Washington-OregonPremierSoccer.Com Forum

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  
Pages: [1]   Go Down

Author Topic: Another Broken Obama Promise  (Read 387 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

EWSoccer64

  • WPS-Hall of Fame Poster
  • *****
  • Karma: +1924/-1463
  • Posts: 8062
  • Joined 07/02/2008
    YearsYearsYearsYears
    • View Profile
Another Broken Obama Promise
« on: March 31, 2009, 11:08:51 AM »

President O (for On the Job Training) has done it again.   He has broken yet another campaign promise.   After taking the Bush administration to task for not going into Pakistan after the terrorists, Obama now says that he will not send American troops on raids into Pakistan after the Terrrorists.   And it turned out that the Bush Administration had been using drones to attack the terrorists in Pakistan for over a year before the election.   So Obama had falsely pilloried the Bush administration and now has broken yet another campaign promise.
  It looks like he will set the record for the most broken campaign promises.   No wonder his poll numbers are dropping like a rock.


>>>>Obama Rules out US Troop Raids Into Pakistan
March 30, 2009
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - As he carries out a retooled strategy in Afghanistan, President Barack Obama says he will consult with Pakistan's leaders before pursuing terrorist hideouts in that country.

Obama said U.S. ally Pakistan needs to be more accountable, but ruled out deploying U.S. troops there. "Our plan does not change the recognition of Pakistan as a sovereign government," the president told CBS' "Face the Nation" in an interview broadcast Sunday. <<<
Logged

EWSoccer64

  • WPS-Hall of Fame Poster
  • *****
  • Karma: +1924/-1463
  • Posts: 8062
  • Joined 07/02/2008
    YearsYearsYearsYears
    • View Profile
Re: Another Broken Obama Promise
« Reply #1 on: April 01, 2009, 04:50:10 PM »

And YET ANOTHER one..........

>>>



In this Sept. 12, 2008, file photo Democratic presidential candidate Sen....

 
 




Cigarette Tax Increase Angers Smokers

 
  WASHINGTON (AP) - One of President Barack Obama's campaign pledges on taxes went up in puffs of smoke Wednesday.
The largest increase in tobacco taxes took effect despite Obama's promise not to raise taxes of any kind on families earning under $250,000 or individuals under $200,000.

This is one tax that disproportionately affects the poor, who are more likely to smoke than the rich.

To be sure, Obama's tax promises in last year's campaign were most often made in the context of income taxes. Not always.


"I can make a firm pledge," he said in Dover, N.H., on Sept. 12. "Under my plan, no family making less than $250,000 a year will see any form of tax increase. Not your income tax, not your payroll tax, not your capital gains taxes, not any of your taxes."

He repeatedly vowed "you will not see any of your taxes increase one single dime."

Now in office, Obama, who stopped smoking but has admitted he slips now and then, signed a law raising the tobacco tax nearly 62 cents on a pack of cigarettes, to $1.01. Other tobacco products saw similarly steep increases.

The extra money will be used to finance a major expansion of health insurance for children. That represents a step toward achieving another promise, to make sure all kids are covered.

Obama said in the campaign that Americans could have both—a broad boost in affordable health insurance for the nation without raising taxes on anyone but the rich.

His detailed campaign plan stated that his proposed improvement in health insurance and health technology "is more than covered" by raising taxes on the wealthy alone. It was not based on raising the tobacco tax.

The White House contends Obama's campaign pledge left room for measures such as the one financing children's health insurance.

"The president's position throughout the campaign was that he would not raise income or payroll taxes on families making less than $250,000, and that's a promise he has kept," said White House spokesman Reid H. Cherlin. "In this case, he supported a public health measure that will extend health coverage to 4 million children who are currently uninsured."

In some instances during the campaign, Obama was plainly talking about income, payroll and investment taxes, even if he did not say so.

Other times, his point appeared to be that heavier taxation of any sort on average Americans is the wrong prescription in tough times.

"Listen now," he said in his widely watched nomination acceptance speech, "I will cut taxes—cut taxes—for 95 percent of all working families, because, in an economy like this, the last thing we should do is raise taxes on the middle class."

An unequivocal "any tax" pledge also was heard in the vice presidential debate, another prominent forum.

"No one making less than $250,000 under Barack Obama's plan will see one single penny of their tax raised," Joe Biden said, "whether it's their capital gains tax, their income tax, investment tax, any tax."

The Democratic campaign used such statements to counter Republican assertions that Obama would raise taxes in a multitude of direct and indirect ways, recalled Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania.

"I think a reasonable person would have concluded that Senator Obama had made a 'no new taxes' pledge to every couple or family making less than $250,000," she said.

Jamieson noted GOP ads that claimed Obama would raise taxes on electricity and home heating oil. "They rebutted both with the $250,000 claim," she said of the Obama campaign, "so they did extend the rebuttal beyond income and payroll."

Government and private research has found that smoking rates are higher among people of low income.

A Gallup survey of 75,000 people last year fleshed out that conclusion. It found that 34 percent of respondents earning $6,000 to $12,000 were smokers, and the smoking rate consistently declined among people of higher income. Only 13 percent of people earning $90,000 or more were smokers.

Federal or state governments often turn for extra tax dollars to the one in five Americans who smoke, and many states already hit tobacco users this year. So did the tobacco companies, which raised the price on many brands by more than 70 cents a pack.

The latest increase in the federal tax is by far the largest since its introduction in 1951, when it was 8 cents a pack. It's gone up six times since, each time by no more than a dime, until now.

Apart from the tax haul, public health advocates argue that squeezing smokers will help some to quit and persuade young people not to start.

But it was a debate the country didn't have in a presidential campaign that swore off higher taxation.

___
 <<<<
Logged

kennard04

  • WPS-Hall of Fame Poster
  • *****
  • Karma: +1695/-224
  • Posts: 3797
  • Joined 23/01/2006
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
    • View Profile
Re: Another Broken Obama Promise
« Reply #2 on: April 17, 2009, 11:02:15 AM »

and this surprises anyone because ?  :o      America elected him, let America deal with him. We have proven our ineptness more than a few times.
Logged
Marriage is not a noun; it's a verb. It isn't something you get. It's something you do. It's the way you love your partner every day.

The older I get, the faster I was

Coach Pele

  • WPS Poster
  • *
  • Karma: +28/-18
  • Posts: 69
  • Joined 06/08/2008
    YearsYearsYearsYears
    • View Profile
Re: Another Broken Obama Promise
« Reply #3 on: April 18, 2009, 04:00:28 AM »

test
Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up