Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Transformi­ng, all right

- Cal Thomas is a columnist for the Tribune Content Agency. Cal Thomas

The annual trick-or-treat ritual is over. Not so the tricks perpetuate­d by congressio­nal Democrats about their tax-and-spend ritual, and their phony numbers.

Consider the latest spending measure cobbled together by the House Democratic leadership, or more accurately their staffs. It is 2,400 pages, much longer than the longest book I ever read. I doubt most members have read much if any of it.

The language is foreign to most English speakers and was likely poll-tested along with false promises it will not cost a dime. Forget pennies from heaven. These are borrowed and printed dollars from Washington.

You’ve heard of the kitchen sink. This is that, the bathroom sink, and the tub. If it becomes law, the country will sink deeper in debt from which we are unlikely to recover. Even worse is yet to come with the massive social spending measure.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on CNN that the administra­tion’s proposed tax hike on billionair­es is “… not a wealth tax, but a tax on unrealized capital gains of exceptiona­lly wealthy individual­s.” Word games.

Christian Mysliwiec, commentary editor for The Daily Signal, a publicatio­n of the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation, has written an analysis of the $1.75 trillion bill. Here are three of his lowlights:

—Childcare and Pre-K: Actual 10-year cost is likely more than twice the reported cost of $400 billion.

—Obamacare Tax Credit: Actual 10-year cost is likely much more than three times the reported cost of $130 billion.

—Child and Earned Income Tax Credits: Actual 10-year cost is likely more than 10 times the reported cost of $200 billion.

“In total, these programs would likely cost well over $2.3 trillion above the estimate in this framework over 10 years. This excess would be more than $18,700 of new spending per American household.”

This is, to recall a phrase, voodoo economics.

Aside from the monetary cost, there would also be a sociologic­al price to pay. Children will be raised with the values of paid daycare workers and without parental love. The measure would discourage work, as we have seen with checks going to people during the pandemic who have been reluctant to return to their jobs.

Mysliwiec also notes the bill will “subsidize single parenthood, including among teens, thereby weakening the probabilit­y that children will be raised by a married mother and father … fewer children will experience social success and upward mobility, and low-income Americans will be left behind.”

This advances the liberal (aka progressiv­e) soft bigotry of low expectatio­ns, because it tells especially minorities they have little to no chance of succeeding without federal help. We have heard this for decades. If government alone, or even government mainly, could cause people to make decisions that are good for themselves and the country, would it not have by now?

Trillions of dollars have been spent on programs that have not fulfilled the promises of those who created them. What about the numerous people who have succeeded on their own by making right decisions? Forget them, because they don’t help the Democrats’ narrative.

I am not a pessimist, but if these spending bills become law, which is still in doubt given the opposition of some Democrats, it will only advance our decline, massive debt being one of the contributi­ng factors to the demise of other nations that engaged in profligate spending.

Our enemies, which include domestic as well as foreign, are eager to reach their goal of “fundamenta­lly transformi­ng America.”

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