You may remember Lloyd Bentsen's put down of Dan Quayle during the 1988 Vice Presidential debate if you're old enough. In case your memory is foggy, here is the clip:
This got me thinking about the current presidential campaign and the tendency for Democrat candidates to find parallels between themselves and JFK. This is especially true with the Obama campaign. Then, listening to Tuesday's campaign speeches, I once again heard the never-ending class warfare mantra of "tax cuts for the wealthy." As I've noted before, the Bush tax cuts cut a greater percentage at the bottom of the income distribution, raising the threshold at which taxes are owed. The net effect has been fewer people paying federal income taxes and the wealthy paying a higher percentage. Since more than 85% of federal taxes are paid by people in the top half of the income brackets, by definition, tax cuts will go to the wealthy.
Surely, Jack Kennedy would never have stooped to such sinister tax-cutting atrocities. Check out this clip of Kennedy, the supply-sider, from August 13, 1962:
If you listened closely, you heard that Kennedy's cuts were across the board and included cuts in corporate taxes. This disproportionately helped the wealthy and had none of the effect of moving the burden to the highest earners as Bush's cuts did. Kennedy understood the economics involved and saw his cuts as a contribution toward economic growth, just as Reagan and Bush did.
Obama and Clinton, on the other hand, appear not to care about the economics involved. It seems more about a populist fervor to "stick it to the man." In that sense, senators Obama and Clinton, you're no Jack Kennedy.
(For a comparison of tax cuts and the redistribution accomplished by the Bush cuts click here.)
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