This guy is going to be all over the news the next few days…
He’s the one crafting the Republican Budget that destroys Medicare…
He’s the new darling of the far Right…
I really think the only thing he may be qualified for is to replace the actor playing Eddie Munster in “The Adams Family”…
Look at him closely….
Great article from Dean Baker at the Huffington Post:
Congressman Paul Ryan is the new darling of both the Republican Party and the major media outlets. He has put forward bold plans for dismantling Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. Congressman Ryan is prepared to tell tens of millions of workers that they can no longer count on a secure retirement and decent health care in their old age. In Washington policy circles, this passes for courage.
Outside of Washington, people have a different conception of bravery. After all, over the last three decades the policies crafted in Washington have led to the most massive upward redistribution in the history of the world. The richest 1 percent of the population has seen is share of national income increase by close to 10 percentage points. This comes to $1.5 trillion a year, or as Representative Ryan might say, $90 trillion over the next 75 years. That’s almost $300,000 for every man, woman and child in the United States.
This upward redistribution creates the real possibility that many of our children will be poorer than we are. If Representative Ryan and his followers really cared about future generations, then we might expect him to push for policies that reverse some of this upward redistribution.
For example, we could break up the large banks (e.g. Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan) that operate with implicit government protection. This allows them to borrow money at below market interest rates and undercut their smaller competitors. By my calculations, the size of this subsidy to the largest banks is close to $35 billion a year, almost half the size of the long-term Social Security shortfall that concerns Mr. Ryan so much. If Mr. Ryan could man up a little, maybe he would have the courage to tell the big Wall Street banks that they will have to compete in a free market without this subsidy from the government.
It’s not only the big banks that make Representative Ryan cower. He’s also scared of the pharmaceutical industry. As a result of government-enforced patent monopolies, we spend close to $300 billion a year on drugs that would cost us around $30 billion a year. The potential savings of $270 billion a year is about three times the size of the projected Social Security shortfall.
Representative Ryan is a big fan of Medicare vouchers, however his voucher system does nothing to address our broken health care system while virtually guaranteeing that most seniors will not be able to afford decent health care. How about a voucher system that gives Medicare beneficiaries the option to buy into the more efficient health care systems in Europe and Canada, with the taxpayer and beneficiary splitting the savings? Well, that one could hurt profits of the insurance industry and major health care providers, so Mr. Ryan is against it.
MORE: Dean Baker: It’s Time for Representative Ryan to Man Up.
The End of Compassionate Conservatism
The House Republicans have done the almost impossible: Made George W Bush look good compared to themselves…
Most Progressives, like me, always thought the concept of Compassionate Conservatives was Public Relations BS. And it was…
But we obviously had not anticipated this heartless bunch of new GOP House members…
And of course the Democrats don’t now how to fight this- either in Congress or with a coherent message strategy.
The good news is I think the GOP over reach will eventually be their undoing. At least for a while…
We will just have to hope they don’t kill too many people in the meantime….
From the New Republic:
AND
via House Republicans Turn Out The Lights On President Bush’s Compassionate Conservatism | The New Republic.
Share this:
Leave a comment
Filed under Elections, Politics, Social Commentary
Tagged as Congress, Conservatives, Health Care, politics, The Economy