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Friday, July 18, 2008
Rich Tucker :: Townhall.com Columnist
No Time for Whining
by Rich Tucker
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


How are you doing, financially? You’ve probably got a better job than you did five years ago, and you’ll probably have a still better job (or at least better pay) five years from now.

Unless, of course, you retire. In that case, your income goes down, yet you have an opportunity to live for your final 20 or 30 years (with help from Social Security and Medicare) without working.

Retirement is a prospect today’s Americans take for granted. But it’s a recent invention. It wasn’t all that long ago that most people worked their entire lives. Most jobs were physically exhausting and dangerous, and people worked them until they wore out or died.

It just goes to show how quickly we take something great, make it a part of daily life, and start taking it for granted. The problem is that the slightest blip can then come to seem like an economic earthquake.

This is what Phil Gramm, a former senator and an advisor to John McCain’s presidential campaign was getting at recently when he talked about our country becoming “a nation of whiners.” It’s certainly true that the economy is sagging. Soaring gas and food prices are taking the largest toll.

But as Gramm explained, many of those problems come from our government. “I’m talking about our leaders. I’m not talking about our people,” he told The Washington Post. “We’ve got every kind of excuse in the world about oil prices -- we’ve got speculators, the oil companies to blame -- but too many people don’t have a program to get on with a job of producing.”

Fair enough.

Our government subsidizes ethanol, for example, making corn scarcer and more expensive. That increases the prices of everything else. Meanwhile, our government also restricts drilling offshore and in the wilds of Alaska. We could bring prices down if we did more to increase domestic supply. But Gramm’s right. Too many of our leaders would rather just whine.

Our economy could use some fine-tuning (lower tax rates, less regulation), but anyone who thinks it’s in terrible shape forgets our history. Today’s 5.5 percent unemployment is a long way from the 25 percent unemployment during the Depression, or even the 10 percent unemployment we had during the recession of the early 1980s. We pulled through those, and we’ll pull through this, unless we allow our whiners to drag us down.

Our economy gets plenty of press coverage, but some even bigger stories have passed virtually unnoticed. Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Tucker is an editor in Washington D.C. and a columnist for Townhall.com.

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Subject: Whiners/complaints
What Phil Gramm said that America is a land of whinners/complainers. Read the letter of Jay Leno and everfything he has written is true.

for Vic
Vic writes: " Was the GOP ever your party? If you are voting for the Vomit I doubt it."

Speaking for myself:

I voted for Reagan twice, Nixon before him, Bush 41 after him. I'm not going to vote for Obama.

But I may not vote for McCain either, the way things are going. And here's why:

I say that Bush 43 has betrayed the conservative movement, and come close to wrecking the GOP brand. Until Republicans and conservatives are willing to admit that--PUBLICLY--and begin to repair the damage Bush 43 did, I don't feel supportive of them. I certainly refuse to keep "circling the wagons" around Bush 43, defending his stupid Iraq War policies, his stupid devaluation of the dollar (which something Reagan had denounced Carter for doing in 1980), and his stupid flip-flops on HAMAS, North Korea and Iran.

I've had it with Bush 43. I don't think I can support the GOP again until he's gone from office for good and gone back to private life.
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