Ian wrote:Not wrong, just hyperbole and hypocrisy. How many times was the debt ceiling raised before Obama's term? And now these guys come out of the woodwork as suddenly in favor of cutting everything in sight. It's little wonder Congress in recent years has a public approval rating lower than most serial killers.
Actually, the quote I attributed to Boehner was Barack Obama. Only, now, Obama's all for increases in the debt limit, and it's no longer a failure of leadership.
Another thing I find humorous is the reporting on the "proposals" regarding this "fiscal cliff." NPR is fucking hilarious. This morning the "fiscal cliff" was referred to as "the fiscal cliff THAT CONGRESS CREATED." LOL -- nevermind that it was a deal struck which included the White House as part of those negotiations. They all created it, but NPR has to insulate the White House. And, of course, nowadays "Congress" is a media reference to "Republicans," because the common theme is that the Republicans control Congress, when they really don't (Democrats control half -- the Senate -- and the Republicans control the other half - the House of Representatives).
Then, NPR portrayed the White House's proposals here as eminently reasonable -- tax hikes and some nonspecific spending cuts. But, the GOP proposal was immediately cautioned with "but the numbers don't add up to balance the budget." Of course, NEITHER DOES THE WHITE HOUSE'S NUMBERS! But, NPR doesn't qualify the White House's proposal. The White House's proposal was characterized as "a balanced proposal of tax hikes for the [unfortunately worded] wealthiest among us, and a panoply of spending cuts." Whereas the Republican proposal was draconian spending cuts, an increase in Medicare eligibility, etc., and no tax hikes, and the numbers don't add up.
And, lastly -- why the fuck does the media not ask what the Congressional Democrats have as a proposal? It's "The White House's [reasonable/balanced] proposal," and Congressional Republicans proposal [which doesn't add up]. Congressional Democrats are never mentioned, and never asked why or whether they will ever pass a budget. It just doesn't matter.
I love listening to NPR, but more often than not it's just for the lulz. They are so flamingly biased in their presentations, it makes FoxNews look like a piker.
The only thing worse than their news coverage is their little "slice of life" vinettes where they have a narrator mutter the story in sort of hushed, semi-serious, sorta dejected tones, and they intersperse the story with fake background noises (like when they're talking in a restaurant, they overdub noises of silverware and background conversation, or when walking down the street they add street noise and a hot dog vendor speaking bruskly...
NPR...a radio station of douchebags.