Obama: 'Challenges too large to ignore': The Swamp
The Swamp
Chicago Tribune

The president is hewing to four principles with a $3.55-trillion budget.

Posted March 21, 2009 8:30 AM

The Swamp

by Mark Silva

President Barack Obama, who traveled to California this week to tout his budget priorities - and make a late-night stop on Jay Leno's Tonight Show -- plans to spend the week ahead promoting those budget goals in talks with congressional leaders.

"With the magnitude of the challenges we face, I don't just view this budget as numbers on a page or a laundry list of programs,'' the president said today, in his weekly Internet and radio address. "It's an economic blueprint for our future - a vision of America where growth is not based on real estate bubbles or overleveraged banks, but on a firm foundation of investments in energy, education, and health care that will lead to a real and lasting prosperity.''

The numbers will change in the congressional debate over the $3.55-trillion budget that Obama has proposed for 2010 - the Congressional Budget Office already is predicting larger deficits over 10 years than the ones which Obama anticipates.

But the president insists he will hold Congress to four principles: "It must reduce our dependence on dangerous foreign oil and finally put this nation on a path to a clean, renewable energy future.... This budget must renew our nation's commitment to a complete and competitive education for every American child... we need a budget that makes a serious investment in health care reform - reform that will bring down costs, ensure quality, and guarantee people their choice of doctors and hospitals.... Finally, this budget must reduce that deficit even further.

"I realize there are those who say these plans are too ambitious to enact.'' Obama said today. "To that I say that the challenges we face are too large to ignore. I didn't come here to pass on our problems to the next President or the next generation - I came here to solve them.''

See the address above and the text of the address below:

"Last week, I spent a few days in California, talking with ordinary Americans in town halls and in the places where they work. We talked about their struggles, and we talked about their hopes. At the end of the day, these men and women weren't as concerned with the news of the day in Washington as they were about the very real and very serious challenges their families face every day: whether they'll have a job and a paycheck to count on; whether they'll be able to pay their medical bills or afford college tuition; whether they'll be able to leave their children a world that's safer and more prosperous than the one we have now.

"Those are the concerns I heard about in California. They are the concerns I've heard about in letters from people throughout this country for the last two years. And they are the concerns addressed in the budget I sent to Congress last month.

"With the magnitude of the challenges we face, I don't just view this budget as numbers on a page or a laundry list of programs. It's an economic blueprint for our future - a vision of America where growth is not based on real estate bubbles or overleveraged banks, but on a firm foundation of investments in energy, education, and health care that will lead to a real and lasting prosperity.

"These investments are not a wish list of priorities that I picked out of thin air - they are a central part of a comprehensive strategy to grow this economy by attacking the very problems that have dragged it down for too long: the high cost of health care and our dependence on foreign oil; our education deficit and our fiscal deficit.

"Now, as the House and the Senate take up this budget next week, the specific details and dollar amounts in this budget will undoubtedly change. That's a normal and healthy part of the process.

"But when all is said and done, I expect a budget that meets four basic principles:

"First, it must reduce our dependence on dangerous foreign oil and finally put this nation on a path to a clean, renewable energy future. There is no longer a doubt that the jobs and industries of tomorrow will involve harnessing renewable sources of energy. The only question is whether America will lead that future. I believe we can and we will, and that's why we've proposed a budget that makes clean energy the profitable kind of energy, while investing in technologies like wind power and solar power; advanced biofuels, clean coal, and fuel-efficient cars and trucks that can be built right here in America.

"Second, this budget must renew our nation's commitment to a complete and competitive education for every American child. In this global economy, we know the countries that out-educate us today will out-compete us tomorrow, and we know that our students are already falling behind their counterparts in places like China. That is why we have proposed investments in childhood education programs that work; in high standards and accountability for our schools; in rewards for teachers who succeed; and in affordable college education for anyone who wants to go. It is time to demand excellence from our schools so that we can finally prepare our workforce for a 21st century economy.

"Third, we need a budget that makes a serious investment in health care reform - reform that will bring down costs, ensure quality, and guarantee people their choice of doctors and hospitals. Right now, there are millions of Americans who are just one illness or medical emergency away from bankruptcy. There are businesses that have been forced to close their doors or ship jobs overseas because they can't afford insurance. Medicare costs are consuming our federal budget. Medicaid is overwhelming our state budgets. So to those who say we have to choose between health care reform and fiscal discipline, I say that making investments now that will dramatically lower health care costs for everyone won't add to our budget deficit in the long-term - it is one of the best ways to reduce it.

"Finally, this budget must reduce that deficit even further. With the fiscal mess we've inherited and the cost of this financial crisis, I've proposed a budget that cuts our deficit in half by the end of my first term. That's why we are scouring every corner of the budget and have proposed $2 trillion in deficit reductions over the next decade. In total, our budget would bring discretionary spending for domestic programs as a share of the economy to its lowest level in nearly half a century. And we will continue making these tough choices in the months and years ahead so that as our economy recovers, we do what we must to bring this deficit down.

"I will be discussing each of these principles next week, as Congress takes up the important work of debating this budget. I realize there are those who say these plans are too ambitious to enact. To that I say that the challenges we face are too large to ignore. I didn't come here to pass on our problems to the next President or the next generation - I came here to solve them.

"The American people sent us here to get things done, and at this moment of great challenge, they are watching and waiting for us to lead. Let's show them that we are equal to the task before us, and let's pass a budget that puts this nation on the road to lasting prosperity.''

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Comments

It's only two months, President Obama. Continue to try to do what you think is correct policy. We know, you were left in the lurch, by the most incompetent executive team ever to be elected President and Vice-President. America will not forget them, as easily, as most Republicans hope she will !! The damage Bush-Cheney have visited upon America will be felt for decades to come. We should consider revoking their government pensions and perks, as incompetent executives, like the rest of that motley crew, in the executive suites, across America !!! All of these incompetent executives, can not go, unpunished !! Quit the malarky, about it hurting the economy, to talk of punishing the culprits, responsible for this disaster !! Some more, Republicant stupidity and hypocrisy !!
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE AND WHOLE. NOW.


Obama's radical leftist coup is a challenge too large to ignore. His tactics are strongly reminiscent of Hitler. He scapegoats AIG employees and "the rich" in general, whipping the populace into a lynch-mob frenzy, much the way Hitler branded the Jews as the internal enemy of common Germans. And now he is promoting his 'mandatory volunteerism' agenda for students. Can you say "Hitler Youth"?

Wake up, people!


Regardless of who you want to blame, Obamas proposed spending is crazy. Bush was a total failure in his responsiblity of handling the budget, but Obama is much worse. The Obama long term budget projections are frightening. I don't see how this is an improvement.


Does President Obama have thousands of lives, ended or destroyed, as ex-President Incompetent has, with his stupid and barbaric war and Occupation of Iraq ?? Did President Obama spy on American citizens, such as ex-President Incompetence did ?? If there were any administration that behaved, as though they were reading, Mein Kampf, it surely was, the Previous Incompetent Pair, of Bush-Cheney !! Thank God, America kicked them and their Party out of power !! America and the world, couldn't stand another minute, of such stupidity and incompetence !!
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE AND WHOLE. NOW.


BO's deficits over the next decade is $9.3 Trillion - four times that fo George Bush
.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090320/ap_on_go_pr_wh/obama_budget
.
All Obama is doing is talking a good game, he has no game.
.
Update on his NCAA picks 19-13 for the first round - that's pretty sad


After not reading this (why bother, just follow the Congress example), Obama might consider a late night gig of comedy on the partisan NBC network. Anybody fearful for America about where this debt riddled, class warfare socialist agenda is taking us? And let us not forget the coddling of our enemies while we insult our most staunches allies.


Merit pay for teachers doesn't work. Obama following his unsuccessful experience with the Annenberg challenge, should know this-but he just doesn't care.


Obama is going too far.

Cap salaries for movie stars and athletess. They earn too much.

Let the behind the scenes unions get a portion of the movie stars salaries. They are the true workers.

Sports figures earn too much money. The grounds people, caddies, ticket seller unions need to get part of those huge salaries sport athletes get.

It shouldn't be only Wall Street, but Hollywood Drive and PGA Drive of Champions!


Will he ever shut up?


I sure hope, not !! I want to know what my President is thinking and saying !! President Obama's gaffes, are far more intelligent than ex-President Dim-Wit's jibberish, masquerading as Presidential statements !! That stunt, Mission Accomplished, will go down in history, as the height of stupidity,not to mention, the fatal consequences of this gaffe's, enraging of the enemy !! No, there is no gaffe like a ridiculous Republican gaffe !! They go down in history !!
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE AND WHOLE. NOW.


"Finally, this budget must reduce that deficit even further..."


What a con artist. Obama looked the other way when PelosiCo ran the short con with the 787. He also decried earmarks but signed the 410 to September anyways. Now we know why. Obama to dems in Congress: "You first, get in there and grab yours, I'll stand back. Then help me out when it's my turn for the long con."


Like a pickpocket, keep your eye on what Obama does, don't just listen to the guy. Obama suckers you in with eloquent talk on what we all agree on -- reduce healthcare costs, foreign oil, and improved education. But then his hand goes for our wallets. And not just ours but those 5, 10, and 15 years or more into the future.


And morally worse yet, Obama suckers in the weak-minded with pre-election talk of ending the Iraq war. Then as President Obama shuffles 17,000 troops to Afghanistan to begin the same s*** all over again. And doofuses like Reid react: "... 50,000 [to remain in Iraq after withdrawal], that’s a little higher number than I anticipated."


Obama's outrageous budget deficits demonstrate the flawed thinking that doing better means having to spend even more money -- money we don't even have yet, money that doesn't even EXIST yet. It's flawed thinking when viewed from the outside in, by regular people. From the inside out though, that flawed thinking, ratchet up the federal debt obscenely to do better, is Obama's and Washington-business-as-usual's profit margin.


And it's not like we weren't tipped off beforehand. Obama admitted his greatest skill was being able to walk into a room full of disagreeing people and walk out with a consensus. So it's the THRILL of closing the deal he's after. Is it a GOOD deal for those who would foot the bill? That's for us to decide. Fortunately, the CBO has helped us out. And moderate democrats who may have been among those scurrying for goodies in the 787 and 410 are now raising eyebrows at what Obama expects back from them via his 2010 budget proposal.


How bad was Bush as President? Pretty bad. How bad is Obama? Already worse.


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