Ron
Paul: America has already gone over the fiscal cliff
US
President Barack Obama demanded from Congress immediate action to
prevent America from falling of a so-called fiscal cliff, but Rep.
Ron Paul (R-Texas) says it might be too late to keep the country
afloat.ed he will resign from the Central Intelligence Agency.
RT,
9
November, 2012
Speaking
with Bloomberg Television on Thursday, the lawmaker who ran against
Pres. Obama during the last two elections said he expects that
America’s financial woes are beyond repair.
“We’re
so far gone,” said the congressman, who will retire from the Hill
this year after serving 12 terms in the House. “We’re over the
cliff. We cannot get enough people in Congress in the next 5 to 10
years who will do the wise things. We have to prepare for having
already fallen off the fiscal cliff.”
On
the campaign trail leading up to the Nov. 6, 2012 election, Rep. Paul
proposed an array of ideas he said would save the country from
economic disaster, including returning to a gold standard and
abolishing the Federal Reserve, America’s central bank. On his
part, Pres. Obama vowed to keep the company in tact if elected to a
second term, and Friday told reporters at the White House that he
expects Congress to come to his side and do what’s right to prevent
what Rep. Paul says is inevitable now.
“I’ve
invited leaders from both parties to the White House next so we can
start to build consensus around the challenges that we can only solve
together,” said the president in reference to worries over
America’s fiscal standing next year. “At a time when our economy
is still recovering from the great recession, our top priority has to
be jobs and growth.”
“We
can’t just cut out way to prosperity,” said Obama. “If we’re
serious about reducing the deficit, we have to combine spending cuts
with revenue. That means asking the wealthiest Americans to pay a
little more in taxes.”
“I’m
not wedded to every detail of my plan,” he said. “I’m open to
compromise; I’m open to new ideas.”
According
to Rep. Paul, that’s just more pandering from the president.
“They’re
just looking for the truth,” said the congressman. “They say,
‘Well, all we need is a little compromise.’ Well nobody expects
that because they do not admit the truth, and the truth is that we
are broke.”
“How
do you compromise? The only way you can compromise is if you agree on
what to cut.”
From
the White House on Friday, the president said, “The American people
voted for action, not politics as usual,” and insisted that “What
the American people are looking for is cooperation,” consensus and
common sense from the government. “Most of all they want action,”
he added, insisting, “I intend on delivering for them during my
second term.”
Rep.
Paul tells Bloomberg it’s a “bad sign” that the public, not the
president, is on the receiving end of however the White House tries
to fix the country’s financial woes. “People do not want anything
cut,” he said. “They want all the bailouts to come. They want the
Fed to keep printing money. They do not believe we have gone off the
cliff or are close to going off the cliff.”
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