Obama: Romney Will Cost Feds $5 Trillion

President Obama, speaking at a campaign event in Dubuque, Iowa, said Mitt Romney’s intended tax cuts would cost the government five trillion dollars: "Five trillion dollars is a lot of money, even for Washington.” Where Obama gets his figures, no one knows, but, of course, if you were Barack Obama, you might figure people wouldn’t notice your own financial malfeasance and instead join your substance-free attack on Romney.

Since Obama was unable to offer a litany of his abuses because he was a) too tired, b) too weak, c) too afraid, or d) too ignorant to do so, here is a short primer on Obama’s financial delinquency: $76 million has been spent in support of Obamacare over the past 3-1/2 years, and another $8.35 billion on a “demonstration project” to postpone the vast majority of Obamacare’s Medicare Advantage cuts until after the 2012 election; $535 million went to Solyndra.

But here’s the real kicker; Obama’s 2013 budget proposes to spend $47 trillion over the next 10 years. That is the most spending in the history of the world. By contrast, Paul Ryan’s budget over the same period of time would be spending nearly a trillion dollars less per year than President Obama’s budget.

If Obama’s talking about the costs of trillions of dollars, he should look in the mirror. Based on Obama’s own projections, deficit spending during Obama’s four years in the White House will be an estimated $5.170 trillion, which equals $17,000 per American.

The Democrats will never stop making up figures and hurling them at the American taxpayers to scare them away from Mitt Romney.  But the hard facts will not disappear: Mitt Romney was a highly successful businessman and made money for those who invested with him. What money has been made for the American people when they invested in Barack Obama?


Comments

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The past several months have seen the price of gold slump even as the Fed and other central banks have accelerated their massive expansion of paper money. Gold is off about 20% so far this year with silver down almost 30%. The old adage--“don’t fight the Fed”--particularly comes to mind now because the US equity markets have been setting new highs during this same period. All of these gains are nominal, you understand, but for terrified American policy makers and investors, nominal is just fine.

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