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Feb 11 / 6:51am

Adding to the deficit: Bush vs. Obama - The Washington Post

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Since President Obama became chief executive, the national debt has risen almost $5 trillion. But how much of that was because of policies passed by Obama, and how much was caused by the financial crisis, the continuation of past policies and other effects? For this analysis, we worked with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities to attach a price tag to the legislation passed by Obama and his predecessor. George W. Bush’s major policies increased the debt by more than $5 trillion during his presidency. Obama has increased the debt by less than $1 trillion. Read related article.

Filed under  //  Bush   budget   infographics  
Jan 17 / 4:44pm

No! Bush tax cuts helped the rich get richer - The Washington Post

The 1986 tax reform eliminated the gap between the ordinary and capital gains rates. The gap began to widen again during President Bill Clinton’s second term, but the Bush tax cuts of 2003 blew it wide open by slicing the top rate on dividends and long-term capital gains from 28 percent to 15 percent.

Filed under  //  Bush   taxes   wealth  
Jan 4 / 7:19am

Go figure: George W. Bush barely mentioned in GOP campaign

For Republicans, the Bush administration has become the `yadda yadda yadda' period of American history.

Filed under  //  Bush   gop  
Mar 20 / 6:27am

10 Things We Could Have Done with the Iraq War Money.

Today America has been involved in its war in Iraq for eight solid years. It's an engagement that has cost the country thousands of lives and more than $780 billion. Here are some other things we could have done with $780 billion.

We could have closed every single state’s FY2012 budget deficit—totaling nearly $112 billion—nearly seven times over. That means no protests in Wisconsin, no mass teacher firings, and no school closures.

We could have paid tuition and expenses at four-year, private universities for every single member of the U.S. Armed Forces, both active duty personnel and reservists. There would have been $370 billion left over, $73 billion of which could go toward getting them all master's degrees.

We could have funded the Healthy School Meals Act pilot program, which offers healthful school lunches to America’s increasingly obese schoolchildren, 195,000 times over.

We could have offered lifetime treatment to every single person afflicted with HIV and AIDS in the United States.
 

We could have purchased decent homes for all of the 107,000 American war veterans who are currently homeless. Beyond that, we could have then treated them for major depression for the rest of their lives. (Though if we hadn't invaded Iraq, there would also just be fewer homeless war veterans.)
 

We could have opened 19,500 Oprah-style luxury boarding schools in Africa, providing an elite educational opportunity for nearly 3 million children.


 

We could have completely funded the war in Afghanistan thus far and still had $393 billion left over to put a bounty on Osama bin Laden’s head. That amount of money would be really hard to turn down.

We could have outfitted 31.2 million detached, single-family homes— about 45 percent of the detached, single-family homes in America—with solar paneling.

 

We could have rescued all of the at-risk social-welfare programs on this chart and still had 740 billion left with which to mess around.

We could have given every kindergarten, elementary, middle, and secondary school teacher in America a $224,000 bonus. Many of them certainly deserve a little extra compensation.

via GOOD

Filed under  //  Bush   Iraq