National debt as increased over 300% during Congressman Joe Pitts's tenure in Washington.
Is the title of this post startling, hard to believe, make you angry, fearful, defensive...? Isn't that the way we do this now?
Congressman Pitts, in his January 6, 2013 Letter to the Editor (Lancaster Sunday News, link below), mentioned the upcoming battle over the debt limit and shared some
observations regarding the causes of our fiscal crisis and the current clash of
ideology in Washington. As I read his article,
I was hoping to find some acknowledgement of Washington’s collective lack of
fiscal responsibility over the last two decades. Instead, sadly, I read the same “blame”
language that is currently crippling our democracy. I even read a statement that appears to be an
excuse for his record. It reads as if
he’s throwing his hands up in the air and saying, “what do you want me to do,
I’ve only been a Congressman since 1997 and ‘Congress does not annually vote on
many programs. They are funded automatically’,
so... not my fault.”
With all due respect Congressman Pitts, please, you are a smart and politically experienced man, a Washington insider for
over 15 years. You know what’s going on
and you know how we got here. You have
as much red ink on your hands as anyone, so instead of partaking in this
partisan temper tantrum, rise above it and acknowledge that both parties are to
blame and work together. Having you and
your single-minded conservative colleagues hold the country and economy hostage
over a debt ceiling debate that you had no problem supporting, maybe 7 times,
during the Bush Administration is, for lack of a better word, childish.
In addition, how is it that our current administration is to
blame for our level of national debt?
When you took office, the national debt was $5.307 trillion and it is
now $16.432 trillion. While you have
been a congressman, the national debt has grown over 300% and given the large
number of congressmen and senators who have served as long as or longer than
you, how is it that you and your colleagues aren’t to blame? Certainly during the 15+ years you’ve been in
office, there has been ample time to vote on programs Congress doesn’t vote on
annually, as you noted in your column. And I do realize that there are democrats who
are just as hypocritical and superficial as you, for example, former Senator Barak
Obama voted against increasing the debt limit in 2006 as a statement against
the debt increasing policies of the Bush administration. I’m guessing you didn't have a problem with the debt ceiling in 2006 and voted in favor of increasing
the debt limit?
Yes, of course, the national debt is a problem. We need fiscal discipline, but this is no way
for grown men and women to go about it.
Examine the Real Fiscal Cliff by Joe Pitts, January 6, 2013
The national debt has crossed $16 trillion, and most of the blame can be put on the shoulders of former president George W. Bush. President Obama’s policies have contributed to around $1.5 trillion of debt. This rising debt amount will evidently bring in economic crisis in the near future. The mounting debts will reduce the investments and drive up interest rates hampering national economic growth. However, deficit spending will not harm the economy as long as the debt loads remain below the critical limit after which the creditors start fearing about defaulting.
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