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09.05.2008 9:01 pm

Sunday editorial: Now comes the hard part

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mccain_obama_opt.jpgSarah Palin’s hunting skills are marvelous. Joe Biden’s mom is a hoot. John McCain’s wisecracks are hilarious and Barack Obama’s three-point shot is deadly. So stipulated.

Also stipulated: Ms. Palin may have over-reacted to in-law troubles. Mr. Biden was at times too free in borrowing others’ words and ideas. Mr. McCain’s real estate portfolio is impressive, and Mr. Obama’s former pastor is a kook.
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We are under no illusions: In the era of the 24-hour news cycle, hyper-partisan bloggers and talk radio, attack ads, tabloid newspapers, trash television and the blurred line between news and entertainment, stories like these are going to dominate the next two months.

But the issues facing this country are too serious and the presidential election tooimportant to get lost in trivia and gotcha stories. Here are some of the issues and questions that must be addressed by the McCain-Palin and Obama-Biden campaigns before Nov. 4:

For Mr. McCain: Your health care plan calls for taxing employer-provided health insurance worth more than a certain amount. That would amount to an enormous tax hike on millions of middle-class voters who get insurance through their jobs. It also would weaken, perhaps fatally, the existing system of employer-provided health insurance that covers most Americans. Why do you think this would increase access to health insurance?

• You have called for making permanent all of President George W. Bush’s tax cuts, now set to expire at the end of 2010. Economists say this would reduce federal tax revenue by more than $5 trillion over 10 years. On a yearly basis, that’s about a fifth of everything the government spends outside of Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, defense and interest on the national debt. Since all of those fixed costs will be going up, too, where’s the money going to come from to pay for things like the FBI, air traffic control, Homeland Security and education?

• As you know, there is a debate within the Pentagon over whether the United States should focus on counter-insurgency and anti-terrorism warfare or rebuild its strategic arsenal for major conflict. Given the need to rebuild and resupply the Army after the devastation of Iraq, where should the focus of military be directed?

For Ms. Palin: From 2000 to 2003, when you were mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, your town received $11.9 million in federal earmarked funds. As Alaska governor, this year you wrote, “The federal budget, in its various manifestations, is incredibly important to us, and congressional earmarks are one aspect of this relationship.” Have you had a change of heart?

For Mr. Obama:
You have touted your “comprehensive energy plan” that you claim will create 5 million new jobs over the next 10 years by “catalyzing private efforts to build a clean-energy future.” That is 10 times more workers than currently employed in the U.S. automotive industry. Where will those 5 million new workers be working and at what kind of salaries?

• Health insurance premiums increased by 78 percent between 2001 and 2007. Even as the number of people covered by private health insurance decreased slightly, insurance company overhead soared. Why do you think insurance companies could play a productive role in solving the nation’s health care crisis?

• In your eight years in the Illinois Senate, you maintained excellent relations with Democratic power brokers from Chicago, including U.S. Rep. (and now Gov.) Rod Blagojevich, Mayor Richard Daley, state Sen. Emil Jones and Tony Rezko, a businessman and fundraiser who has been convicted of bribery and corruption. Have you ever spoken out about Illinois’ culture of political corruption?

For Mr. Biden: You supported the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act which passed Congress in 2005, making it harder for individuals to get out from under their credit card debt. Because many credit card companies operate in your home state, you were under great political pressure from them. But you also have said you think the bill was a good idea. Do you still believe that, or would you support revisiting federal bankruptcy laws?

38 comments

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jjk–I have lived and traveled out the U.S. as well consensus from people I know there as well as from of surveys and studies seems to be that that the majority of the people in these countries are reasonably happy with their healthcare system. No system is perfect, but although you can find critics of various aspects of these systems, in recent years I haven’t heard from one European, Canadian or Japanese I know who would exchange their system for ours. Most are actually rather smug about the whole issue.

But the point is not that these countries are perfect, or that their systems would work in the very different social environment in the U.S., but that we need to be willing to use them as experiments that allow us to evaluate whether or not a particular strategy might work here.

— IreneK
9:57 am September 7th, 2008

ADULT TALK

I just watched Joe Biden on Meet The Press
He answered some very difficult questions.
Powerful, articulate, specific answers
Without any hateful viscous attack words - none.

I thought of Sarah Palin sitting in the same chair fielding same questions.
and I smiled.

— STL
10:05 am September 7th, 2008

5 DRAFT DEFERMENTS

-A Centrist
“Why don’t you ask Biden about his 5 draft deferments during the height of the Vietnam War. ”

Maybe somebody could ask Dick Cheney at the same time

Cheney’s Five Draft Deferments During the Vietnam Era
http://tinyurl.com/36624

— STL
10:17 am September 7th, 2008

SOCIAL SECURITY

-A CENTRIST
“Does anyone recall what happened to Bush’s promise to fix social security? Shot down by the Dems.”

Nope.
Bush never submitted it to the Republican controlled Congress.
Not well received by either Democrats, Republicans or AARP

— STL
10:30 am September 7th, 2008

TAX CUTS

-A CENTRIST
“Does anyone remember Clinton promising tax cuts for the middle class and when he got in office said, too bad, we can’t afford them.”

Clinton took over in 1993.
“Most taxpayers did not see their federal taxes increase. The 1993 tax increase, however, applied overwhelmingly to high-income taxpayers. The vast majority of American taxpayers saw no increase at all in their income taxes and were touched only by a 4.3 cent increase in the gas tax, which costs a typical household $38 per year.”
http://youdebate.com/DEBATES/clintons_tax_increase.HTM

Significant tax cuts came under Clinton in 1997

— STL
10:45 am September 7th, 2008

IreneK–you can get used to anything and if you have nothing to compare it to, you might be happy. I remember once bringing over a British guy to work for us and when he saw Schnucks he almost cried, but he’d been very happy with what he had until he saw it. You have generations of Britons and Canadians who’ve never known anything else. You make the switch here and you will have chaos. I agree we should use these socialist systems as examples,,,of what not to do.

STL. You compared Joe Biden on a TV talk show to Sarah Palin’s convention speech. Perhaps, had you compared his convention speech to hers you would have seen the same childish partisan attacks. Apples and Oranges.

— jjk
11:02 am September 7th, 2008

SPEECH COMPARISON
-jjk
“You compared Joe Biden on a TV talk show to Sarah Palin’s convention speech. Perhaps, had you compared his convention speech to hers you would have seen the same childish partisan attacks. Apples and Oranges.”

Was Joe’s a partisan speech? - Yes
Was Joe’s a viscous, hateful, demeaning, trash talking speech? - No.

I watched all the speeches given by the P & VP nominees at both conventions.

— STL
11:15 am September 7th, 2008

You must have been watching a different Biden speech than the rest of us. Biden made numerous attacks against McCain and Bush (he couldn’t insult Sarah as she hadn’t been picked at that time). Perhaps it was the post-game analysis by MSNBC that skewed your opinion.

— jjk
11:34 am September 7th, 2008

Here is a video of Obama on This Week this AM calling himself a Muslim.
Don’t blame me for this. He said it, not me!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zQK_EhDhZQ

— A CENTRIST
11:41 am September 7th, 2008

STL- that is exactly why I brought up Biden’s deferments. The media were all over Cheney like white on rice about his. Biden? Not so much - and that was in 2000 BEFORE the war in Iraq.

— A CENTRIST
11:45 am September 7th, 2008

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