Well, I favor more troops and better armaments, but raising taxes - raising tax rates on incomes more than $250,000 to 300,000 as has been suggested by "the left" - will not raise revenues. It will chase those upper-income taxpayers into tax shelters, or offshore, or both. One more point about "the rich," the top 1 percent earn 15 percent of total income and pay 35 percent of income taxes. Compared to 10 years ago "the rich" are paying actually a larger share, not a smaller share of income taxes. As I've said many times, if you want to "soak the rich" lower the tax rates to 20 or 25 percent where there is absolutely no incentive to go offshore, go into tax shelters or stop producing income by going on longer holidays.
The president wants to achieve a stable Iraq, as all or most of us do, and that will take more boots on the ground to help pacify Baghdad. But slowing down the economy is just plain counterproductive, counterintuitive and counter to historical evidence. President Kennedy cut tax rates during the Vietnam War and the budget came into balance in 1965. Ronald Reagan cut tax rates during the Cold War and unemployment came down, (as did inflation) while the economy more than doubled in the '80s.
Richard Nixon raised taxes during the Vietnam War, (spreading the sacrifice, E.J. would say) and a recession followed and revenues fell. President Carter raised taxes in the late '70s and revenues went down, not up.
The Bush tax rate reductions have had a positive impact on the U.S. economy by lowering unemployment to 4.6 percent. Since the second half of 2003, the U.S. economy has grown by around 4 percent on an annual basis, added more than 6 million new jobs and added revenues to the federal treasury of over 15 percent per year for three straight years. Why would E.J. Dionne and others want to jeopardize economic growth?
Even though "the left" is enamored by former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin's advice to raise taxes to lower the deficit, the real answer to this challenge of funding the war, expanding our military and reducing the burden of debt is to reform and simplify the tax code while lowering the tax rate on both labor and capital while cutting rate of growth in government spending.
John F. Kennedy said in 1961, "the purpose of cutting tax rates is to achieve a more prosperous, expanding economy ... and the soundest way to raise revenues in the long run is to cut the tax rates now." He did, and those who ignore the empirical evidence of the last 60 years are threatening the growth of our economy and putting the poor in harms way.