The View From Kabul

Andrew Exum puts the resignation of Afghanistan Senior Civilian representative Matthew Hoh in context. Here is the WaPo's take on the story and here (pdf) is the resignation letter. From the letter:

To put simply: I fail to see the value or the worth in continued US casualties or expenditures or resources in support of the Afghan government in what is, truly, a 35-year old civil war.

Put like that … Ackerman has further thoughts.

Obama’s Debt

He and the Democrats should be punished severely if the fiscal outlook is no brighter in a year's time. But for now, the following remains true (just don't expect Pajamasmedia to let you know):

Now let's fast forward to the end of fiscal year 2009, which ended on September 30. According to CBO, it ended with spending at $3,515 billion and revenues of $2,106 billion for a deficit of $1,409 billion. To recap, the deficit came in $223 billion higher than projected, but spending was $28 billion and revenues were $251 billion less than expected. Thus we can conclude that more than 100 percent of the increase in the deficit since January is accounted for by lower revenues. Not one penny is due to higher spending…

I continue to believe that the Republican position is nonsensical. Final proof is that the previously cited CBO report shows total federal revenues coming in at 14.9 percent of the gross domestic product in FY2009.

According to the Office of Management and Budget, one has to go back to 1950 to find a year when federal revenues were lower as a share of GDP. For reference, revenues averaged 18 percent of GDP during the Reagan administration and were never lower than 17.3 percent – 2.4 percent of GDP above where they are now.

I think there are grounds on which to criticize the Obama administration's anti-recession actions. But spending too much is not one of them. Indeed, based on this analysis, it is pretty obvious that spending – real spending on things like public works – has been grossly inadequate. The idea that Reagan-style tax cuts would have done anything is just nuts.

Anita Dunn And Mao

Several reader have complained that I have fallen for a Beck trap: out-of–context quotes. But, as I said in my first post, I'm not buying the Beck idea that there are closet Maoists in the Obama administration. I'm buying the idea that some dumb and morally bankrupt lefties simply do not see Mao as he should be seen: as a murderous totalitarian monster. 

Here's the full Dunn quote. I stand by that judgment. Dunn would never have used Hitler as a source for perseverance and setting the right objectives. Why Because Hitler's evil is self-evident. So why is Mao's rancid evil not self-evident for a person like Dunn? Because she retains a double standard for far left totalitarianism over far right totalitarianism. It's that insulting and morally disgusting double standard that gets my goat. Mao was responsible for the deaths of up to 70 million people – and Dunn sees him as a useful strategist.

Disgusting; blind; dumb; appalling.

Hathos Alert

Tim Nudd sums it up nicely:

Just when you think political ads can't get any worse, along comes this four-minute travesty starring a rat (a stand-in for the villainous Democratic former governor, Roy Barnes) and an ox (representing the ad's strong though perhaps somewhat dumb creator, John Oxendine). Via The Awl, which believes the ad "is not just stupid, it is powerful stupid." A commenter over there adds: "This is the most Aesopian campaign ad ever!"

Or the point at which politics becomes South Park. Go to the 2:15 mark and the head-butting montage. It's mesmerizingly kick-ass.

The Lethal Politics Of The Opt-Out Public Option, Ctd

A reader adds:

It's a great point, and one the Republicans should be scared to death of, but the truth of the matter is: there is no way any Republican up for election in 2010 can support a public option opt-out and then not worry about what might happen in their primary or their political future in the Republican party. 

Look at how Charlie Crist has been demonized for supporting the stimulus … that's small potatoes compared to the backlash that would come from supporting the public option.  But then what happens if they oppose, win the primary, and have to face the rest of the public option friendly electorate? NY's 23rd anyone?

Obama plays chess while the GOP is still playing checkers with a timer.