I know what America needs.......MORE COWBELL! Love that avatar!
Marcus78, I'll answer you paragraph by paragraph:
1. No one is asserting that rescinding the Bush tax cuts will balance the budget. Allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire in 2012 is part of the solution. Why would tax cuts to the wealthiest 2% even be an issue in this economy? Is it right to allow the Bush tax cuts to continue on the backs of Middle America? I don't think so.
The budgetary pressures that the nation will face in the decades ahead also underscore the desirability of allowing President Bush’s tax cuts to expire on schedule at the end of 2012.
The revenue loss over the next 75 years from making those tax cuts permanent would be three times the entire Social Security shortfall over that period.
Indeed, the revenue loss just from extending the tax cuts for people making over $250,000 — the top 2 percent of Americans — would itself be almost as large as the entire Social Security shortfall over the 75-year period.
2. I would not use the political term "sacred cow" when referring to Social Security, Medicare-Medicaid and Welfare.
Social Security faces no immediate crisis and will have substantial resources to pay benefits even over the long run, but it faces a long-term shortfall that Congress should address sooner rather than later so the program can meet its promises.
Specifically, Social Security will be able to pay full benefits until 2036, at which point its combined trust funds will be exhausted. After that, Social Security will still be able to pay about 75 percent of scheduled benefits, relying on Social Security taxes as they are collected.
If you think of retirement as a three-legged stool (savings, pensions, Soc Sec) the latter is the strongest leg. Retirement savings have been lagging for years for many in the workforce due to stagnant wage growth, and pensions have a) shifted from guaranteed (defined benefit) to variable (defined contribution) and b) gotten whacked by bursting asset bubbles.
For recipients age 65 and up on, Social Security is about two-thirds of their income and that share grows with age—for the old-elderly, it’s closer to 70% of their income. Other data show that for a third of those over 65, Social Security accounts for at least 90% of their income.
We should keep these income shares in mind when we think about applying some combination of the fixes to the shortfall. Benefits mean a lot to most retirees and that fact should guide our solution set.
Addressing the Social Security issue should include higher payments into the program from current workers, some form of diminished benefits, or some combination.
The CBO link
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/115xx/doc...ons_forWeb.pdf see Tables 2-4 it shows the different ways to close the gap.
The true "sacred cows" are: Wall Street, Banks, The Military Industrial Complex, Corporate welfare and subsidies, Big Pharma, Big oil, Healthcare costs, Tax cuts for the rich and war, etc.
3. Hell Yeah! I'm on board with that!
4. Hell Yeah again!
5. Accumulated debt will show how much has been added since President Obama's inauguration, but that reflects decisions made before he got in office (TARP, auto bailouts, wars - all bush things).
It doesn't reflect solely legislation he signed.
The Bush-Reagan years presided over by far the largest increase in the debt (in terms of real purchasing power) since WWII.
Stimulus - roughly 250 billion for 3 years, of which 1/3 is tax cuts
Health reform - saves 100+ billion in the short term, over 1 trillion long term and adds 10 years to medicare.
Cuts to the military complex - 200 billion, including the F22 which doesn't help us in our current fights.
Looking at just the total debt and trying to assign it to Obama is not reflective of reality.
How many hundreds of billions are simply debt service on what he was handed (a 1.2 trillion dollar deficit).