It Looks Like the Southern Poverty Law Center Wasn't Only Funding White Supremacists
GOP Is Low-Key Trying to Woo John Fetterman Into Switching Parties
Trump Goes Scorched Earth on CNN's Van Jones in Brutal Truth Social Post
Astronaut Victor Glover Had a Brilliant Answer About Being the First Person of...
A Scary Incident With a United Airlines Flight Was Caught on Camera
60 Minutes Ran a Shameful Report on 'Hate Groups' Helping After Natural Disasters
Breaking News: Moms Matter
Oregon Media Celebrates How Red Flag Law Kept Bomber From Having Gun
Secretary of State Marco Rubio to Meet With the Pope This Week Amid...
US Navy Sinks Seven Iranian 'Fast Boats' As the Regime Attacks South Korean...
Iran Launches Drones and Missiles at UAE As Fire Breaks Out at Major...
This Democrat Refused to Say Whether She Supports a Candidate With a Nazi...
Scott Bessent Says Relief Is on the Way As US Forces Begin Assisting...
Pete Buttigieg Called to Abolish the Electoral College, There's Just One Problem
Scott Bessent Slams Sen. Warren, Biden Admin, for the Death of Spirit Airlines
OPINION

Talking Points vs. Realty

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Talking Points vs. Realty

In a swindle that would make Bernie Madoff look like an amateur, Barack Obama has gotten a substantial segment of the population to believe that he can add millions of people to the government-insured rolls without increasing the already record-breaking federal deficit.

Advertisement

Those who think in terms of talking points, instead of realities, can point to the fact that the Congressional Budget Office has concurred with budget numbers that the Obama administration has presented.

Anyone who is so old-fashioned as to stop and think, instead of being swept along by rhetoric, can understand that a budget-- any budget-- is not a record of hard facts but a projection of future financial plans. A budget tells us what will happen if everything works out according to plan.

Sean Hannity FREE

The Congressional Budget Office can only deal with the numbers that Congress supplies. Those numbers may well be consistent with each other, even if they are wholly inconsistent with anything that is likely to happen in the real world.

The Obama health care plan can be financed without increasing the federal deficit-- if the administration takes hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicare. But Medicare itself does not have enough money to pay its own way over time.

However money is juggled in the short run, the government's financial liabilities are increased by adding this huge new entitlement of government-provided insurance. The fact that these new financial liabilities can be kept out of the official federal deficit projection, by claiming that they will be paid for with money taken from Medicare, changes nothing in the real world.

I can say that I can afford to buy a Rolls Royce, without going into debt, by using my inheritance from a rich uncle. But, in the real world, the question would arise immediately whether I in fact have a rich uncle, not to mention whether this hypothetical rich uncle would be likely to leave me enough money to buy a Rolls Royce.

Advertisement

In politics, however, you can say all sorts of things that have no relationship with reality. If you have a mainstream media that sees no evil, hears no evil and speaks no evil-- when it comes to Barack Obama-- you can say that you will pay for a vast expansion of government-provided insurance by taking money from the Medicare budget and using other gimmicks.

Whether this administration, or any future administration, will in fact take enough money from Medicare to pay for this new massive entitlement is a question that only the future can answer, regardless of what today's budget projection says.

On paper, you can treat Medicare like the hypothetical rich uncle who is going to leave me enough money to buy a Rolls Royce. But only on paper. In real life, you can't get blood from a turnip, and you can't keep on getting money from a Medicare program that is itself running out of money.

An even more transparent gimmick is collecting money for the new Obama health care program for the first ten years but delaying the payments of its benefits for four years. By collecting money for 10 years and spending it for only 6 years, you can make the program look self-supporting, but only on paper and only in the short run.

This is a game you can play just once, during the first decade. After that, you are going to be collecting money for 10 years and paying out money for 10 years. That is when you discover that your uncle doesn't have enough money to support himself, much less leave you an inheritance to pay for a Rolls Royce.

Advertisement

But a postponed revelation is not part of the official federal deficit today. And that provides a talking point, in order to soothe people who take talking points seriously.

Fraud has been at the heart of this medical care takeover plan from day one. The succession of wholly arbitrary deadlines for rushing this massive legislation through, before anyone has time to read it all, serves no other purpose than to keep its specifics from being scrutinized-- or even recognized-- before it becomes a fait accompli and "the law of the land."

Would you buy a used car under these conditions, even if it was a Rolls Royce?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement