Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have zero faith that this administration will do anything besides tax and spend.
Bush taxed, spent, and got us into a war. I say 2 out of 3 is progress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To paraphrase another DCUMer from months ago:
Dear Government/Government Contractors,
Welcome to the recession. Other companies have been doing massive layoffs and budget cuts since 2008.
Sincerely,
The rest of us
Dear "rest of us",
I am one of you. I have no family members who make money as government employees or contractors. What's more, one of my biggest personal priorities with the budget is big defense cuts. I think it is the most over-padded part of our entire budget.
But I understand that if we lay off a bunch of people in this sector, for the simple reason that the two parties cannot be grownups and compromise, then it is going to affect the entire economy. If you are in retail, restaurants, construction, financial services, legal... it doesn't matter. Consumption will go down and your life gets a little bit tougher.
We can do better deficit reduction with a long term plan, and everyone on the Hill knows it. What they are doing is playing a game of chicken and that's just stupidity.
Anonymous wrote:I have zero faith that this administration will do anything besides tax and spend.
Anonymous wrote:To paraphrase another DCUMer from months ago:
Dear Government/Government Contractors,
Welcome to the recession. Other companies have been doing massive layoffs and budget cuts since 2008.
Sincerely,
The rest of us
Anonymous wrote:Come on smaller government and what not, what did you think they were talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is it?
A nickname for a budget procedure called "sequestration." Congress resolved the debt ceiling debate by putting the federal budget on a course for automatic, across-the-board cuts to the entire federal budget. The super committee was supposed to come up with a plan that would make cuts in a more targeted fashion that would preserve priority areas, but they could not agree. So, starting on January 1 the federal government will be cut by just shy of 10% - across-the-board - unless Congress and the President can rescind the law and come to some other agreement.
Does this mean 10% cut for every agency?
Give or take, yes. It's not entirely clear yet. Probably will be less (like 8.2 or 9.4) but no one really knows exactly. As I tend to be pessimistic, I always plan for the worst so I am figuring on about 10.
But this doesn't apply to the ones that are self-funded??
Anonymous wrote:To paraphrase another DCUMer from months ago:
Dear Government/Government Contractors,
Welcome to the recession. Other companies have been doing massive layoffs and budget cuts since 2008.
Sincerely,
The rest of us