Wow. I'm a bit overwhelmed by the crazy coming out of the Republican party. The scary part is that this guy has a chance just by saying, hey look, Texas' economy is doing really well. You know what, oil prices are pretty high too. I don't think Rick Perry is creating jobs, unless he starts building up a campaign organization. People do move to Texas from other parts of the country, big deal. People flocked to California for 80 years. People moved to Georgia in droves. All I can say is that we've done the Texas governor as President thing, and it didn't turn out well. I don't think this guy is any better than George W. Bush, and I just don't agree with the idea that Barack Obama is doing a worse job than GWB. The only person I think who can complain about Obama's job performance versus George W. Bush would be Osama Bin Laden, and he can't complain because he's at the bottom of the ocean somewhere.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
About Rick Perry
Hendrik Hertzberg, on the most recent not-yet-running heartthrob of the Republican base via the Dish:
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It would be sad if we had more "Texas Success" across the country. Please bring some more of that California good stuff. Hard to believe all of the entitlement programs and high taxes don't create more jobs? I mean, it seems so obvious that they would. The problem with liberals like yourself is your too busy professing your elitism that you lose touch with reality.
ReplyDeleteTexas has added 165,000 jobs during the last three years while California has lost 1.2 million jobs.
"Texas's superior economic performance is noteworthy," said conservative economist Arthur Laffer, a senior fellow of the foundation who conducted the analysis. "It's just striking how the states with no income tax outperform the states with high income taxes.
"And the reason is simple: employers move to the location that promises better after-tax returns. Texas constantly focuses on improving its economic competitiveness and the citizens of Texas are benefiting because of it," he said in a written statement.
The study attributed the competitive growth to the state's economic policies, including no income tax.
"Our study shows that it is these Texas policies of relatively low taxes, low spending, and less regulation that have helped the Lone Star State weather the Great Recession better than California and the nation as a whole," the report reads.
Texas is a place I would not live in, even if they paid me to stay there. Arthur Laffer is a clown. If state taxes drive people away, why does Connecticut have the highest per capita income in the nation, why not Texas?
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