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President Barack Obama on the Federal Budget: Four Principles

by: President Barack Obama, t r u t h o u t | Transcript

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Following his visit to California last week, President Barack Obama's weekly address to the nation lays out four basic principles behind the federal budget and an "economic blueprint for the future." (Photo: Getty Images)

    Washington, DC - Last week, I spent a few days in California, talking with ordinary Americans in town halls and in the places where they work. We talked about their struggles, and we talked about their hopes. At the end of the day, these men and women weren't as concerned with the news of the day in Washington as they were about the very real and very serious challenges their families face every day: whether they'll have a job and a paycheck to count on; whether they'll be able to pay their medical bills or afford college tuition; whether they'll be able to leave their children a world that's safer and more prosperous than the one we have now.

    Those are the concerns I heard about in California. They are the concerns I've heard about in letters from people throughout this country for the last two years. And they are the concerns addressed in the budget I sent to Congress last month.

    With the magnitude of the challenges we face, I don't just view this budget as numbers on a page or a laundry list of programs. It's an economic blueprint for our future - a vision of America where growth is not based on real estate bubbles or overleveraged banks, but on a firm foundation of investments in energy, education, and health care that will lead to a real and lasting prosperity.

    These investments are not a wish list of priorities that I picked out of thin air - they are a central part of a comprehensive strategy to grow this economy by attacking the very problems that have dragged it down for too long: the high cost of health care and our dependence on foreign oil; our education deficit and our fiscal deficit.

    Now, as the House and the Senate take up this budget next week, the specific details and dollar amounts in this budget will undoubtedly change. That's a normal and healthy part of the process.

    But when all is said and done, I expect a budget that meets four basic principles:

    First, it must reduce our dependence on dangerous foreign oil and finally put this nation on a path to a clean, renewable energy future. There is no longer a doubt that the jobs and industries of tomorrow will involve harnessing renewable sources of energy. The only question is whether America will lead that future. I believe we can and we will, and that's why we've proposed a budget that makes clean energy the profitable kind of energy, while investing in technologies like wind power and solar power; advanced biofuels, clean coal, and fuel-efficient cars and trucks that can be built right here in America.

    Second, this budget must renew our nation's commitment to a complete and competitive education for every American child. In this global economy, we know the countries that out-educate us today will out-compete us tomorrow, and we know that our students are already falling behind their counterparts in places like China. That is why we have proposed investments in childhood education programs that work; in high standards and accountability for our schools; in rewards for teachers who succeed; and in affordable college education for anyone who wants to go. It is time to demand excellence from our schools so that we can finally prepare our workforce for a 21st century economy.

    Third, we need a budget that makes a serious investment in health care reform - reform that will bring down costs, ensure quality, and guarantee people their choice of doctors and hospitals. Right now, there are millions of Americans who are just one illness or medical emergency away from bankruptcy. There are businesses that have been forced to close their doors or ship jobs overseas because they can't afford insurance. Medicare costs are consuming our federal budget. Medicaid is overwhelming our state budgets. So to those who say we have to choose between health care reform and fiscal discipline, I say that making investments now that will dramatically lower health care costs for everyone won't add to our budget deficit in the long-term - it is one of the best ways to reduce it.

    Finally, this budget must reduce that deficit even further. With the fiscal mess we've inherited and the cost of this financial crisis, I've proposed a budget that cuts our deficit in half by the end of my first term. That's why we are scouring every corner of the budget and have proposed $2 trillion in deficit reductions over the next decade. In total, our budget would bring discretionary spending for domestic programs as a share of the economy to its lowest level in nearly half a century. And we will continue making these tough choices in the months and years ahead so that as our economy recovers, we do what we must to bring this deficit down.

    I will be discussing each of these principles next week, as Congress takes up the important work of debating this budget. I realize there are those who say these plans are too ambitious to enact. To that I say that the challenges we face are too large to ignore. I didn't come here to pass on our problems to the next President or the next generation - I came here to solve them.

    The American people sent us here to get things done, and at this moment of great challenge, they are watching and waiting for us to lead. Let's show them that we are equal to the task before us, and let's pass a budget that puts this nation on the road to lasting prosperity.

  

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OBAMALONEY! This budgetary

OBAMALONEY! This budgetary gibberish does not even address the insane cost of useless and illegal foreign wars, nor the madness of a military budget that is higher than all the world's other countries' military expenditures put together. It says nothing about the huge and obscene sums of money being showered on special interest groups and military "aid" to countries like Israel and Egypt, or the huge sums allotted to the "war" on drugs. This is a sham and a shame. Oblahma talks like a progressive, but acts like George Bush light. What a disappointment!

Dear Obama, So far so good,

Dear Obama, So far so good, but what about the vultures on Wall St? What are you going to do about them? What about the Israeli Lobby? When are you going to stop catering to their whims? What about the corporations decimating this planet we ALL live on? What are you going to do about their manipulation of our, we the people"s, gov't? What about the Pentagon and our insane imperialistic ways? When are you going to stop this arrogant blasphemy? When are you going to bring our troops home and stop the senseless bloodshed? What about the criminal Federal Reserve? When are you going to stop this nonsense of paying someone else for OUR money? I had hopes when you were elected, Obama, but so far, you are just another crooked politician. When you start doing something for the PEOPLE of this country, and the world, instead of a select few that "think" they are better than the rest of us, I might, MIGHT, regain my faith in this country and mankind as a whole. Until then, shame on you for your deceit!!!

Clean coal? What's that?

Clean coal? What's that?

One of the largest

One of the largest domestic spending programs is the defense budget. I agree that cutting out the various boondoggles in it, including the F-22 fighter program (rife with cost overruns on an unneeded weapons system), along with scaling down our Iraq and Afghanistan war involvements, would free up hundreds of billions of dollars. I'm all for it. Defense weapons research and development are necessary. History has shown us the danger in allowing our military to deteriorate (we were abysmally unprepared at the start of WW II, for example). But, continuing development of WMDs when treaties exist to ban their existence, treaties to which we are signatories, puts us in violation of our own laws, as well as, international law. Their gradual reduction and destruction, in conjunction with negotiations including requirements that other countries who possess them do the same, would save billions What occurs to me, though, in all of the discussion about the success or failure of the Obama Administration in addressing the myriad crises facing this country, is that they have been in office for two months. Did Congress include a magic wand in their budgetary legislation? From the time of Ronald Reagan's entry into the Oval Office until W's exit, almost 30 years elapsed. It took Reagan's 8 years, Bush I's 4 years and W's 8 years to dig us into the mud pit in which we're mired right now. Clinton's Administration, at least, developed a budgetary surplus; despite his many foibles, progress was made in paying down the national debt. How can any rational human being expect that a new President, who has yet to fill all of the key posts in the most critical departments of the government, would be able to reverse 20 years of fiscal malfeasance, out of the last 28 years of history, within his first 60 days in office? Then again, the ravings of the right wingers can hardly be characterized as rational. They're the hypocritical potshots of a cabal of misfits who have their hands filthy from their role in creating what Obama and his band of merry men have been left to clean up. I say give them a chance, and end the second-guessing and miracle-seeking. Obama won a legal election without the cloud hanging over his victory that besmirched Bush 43's stay in office. He's legitimately the President. Get over it and let him do the job. That's why we sent him to Washington, isn't it?

As for the last principle -

As for the last principle - debt... we can never get rid of the debt unless we get rid of the privately owned Federal Reserve. As long as we pay interest on the money they create, we can never pay it back. Presently, we owe more in interest than the actual US dollars in circulation. How could we ever pay off the debt? If Obama doesn't dismantle the FED's, we will only be feeding into the hands of the Globalization agenda! Beware!

Disappointing indeed --

Disappointing indeed -- Obama's use of a few key terms signals that he buys into many of the myths that got us into this mess in the first place: "Clean coal" -- it's bogus. Doesn't exist except on paper. An excuse for throwing more money at the big energy companies that have a stranglehold on our political process. "Competitive" education, "accountability" -- Arnie Duncan and his ilk continue to insist that we can have equality of educational outputs despite the vast inequalities in educational inputs. Where's the accountability regarding school finance, racist curricula, unfair school tracking practices, bone-headed instructional strategies for English language learners, etc.? Our children need a meaningful education, not a chance to be more "competitive" in the race to the bottom with foreign workers. Our trade deficit with China is due not to the superiority of Chinese education, but to China's cheap production costs, ensured by horrible working conditions and lack of safety standards. But hey, Bush put us well on the way toward competing with China on those fronts! Why do so many smart people (Obama included) believe that when we educate more people, jobs will magically appear for them to put their new skills to use? Our economy demonstrates just the opposite -- not a "skills shortage," but an oversupply of workers as corporations downsize. Finally, any politician who talks about putting us on a firm financial footing and does not even address military spending is just blowing smoke. I say this as one who appreciate the good things Obama has done in some areas. But he's not talking any of the radical change we need.

Well spoken, NewYorker6699!

Well spoken, NewYorker6699! I agree that we need to give President Obama a chance. He didn't make this mess. It was caused mostly by Republicans, because they've been in the White House and/or in control of Congress for most of the last 30 years. So any criticism coming out of their mouths we should see for what it is, just self-serving hypocritical BS. Every single patriotic American should now be giving our President our full support and envisioning and working toward an America that is fair, just, ethical, healthy, and strong, which will bring us prosperity as well.