InetGiant Florida: Land for sale in VANDAVASI Classified Ad on …
InetGiant Florida: Land for sale in VANDAVASI classified ad on InetGiant.com. Free Land for sale in VANDAVASI advertising & online classifieds.This ad was placed with the following tags: homes, estate, estate, horse farm, hunting. read more…
How to set up a Yard Sale (Part One) by the Master Poet | Farmall …
Hello again. This is the old Master Poet. Since a lot of you out…Duration : 0:9:55[youtube 700pmpuJbMQ] read more…
Real Estate Blog - Franklin Farm Homes for Sale - Under Contract …
Under Contract in one week! 13613 Soft Breeze Court, Oak Hill, VA Beautiful 3 Bedroom, 2 full + 2 half Bath single famil home. Backs to Franklin Farm common area w/ trees–great back deck and LL paver patio to enjoy. read more…
From Google Blog Search
How Car Leasing Became So Pleasing
The leasing of personal property has been around a lot longer than you probably think. There has been a huge growth in the United States for leasing businesses since people have viewed it as being a g… read more…
Top 10 Music Festivals in the UK in 2009
Whatever musical genre that takes your fancy, you will be pleased to know that there are many festivals taking place in the UK this year that cater for all types of tastes! We have compiled a list … read more…
Organic Farming in Kerala
ORGANIC farming can be called as Eco Farming as it is a way of agriculture that preserves the ecosystem. It echews the use of harmful chemicals & fertilizers. Cultured are the Symbiotic life forms & w… read more…
From GoArticles.com
Arizona*(Organic farms for sale)*505-715-6595
Arizona*(Organic farms for sale)*505-715-6595: Contact Dave Mahoney . . .
Dave is not a Realtor.
Organic Farms for Sale - Real Estate - Find Organic Farms
Organic farms for sale: USA, Canada, International.
Land for sale, Farms for sale, Rural Property …
Dairy Organic Vegetable Farm (vegetable farm, dairy farm, organic uses) A 64 acre property with an asking price . This property is for sale. …
Organic farms. A network directory of Organic farms, farm real estate, farms and ranches for sale.
Organic Farm
All products, auctions, jobs, careers, Organic Farm, farms for sale, machinery, animal, are brought by farmers, dealers, ranchers and breeders.
Arizona*(Organic farms for sale)*505-715-6595
Classifieds - CCOF: Organic Certification, Trade …..
Organic Farms 4 Sale now Organic Farm, Farmland For Sale, Solar
colorado vineyards orchards organic farms for sale ranch vineyards, wineries, Organic vineyards, orchards, and farms are
Arizona*(Organic farms for sale)*505-715-6595
Open Question: Halloween slider gloves for sale?
Does anyone know any websites that sell halloween slider gloves (like the ones from knotts scary farm) at a cheap price, but good quality. I already checked ghostride.com, and they were to expensive.
Open Question: obama revolution..does this article make sense to any one?
HEY FOLKS I WAS WONDERING HOW YOU GUYS FELT ABOUT THE ”OBAMA REVOLUTION”? IS IT GOOD OR BAD FROM WHAT YOU READ ABOUT THIS ARTICLE.this article doesnt make sense to me i think its rediculous
The Obama Revolution
Paid for by the people.Article
In the closing weeks of last year’s election campaign, we wrote that Democrats had in mind the most sweeping expansion of government in decades. Liberals clucked, but it turns out even we’ve been outbid. With yesterday’s fiscal 2010 budget proposal, President Obama is attempting not merely to expand the role of the federal government but to put it in such a dominant position that its power can never be rolled back.
APThe first point to understand is the sheer magnitude of federal spending built into this proposal. As the nearby chart shows, federal outlays will soar in fiscal 2009 to $4 trillion, or 27.7% of GDP, from $3 trillion or 21% of GDP in 2008, and 20% in 2007. This is higher as a share of the economy than any year since 1945, when the country was still mobilized for World War II. It is more spending by far than during the Vietnam War, or during the recessions of 1974-75 or 1981-82.
But let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Obama is right that this spending is needed now to “jump-start” an economic recovery. Though the budget predicts that the economy will recover in 2010, spending will still be 24.1% of GDP that year, and the budget proposes that spending will remain higher than 22% for the entire next decade even as the defense budget steadily declines. All Presidential budgets predict spending will decline in the “out years,” if only to give the illusion of spending restraint. Mr. Obama tries the same trick, but he is proposing so many new and expanded nondefense programs that his budgeteers can’t get anywhere close even to Jimmy Carter spending levels.
These columns focus on spending, rather than deficits, because Milton Friedman taught us that spending represents the real future burden on taxpayers. Nonetheless, the 2009 budget deficit is estimated to be an eye-popping 12.7% of GDP, which once again dwarfs anything we’ve seen in the postwar era. The White House blueprint predicts that this will fall back down to 3.5% as soon as 2012, but this is based on assumptions about Washington that aren’t going to happen.
For example, Mr. Obama’s budget assumes that nearly all of the new stimulus spending will be temporary — a fantasy. He also proposes to eliminate farm subsidies for those with annual sales of more than $500,000. This is a great idea, and long overdue. But has the President checked with Senators Kent Conrad (North Dakota) or Chuck Grassley (Iowa)? We hope we’re wrong, but a White House that showed no interest in restraining Congress during the recent stimulus bacchanal isn’t likely to stand athwart history to stop the agribusiness lobby.
The falling deficit also assumes the largest tax increase in U.S. history, starting in 2011 with the repeal of the Bush tax rates on incomes higher than $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for couples. The White House says this will yield upwards of $1 trillion, if you choose to believe that tax rates don’t affect taxpayer behavior.
In the real world, two of every three tax filers who fall into this income category are small business owners or investors, who are certainly capable of finding ways to invest that allow them to declare less taxable income. The real impact of this looming tax increase will be to cast further uncertainty over economic decisions and either slow or postpone the recovery. Ditto for the estimated $646 billion from a new cap-and-trade tax, which no one wants to call a tax but would give the political class vast new leverage over the private economy. (See here.)
Then there is Mr. Obama’s plan for national health care. The White House has put a $634 billion place holder in the budget to pay for covering tens of millions of uninsured Americans with government subsidized coverage. But even advocates of this government plan say the cost will be closer to $1 trillion over 10 years, and probably much more. Meanwhile, the President is promising to reform entitlements, but his budget proposes a net increase of about $1 trillion in Medicare, Medicaid and other entitlements.
The biggest illusion in this budget may be its optimistic economic forecast. The White House assumes that the economy will decline by only 1.2% this year, before growing by 3.2% next year. This assumes the recovery will begin later this year and gather steam quickly to return to normal levels of growth. By 2010 to 2013, the budget adds, the economy will be cooking by an average of 4% a year — which is also how it conjures up magical deficit reduction.
This growth is a lovely thought, but how? The only impetus for growth in this budget comes from the government spending more money that it is taking out of the job-producing private economy. With $1 trillion of new entitlements, $1.4 t
Open Question: HOW YOU GUYS FELT ABOUT THE ”OBAMA REVOLUTION”?
HEY FOLKS I WAS WONDERING HOW YOU GUYS FELT ABOUT THE ”OBAMA REVOLUTION”? IS IT GOOD OR BAD FROM WHAT YOU READ ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
The Obama Revolution
Paid for by the people.Article
In the closing weeks of last year’s election campaign, we wrote that Democrats had in mind the most sweeping expansion of government in decades. Liberals clucked, but it turns out even we’ve been outbid. With yesterday’s fiscal 2010 budget proposal, President Obama is attempting not merely to expand the role of the federal government but to put it in such a dominant position that its power can never be rolled back.
APThe first point to understand is the sheer magnitude of federal spending built into this proposal. As the nearby chart shows, federal outlays will soar in fiscal 2009 to $4 trillion, or 27.7% of GDP, from $3 trillion or 21% of GDP in 2008, and 20% in 2007. This is higher as a share of the economy than any year since 1945, when the country was still mobilized for World War II. It is more spending by far than during the Vietnam War, or during the recessions of 1974-75 or 1981-82.
But let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Obama is right that this spending is needed now to “jump-start” an economic recovery. Though the budget predicts that the economy will recover in 2010, spending will still be 24.1% of GDP that year, and the budget proposes that spending will remain higher than 22% for the entire next decade even as the defense budget steadily declines. All Presidential budgets predict spending will decline in the “out years,” if only to give the illusion of spending restraint. Mr. Obama tries the same trick, but he is proposing so many new and expanded nondefense programs that his budgeteers can’t get anywhere close even to Jimmy Carter spending levels.
These columns focus on spending, rather than deficits, because Milton Friedman taught us that spending represents the real future burden on taxpayers. Nonetheless, the 2009 budget deficit is estimated to be an eye-popping 12.7% of GDP, which once again dwarfs anything we’ve seen in the postwar era. The White House blueprint predicts that this will fall back down to 3.5% as soon as 2012, but this is based on assumptions about Washington that aren’t going to happen.
For example, Mr. Obama’s budget assumes that nearly all of the new stimulus spending will be temporary — a fantasy. He also proposes to eliminate farm subsidies for those with annual sales of more than $500,000. This is a great idea, and long overdue. But has the President checked with Senators Kent Conrad (North Dakota) or Chuck Grassley (Iowa)? We hope we’re wrong, but a White House that showed no interest in restraining Congress during the recent stimulus bacchanal isn’t likely to stand athwart history to stop the agribusiness lobby.
The falling deficit also assumes the largest tax increase in U.S. history, starting in 2011 with the repeal of the Bush tax rates on incomes higher than $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for couples. The White House says this will yield upwards of $1 trillion, if you choose to believe that tax rates don’t affect taxpayer behavior.
In the real world, two of every three tax filers who fall into this income category are small business owners or investors, who are certainly capable of finding ways to invest that allow them to declare less taxable income. The real impact of this looming tax increase will be to cast further uncertainty over economic decisions and either slow or postpone the recovery. Ditto for the estimated $646 billion from a new cap-and-trade tax, which no one wants to call a tax but would give the political class vast new leverage over the private economy. (See here.)
Then there is Mr. Obama’s plan for national health care. The White House has put a $634 billion place holder in the budget to pay for covering tens of millions of uninsured Americans with government subsidized coverage. But even advocates of this government plan say the cost will be closer to $1 trillion over 10 years, and probably much more. Meanwhile, the President is promising to reform entitlements, but his budget proposes a net increase of about $1 trillion in Medicare, Medicaid and other entitlements.
The biggest illusion in this budget may be its optimistic economic forecast. The White House assumes that the economy will decline by only 1.2% this year, before growing by 3.2% next year. This assumes the recovery will begin later this year and gather steam quickly to return to normal levels of growth. By 2010 to 2013, the budget adds, the economy will be cooking by an average of 4% a year — which is also how it conjures up magical deficit reduction.
This growth is a lovely thought, but how? The only impetus for growth in this budget comes from the government spending more money that it is taking out of the job-producing private economy. With $1 trillion of new entitlements, $1.4 trillion in new taxes, and $5 trillion in new debt, America
Two Appaloosa Horses For Sale (OHIO)
Posted by dallaslistings via craigslist | all for sale / wanted in dallas / fort worth
Lot of 13 Melissa & Doug Wooden Learning Toys (The Colony, TX) $50
Posted by dallaslistings via craigslist | all for sale / wanted in dallas / fort worth
Lot of 7 Educational Learning Toys by Leap Frog, Vtech & More! (The Colony, TX) $55
Posted by dallaslistings via craigslist | all for sale / wanted in dallas / fort worth
ONE FREE ADMISSION Ticket to DuPage County Kid’s ReSale (DuPage County Fairgrounds Manchester RD )
Posted by sameerb via craigslist | free stuff in chicago
State Farm Agent looking for part time, licensed sales person (West Fort Worth)
Posted by tweetfeeds via craigslist | all jobs in dallas / fort worth
1977 FORD F150 for sale or trade (Terrell, TX) $2500
Posted by dallaslistings via craigslist | all for sale / wanted in dallas / fort worth
Goat ( Nubian , Kinder , pgymy goat ) Kids — Pet goats (san jose south)
Posted by tweetfeeds via craigslist | all community in SF bay area
ATV, Utility Vehicle, Farm Equipment Business (Nacogdoches/Lufkin area) $995000
Posted by dallaslistings via craigslist | all for sale / wanted in dallas / fort worth
Recently Being Discussed on FriendFeed
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply