fireside
Porn Star
The issue is earmark spending.
In this case, I'd rather earmark spending that'll actually go to a worthwhile cause than 'straightforward legislation' that turns into AIG executives' spa treatments.
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The issue is earmark spending.
In this case, I'd rather earmark spending that'll actually go to a worthwhile cause than 'straightforward legislation' that turns into AIG executives' spa treatments.
yeah, earmarks are nothing compared to trillion dollar fuckups like Iraq. We need a president that will not make more mistakes like that, not continue them for 100 years.^ Everyone pays lip service to that. It doesn't stop McCain's running mate from taking earmarks or McCain for voting for them (as he's just done in the bail out bill).
The fact remains that earmarks are just 1% of the federal budget. You could eliminate them completely and not solve anything.
Earmarks are an extremely small percentage of all funds appropriated by Congress and spent by the US anyway (I think the overall percentage is like 3% or something). Is it worth an entire election? I think not..... and that's all McCain has to go on?
All spending has to be addressed.
But that's not the main reason earmarks need to be stopped. They're a bad way for Congress to apportion spending. It's too easy to be wasteful and unaccountable, and unaccountability is bad news in a representative Democracy.
This defense from Obama supporters is tragically revealing, though.
Obama's primary campaign theme is changing the way Washington does business, and that's exactly what McCain is talking about in dealing with earmarks -- and here you all shrug it off. Sad, really. Obama's not even elected yet and his supporters are already defending his broken promise.
^ No one's shrugging it off. They're saying that, sure earmarks need to be dealt with, but that that's only 1% of the problem.
Somehow I knew you would have something to say about it though.

That's just flatly disingenuous.
You just wrote, not more than a few posts above, "The fact remains that earmarks are just 1% of the federal budget. You could eliminate them completely and not solve anything."
"You could eliminate them completely and not solve anything" is shrugging it off.
Not at all.
It's called putting the problem in its true context.
You might try it some time. LOL.

Eliminating earmarks completely WOULD solve …
Is there ANY redeeming characteristic associated with earmarks? Should they be eliminated entirely, or has their proper function been distorted from an otherwise reasonable “original intent?”
As for earmarks, eliminating all earmarks is unlikely as it would involve cutbacks to veterans benefits and housing programs (which McCain has said he would not cut) as well as to major construction projects that are already under way by the Army Corps of Engineers. Realistically, McCain could probably eliminate half of all earmarks, or about $9 billion. Compared to the scope of his additional pro-wealthy tax cut, Obama was correct to point to the much greater fiscal stakes involved with tax policy. Incidentally, I wish Obama had replied to McCain's criticism of his own earmark requests by pointing out that by extension of opposing his earmarks, McCain was opposing after school programs for at risk youth, research into soybean disease and livestock genes, teacher training, fixing broken water mains, nanomedical technology research, etc. You can see a long list of his requested (not necessarily received) earmarks here:
http://www.electiongeek.com/blog/2008/03/13/obama-releases-his-long-list-of-earmarks/
The bottom line is that while not all earmarks are equally "good," there is no doubt that any person can find some earmarks that are potentially worthy of public support. Obama's position has been that transparency is key, and along with McCain he helped pass a bill creating a federal earmark registry where you can search who sponsored which earmarks. This also appeared to be VP candidate Sarah Palin's position until recently.
McCain didn't lie.
Did you read your own link?
Obama did try to get an earmark for $3 million for a projector for the planitarium.
The fact that yet again Obama failed does not change the fact that he tried to get that earmark.
McCain's point is that earmarks are the wrong way to do business with our Federal taxpayer money.
If Obama wanted public funds for that projector, according to McCain's point, he should have been forthright about it and not try to slip it into some unrelated spending legislation. Let the people of Illinois or the American people know what you want money for and give us the chance to vote you back in or out of office when we approve or disapprove. The secret nature of earmark spending, and it getting totally out of hand, is what's at issue.
And McCain's further point is that Obama stopped asking for earmarks when he decided to run for President and then started talking about ending earmark spending. It's another example of Obama's deceitfulness.
That's just flatly disingenuous.
You just wrote, not more than a few posts above, "The fact remains that earmarks are just 1% of the federal budget. You could eliminate them completely and not solve anything."
"You could eliminate them completely and not solve anything" is shrugging it off.
