from the National Post, by Chris Edwards:
The point here is not to condemn president Bush, but to illustrate that
party labels have meant very little in recent federal expansions. Each recent
president has added new subsidy programs, expanded existing ones and imposed new
mandates on the states. Those changes have been usually retained by later
presidents, resulting in outlays growing ever larger. Recently, Republicans have
opposed some “pork” spending, but unless they challenge programs in a more
fundamental way, spending will be a runaway freight train under President Obama.
President Obama thinks that he can improve federal efficiency, and perhaps
he can somewhat. But he cannot change the fundamental factors that make the
government such a poor allocator of resources. If Mr. Obama succeeds in
expanding the government, it will probably function worse than under president
Bush because it will be even harder for administrators to keep track of all the
spending. Sadly, President Obama’s first budget sets a course for more
government bloat, more economic distortions and ultimately lower standards of
living for everyone who is not living off of federal handouts.
That's the problem with politicians; they all think they can do it better. The only importance to them is staying in office/power.
