Romney-Ryan Forces Americans to Finally Face Looming Fiscal Doom
By: Ken Blackwell / Townhall Daily
We do not know who will win the White House in November. But we do know
that American politics has crossed the Rubicon on spending and
entitlements, and these issues will at long last complete the journey
from a forbidden third rail to a central element of national politics.
Even if Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan lose this year’s battle to Barack
Obama, they will win the war on the challenge of our generation.
Congressman Paul Ryan is best known for his budget, the Ryan Roadmap,
which ties together the two sides of our fiscal-crisis coin: First, the
major entitlements of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid will soon
be bankrupt and unable to provide for millions of beneficiaries. And
second, our growing $16 trillion debt will result in an unprecedented
economic disaster if not balanced and then paid off.
President
Barack Obama and his Democrats are replying with the
inexcusably-irresponsible argument that overhauling entitlements and
balancing the budget are cruel and unnecessary. They cry that this will
harm seniors and deprive people of needed benefits, willfully ignoring
the reality—with can be proved beyond doubt on a napkin using
fifth-grade math skills—that the status quo cannot and will not
continue.
Beginning in 1783, national leaders like John Jay
corresponded with George Washington—the recently-retired
commander-in-chief of the Continental Army—about the need for structural
change in American government. They made the case that the Articles of
Confederation had failed, and the national governing document must be
fundamentally overhauled.
This eventually led to the drafting
of the U.S. Constitution in 1787. But before reaching that point, as
late as 1786, Washington agreed that young America teetered on the edge
of an abyss, but that a critical mass of American citizens had not yet
reached the same assessment. Things would get worse before they could
get better, Washington concluded. Then things got worse with Shay’s
Rebellion, and change came.
George Washington intuitively
understood that major change in a democratic system must be driven by
the people. We will not reform entitlements and balance the budget until
they become kitchen-table issues for ordinary citizens, which takes
time and visibility. Democrats simply pretend there is no problem. Now
Republicans can make these points so central to national discourse that
they become unavoidable and undeniable.
This election now turns
on whether a critical mass of American voters have arrived at the
undeniable conclusion that if we do not fundamentally transform the
three major entitlements for younger Americans then it will not be there
for them at all (or even for those who will soon rely upon them), and
that if we do not balance the federal budget it will cause an economic
catastrophe.
We will see one of three outcomes over the next
four years. First, Romney-Ryan wins in November, with sufficient numbers
and political will in the House and Senate to enact fundamental
entitlement reform and a balanced budget. If so, that by itself could
give Mitt Romney a lasting legacy as a transformational president.
Second, Romney-Ryans prevails, but without persuading a majority of
Americans of the urgency of this issue, and so either Republicans do not
hold both houses of Congress with stable majorities or those majorities
lack the political courage to steadfastly resist intimidation and
reject demagoguery to pass legislation to reinvent the entitlements and
balance the budget.
Third, Barack Obama wins a second term, and
claims it as a mandate not to curb spending or entitlements. We
continue with trillion-dollar deficits, reaching $20 trillion in
national debt 2017.
Under the first scenario, although current
and imminent beneficiaries will retain their benefits, younger Americans
will experience the discomfort that such foundational change entails,
but will later be profoundly grateful. Under the second, Republicans may
be at the helm when everything unravels, and conservatism could be
blamed and suffer a devastating setback with voters. Under the third, by
November 2016 voters should have no doubt what must be done, and
realize that liberals offer only blame and denial, while conservatives
offer solutions.
Regardless of whether Messrs. Romney and Ryan win this battle, conservatives can now win this war.
Editor's Note: This column was coauthored by Ken Klukowski, Legal Columnist for Breitbart.com
Article sounds good for US politics that according to Romney-Ryan but what they can do after election if they get loose from Barack Obama nothing. Because Obama fighting for middle class peoples to grow up them in the society. On the other hand Mitt Romney going to increase taxes to poor and middle class peoples by hiding his own tax returns. Obama t Shirts
ReplyDeleteIn a word...bullsh*t! Sounds as if you've drunk the kool-ade of Obama's lies.
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