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Name: MADDOG10
Location: Beautiful Florida
Country: United States
Interests: restoring old cars, winning the lottery, avid football fan, and riding my motorcycles... Both (Harleys)...!!

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Out of touch with reality...

Republicans should let the sequester proceed if President Obama won’t let the  defense cuts be eased, and Obama is simply out of touch with reality on fiscal  matters, according to former U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint, S.C.

DeMint resigned his seat in January as he prepares to become the new  president of the Heritage Foundation. In a wide-ranging interview, DeMint  addressed looming debates on guns and immigration, but he’s also passionate  about how the current sequestration fight plays out. DeMint told WND House GOP  members have responsibly approved changes in sequestration so the cuts won’t  land so hard on national security spending, and the ball is now in Obama’s  court.

“If we can’t get the president to come off the military cuts, we need to  leave these cuts in place,” DeMint said. “In most cases, it’s not really cuts.  It’s just a slowing of the growth of spending which has been out of control for  years. I would encourage Republicans, if the president’s not going to be  reasonable about restoring military funding and allowing these other programs to  actually be reduced, then they’re just going to have to swallow it. It’s a small  percent of our total budget and, frankly, we’re going to have to do a lot more  of these cuts if we’re going to balance the budget within 10 years.”

Obama has repeatedly demanded a “balanced” approach that consists of spending  cuts and higher taxes for the wealthy. The president also says he and Congress  have already made painful cuts of $2.5 trillion. DeMint said the president is  simply not living in the real world.

“The president has a difficult time with the truth. We have not cut any  spending in Washington. We’ve doubled spending in the last 10 years. He keeps  talking about ‘revenues,’ which is their new code word for more tax increases,”  said DeMint, citing the fiscal cliff deal and the Obamacare as major tax  increases that have already been implemented.

“We don’t have a revenue problem,” he said. “If we would cut spending, you  would see the private sector grow and even more revenues to the federal  government. The president talks about a fair and balanced approach. American  businesses and individuals now have some of the highest rates in the world. It’s  hard to compete internationally. He’s still talking about more tax increases.  The president is really going to hurt our country in a long-term way if we don’t  push back on this.”

The mounting debt makes fiscal responsibility essential, and DeMint said  America doesn’t have much time to change course.

“If we’re going to save our country and keep us from looking like Greece in a  few years, we’re going to have to find things we can cut,” he said, noting that  duplicative programs and services that should be under state control are a good  place to start.

“I think the president has lost contact with reality,” DeMint said. “He  doesn’t see the spending and the debt as a problem. We are approaching a real  meltdown if we don’t get control of it.”

The former senator also made news this week for his public defense of  freshman Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. Democrats and some media outlets slammed Cruz  for his pointed criticism of defense secretary nominee Chuck Hagel and demanding  that Hagel reveal which groups hired him to speak and how much he was paid for  those appearances. Demint said the partisan double-standard should be condemned,  and Cruz should be commended for doing his job.

“What Ted Cruz is doing makes me so proud I could pop, because the pressure  against doing what he’s doing is really great,” said Demint, who notes that  liberals and the media demanded tax records from Mitt Romney going back a  decade.

“The questions that Ted Cruz asked were very reasonable and very thorough.  He’s tried cases before the Supreme Court. He knows how to get answers out of  people. I think he was doing just the right thing,” he said.

While DeMint has left the Senate, he plans to remain active in recruiting  solid conservative candidates to Senate races, a move he said will bring  heartburn to the establishment for both parties. DeMint rejects the assertion  from Karl Rove and others that the GOP has suffered from “unelectable”  conservatives winning primaries in winnable states.

“We haven’t been too conservative. Certainly, we have to have our candidates  better prepared for the shark pool that they’re going to get into because the  media’s always trying to ask questions that we don’t need to be answering  because they are not federal issues,” said DeMint, who suggests making a  campaign issue out of federalism and moving more and more responsibilities out  of Washington and back to the state level.

“We need to prove to these Washington establishment folks that the best way  to win races is to get a good conservative candidate,” he said. “We saw it in  (Marco) Rubio, Rand Paul, Pat Toomey, Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, Jeff Flake. They’re  out there. They can win, and we just need to identify them and support  them.”

Other pending debates also have DeMint’s attention. On guns, he said  exhaustive Heritage Foundation studies show that gun-control measures do not  work. He argued that this is another issue best handled at the local level.

“We can’t eliminate evil in this world, but the schools are going to have to  do things at the local and at the state level to protect themselves and have the  ability within to stop something like this once it happens,” DeMint said.  “Gun-control laws don’t help. If they did, Chicago wouldn’t be the murder  capital of the world. We need to look at real solutions and not just this  political talk that makes people feel better but doesn’t make our children  safer.”

Finally, on immigration, DeMint said this is another issue where the Obama  rhetoric sounds appealing to many but the real motivation is far less noble.

“It’s very apparent to me what’s going on here. The president and the  Democrats want two things. They want voters. They want union members. So  everything they talk about is about citizenship,” said DeMint, who warned that  the U.S. has an illegal immigration problem and not a citizenship problem.

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/02/demint-obama-has-lost-contact-with-reality/#0QD4lGGGdC3WBDEz.99

4 Comments:

JAP69 said...

Yep

4:24 PM
emilyg said...

Excellent.

7:29 PM
Piaceri said...

Another well said commentary from Jim DeMint. Although I was sad when he resigned from the Senate, I'm excited to see what he can do from The Heritage Foundation.

10:04 PM
rdgrnr said...

I think Jim DeMint was the most honest guy in Washington.
My wife and I have met him and he's a very decent and kind man, a regular guy.
I wish there were a lot more like him in Congress.

1:21 AM

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