-featured article is more likely to make the list, as is one written by a famous person. Slightly more surprising is the fact that longer articles were more e-mail-worthy. But the most fascinating findings are also the most useful for anyone hoping to make it on the only list that matters, journalism-wise. Using complicated math, researchers identified four qualities of an article which resonate with the ’email-this’ part of readers’ brains. Most-emailed articles are: Awe-inspiring: Being ‘awe-inspiring’ was the quality which most improved an item’s odds of making the list. These articles blow readers’ minds by dealing with something physically or intellectually enormous—a natural wonder, a work of art, a big idea, the indomitable human spirit, etc. People like to share awe-inspiring New York Times articles at lunch so they can forget their own puniness long enough to finish the workday. (Example articles: “Fury of Girl’s Fists Lifts Up North Korean Refugee” and “The Promise and Power of RNA.”) Emotional: If you want to convince a reader to hit the ’email this article’ button, try tugging on their heart-strings with a weepy tale of struggle or redemption. Soon, their offspring will be deleting yet another email from Mom with the subject “You HAVE to read this article. SO SAD!”. (Example: “Redefining Depression as Mere Sadness.”) Positive: “If it bleeds it leads”—the old newspaperman’s cliche—did not hold up under our researchers’ critical gaze. People like to share happy things, apparently. (Example: “Wide-Eyed New Arrivals Falling in Love With the City”) Surprising: Unsurprisingly, people like to share articles that are surprising. Think, things that make you go “woah.” (i.e. a story about chickens in Harlem, or a marathon-running restaurateur.) Using these four variables, we have visually dissected the top five most e-mailed Times articles as of 11pm, Feb. 9th, 2010. Study them, for they hold the secret of Internet immortality: 1. America is not Yet Lost 2. Sinatra Song Often Strikes Deadly Chord 2. The New Math on Campus 4. Have Faith in Love 5. For Students at Risk, Early College Proves a Draw

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Secrets of The New York Times’ Most-Emailed List, Revealed