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What can I say? I swore off the Dayton Daily News a long time ago, tired of their
ceaseless attempts to deceive. They pressed one of my hot-buttons, though, so here I am once
again tilting at windmills in the vain attempt to educate their editorial staff.
I can certainly understand why the editors at the Dayton Daily News would want to
down-play tax cuts. After all, the party of JFK washed their hands of tax cuts after
President Reagan rode to victory with them in 1980 and 1984.
Since then tax cuts have been the kryptonite of the Democrat Party. At every turn they downplay them,
demonize them, equate them to racist lynchings and totalitarian death camps...which is all the more reason
we have to expose these illogical tactics when they occur.
On this occasion it is Martin Gottlieb who is leading the charge against tax
cuts. His primary target is the Bush tax cuts; those already granted and scheduled as well as those newly proposed. His
parting shot, though, is aimed squarely at the Reagan legacy.
Let's examine his argument, so as to more fully appreciate the irony of his final claim. Gottlieb starts out
alleging that President Bush is telling half-truths, at best, about his tax and economic plans. In his State of the Union
speech President Bush stated:
Jobs are created when the economy grows, the economy grows when Americans have more money to
spend and invest; and the best and fairest way to make sure Americans have that money is not to tax it away
in the first place.
Gottlieb's objection to this is that the first part is self-evident, the middle part (the alleged half-truth) is
backwards (people have money because the grows, not the other way around) and the last part, about tax cuts, completely wrong.
Let's look at what Gottlieb says:
The part about the economy growing when people have more money is someplace in the realm of truth. But it
seems to suggest that the economy grows because people have more money. In fact, people having more money is
more likely the effect of the economy growing than cause.
If they have more money not because the economy is growing but because taxes have been cut, the money has simply been
transferred from someplace else. In that case, there are negative consequences to be considered (below) if one wants
to confront anything like the truth.
And as for Bush's concluding notion that the best way to make sure people have money is not to take it away: If it's taken
away, it's still being spent, possibly on things that, themselves, spur the economy....
Well! That's quite an indictment of President Bush's statement, isn't it? Actually, it's not. Speaking of half-truths,
Mr. Gottlieb has simply tossed out a few of his own to try and support his claims that President Bush has told them.
While that in and of itself is logically invalid, let's pick apart his claims just for fun.
Gottlieb has a problem with stating whether people have more money is the cause or the effect of a growing
economy. That's fine, but that doesn't make one claim a half truth and the other the whole truth. Gottlieb's position
is just as (in)valid as President Bush's. So either Gottlieb is also telling a half truth...or he's simply of a differing
opinion. History shows that a growing economy and increasing incomes are linked in a feedback loop. Trying to determine
which comes first is like arguing for the chicken or the egg. We can conclude, then, that Gottlieb's claim that President
Bush told a half-truth on this issue is not supported by the facts.
Next, Gottlieb's claim when you cut taxes it amounts to a transfer "from someplace else" is simply false. Cutting taxes means
the government doesn't take it from the taxpayer in the first place. There is no "transfer" at all. This is simply the tired liberal
attack on tax cuts: that it's the government's money, not yours. However, the government takes money from our paychecks,
not the other way around. The claim that government taxing your money and spending is of equal economic stimulus isn't
supported by the facts, either. To tax a dollar requires that the government spend money. It costs money to collect taxes,
to administer the money and to spend it on items via government programs. All of this money takes away from that dollar
taxed, so it's something less than a dollar that eventually gets spent. In addition, there are many government programs
that do not produce goods or services. Money spent on those other programs has little, if any economic stimulus effect.
But enough of Gottlieb's hand waving about the Bush tax cuts (which goes on to whine about deficits), what set me off was
the last part of his editorial. He told a whopper of lie:
The new debt caused by a tax cut might be a reasonable trade-off if the tax cuts actually worked to stimulate
the economy in the short term. But the first thing that followed Ronald Reagan's tax cuts in 1981 was the worst recession
in 50 years. (Things did eventually get better.) And the first thing that followed George W. Bush's tax cut in 2001
was nothing.
That's a part of the truth they want you to forget.
Well! Is that so? Of course it isn't. The recession started in June of 1981. Reagan's tax cuts were passed by
Congress in late summer and early fall. Taxpayers didn't receive any money until the summer of 1982, with their 1982
tax returns. Guess when the recession ended? Yep, the fall of 1982, right after people started receiving their tax
cut benefits. In addition, the recession of 2001 ended right when the rebates for the 2001 tax cut were being received
by the taxpayers, in the fall of 2001. I guess for people like Mr. Gottlieb, a "half truth" is worthy of an editorial,
but an outright lie...well that's something to be proud of.
Four years ago in another response to the Dayton Daily News I said: "A lie is not an editorial. An editorial
is an opinion piece, and while the DDN has all the right in the world to be wrong (one that they do
exercise frequently) they do not have the right to lie." Apparently that statement
is as necessary now as it was then.
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...here I am once again tilting at windmills in the vain attempt to
educate their editorial staff.
So either Gottlieb is also telling a half truth...or he's
simply of a differing opinion.
Cutting taxes means the government doesn't take it from the taxpayer
in the first place. There is no "transfer" at all.
Four years ago in another response to the Dayton Daily News
I said: "A lie is not an editorial."
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