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Obama Believes Success Is a Gift From Government
Around the State

Perhaps he didn't really mean what he said. Or perhaps -- as is often the case with people -- when unanchored from a prepared text he revealed what he really thinks.
"There are a lot of wealthy, successful Americans who agree with me -- because they want to give something back," he began, defending his policy of higher tax rates on high earners. "They know they didn't -- look, if you've been successful, you didn't get there on your own. You didn't get there on your own. I'm always struck by people who think, well, it must be because I was just so smart. There are a lot of smart people out there. It must be because I worked harder than everybody else. Let me tell you something -- there are a whole bunch of hard-working people out there.
"If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help. There was a great teacher somewhere in your life. Somebody helped to create this unbelievable American system that we have that allowed you to thrive. Somebody invested in roads and bridges. If you've got a business -- you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen."
In other words, Steve Jobs didn't make Apple happen. It was the work of a teacher union member -- er, great teacher -- and the government agencies that paved I-280 and El Camino Real that made Apple happen.
High earners don't deserve the money they make, Obama apparently thinks. It's the gift of government, and they shouldn't begrudge handing more of it back to government.
And that's true, as he told Charlie Gibson of ABC News in 2008, even if those higher tax rates produce less revenue for the government, as has been the case with rate increases on capital gains. The government should take away the money as a matter of "fairness."
The cynical might dismiss Obama's preoccupation with higher tax rates as an instance of a candidate dwelling on one of his few proposals that tests well in the polls. Certainly he doesn't want to talk much about Obamacare or the stimulus package.
Cynics might note that he spurned supercommittee Republicans' willingness last year to reduce tax deductions so as to actually increase revenue from high earners, without discouraging investment or encouraging tax avoidance as higher tax rates do.
But maybe Obama's Captain-Ahab-like pursuit of higher tax rates just comes from a sense that no one earns success and that there's no connection between effort and reward.
That kind of thinking also helps to explain the approach taken by Sen. Patty Murray in a speech at the Brookings Institution Monday. She wants a tax rate increase on high earners so badly she said she'd prefer raising everyone's taxes next year to maintaining current rates.
Murray was first elected in 1992 as a state legislator who had been dismissed by a lobbyist as "just a mom in tennis shoes." But in 20 years she's become an accomplished appropriator and earmarker.
"Do no harm," Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told members of Congress at a hearing yesterday, urging them to avoid the sharp spending cuts and tax rate increases scheduled for year's end.
But Murray is threatening to do exactly that kind of harm. Those prattling about how irresponsible Republicans are might want to ponder her threat.
And to consider that Republicans remember what happened to the last Republican who agreed to such rate increases, George H.W. Bush in 1990. Seeking re-election in 1992, he won only 37 percent of the vote. Republicans won't risk that again.
The Obama Democrats seem to believe that there's no downside risk in threatening huge tax increases for everyone and in asserting that if you're successful "someone else made that happen."
But The Wall Street Journal's Catherine McCain Nelson reported yesterday how affluent Denver suburbanites have soured on Obama. Obama tied John McCain 49 percent to 49 percent among voters over $100,000 income in 2008, but in NBC/WSJ polls this year they've favored Mitt Romney 50 percent to 44 percent.
Affluent voters trended Democratic over two decades on cultural issues. But economic issues dominate this year, and they may not appreciate Obama's assertion that they don't deserve what they've earned.
Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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Comments (15)
And of course all those "successful people" before the Constitution had no government providing servcies and infrastructure, correct?
A baby is unproductive, so their receiving a lot is unfair, correct?
A 91-year old WWII vet in a nursing home is unproductive, so their receiving a lot is unfair, correct?
A college student learning to be a scientist on a scholarship is unproductive, so their receiving a lot is unfair, correct?
We can go on and on, but it's clear who wants to be unfair.
Why don't you just clearly specify who your "unproductive" are and we can put that list up to the "smell" test.
Parents can provide for babies. If babies are orphaned then I'll support the government providing for them until age 18.
All vets risked their lives for this country and I support their benefits. You surprised? By the way, vets are a small percentage of the population and have earned those benefits unlike those who didn't serve in the military.
Government can provide some incentive/benefits for students aggressively pursuing degrees for much needed professions. We can cut off all those majoring in crap.
You had your chance to go on and on smarty. I can say we actually compromised...and cut the entitlement budget by about 80%.
Yes, it appears that in your world that if you don't like the field the student may desire to go into and needs financial help in, like evolutionary biology or investigative anthropology, you'd starve their mind.
I guess you just don't want to clearly specify who your larger list of "unproductives" are, so we can put that list up to the "smell" test.
Just like Romney's tax returns.
Yes, in my world parents take care of their babies. In yours parents don't exist. Either get an abortion or abandon the kid and keep living it up single. As far as the baby goes, it takes a village right?
Yes, in my world I don't pay for someone else's kid to go study a subject that serves me no purpose. You want tax payer money to get your degree, then study a useful major so you can repay the favor with your productivity and service. I have no desire to sit here and spell out every field that is worthy of such benefit. Let the market decide. Starve their mind? Are you drunk Frank?
It is far more effective to budget only the money available and spend it on limited ventures that reasonable people can agree are productive. No need to develop an exhaustive list of what is unproductive. Just stop spending when the money is out.
Yes, you and I see different worlds, and that is what this election is about.
You know as well as I do that no one gives a crap about Romney's tax returns. He's rich. So are a lot of your liberal heroes. Get over it.
As to those tax returns, you must be right, I guess that's why all those Republicans are scarmbling to tell Mitt to just go ahead and release them now . . .obviously, they're doing that because "no one gives a crap", just as you said.
Perhaps the insightful comment I heard about this today was the observation that - - whatever is in the last 12 years of tax returns, it couldn't be as bad as the grief he's getting for not doing it, . . . .or could it. This is just going to fester and fester.
Especially, as he apparently hasn't even turned in one FULL set of tax returns. The 2010 public submittal appear to be missing all the foreign bank account (i.e. Swiss bank) tax form information from the accounts he is known to have. It's known as the Report on Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts and it's missing.
See, no roads, no infrastructure, no sales taxes, no property taxes, no government interference, plenty of unmet needs and demands for services and products, no regulatory structure to have to deal with, no complicated forms to fill out and submit, no minimum wages, no employee rights, no medical insurance to provide, no workman's comp, no maternal leave requirements - your Republican small government paradise for business, or at least that's the way you say you want it.
It takes a civilization to provide the environment and opportunity for business to be truly successful, and that economic success is by its very nature built upon the combined efforts (and taxes) of its citizens. Otherwise, you have Somalia.
But then, I'm sure you understand the reality, you just wanted to try once more to engage in the politics of the "Big Lie" and demonize a black President you despise.
1 - "Romney, Santorum Represent Different White Americas"
2 - "Can Mitt lure upscale whites back to GOP?”
3 - "Romney May Recapture Upscale Whites for the GOP"
4 - "GOP Shouldn't Panic If Whites Become a Minority"
5 - "To Win Burbs, Romney May Pick 'Double-Vanilla' Veep"
6 - "Obama pursues poor, not white working vote"
7 - "White middle class not in Obama’s base"
8 - "Romney needs big share of white working-class vote"
9 - "Romney and the White Working-Class"
10 - "Obama ignores white working class"
Last week's special - "Obama ate grits in Ohio; that's about it"
He certainly spends a lot of time and energy selectively writing about the "white" race and complaining about the nation's first black President in articles using the word "white".
We have plenty of right-wing racist and bigoted comments to discuss this year - Michelle Bachmann, Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, Rick Sanctorum, Pat Buchanan, Sheriff Joe Arpaio, and even Allen West.
Yes, lots of your type of meat from those and many more sources that you can continue to be an apologist for.
Some of my examples are in court as we speak, and some of the others from just this week are being blasted by their own party - - Republicans.
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