The responses are par for the course. The GOP has no ideas whatsoever for getting the economy going other than the same old stale ones that resulted in the biggest economic dislocation since the Great Depression. Deregulate some more and let's repeat the Wall Street melt down. What a bunch of fucking fools. And the sad part is that the American people are so ignorant and ill-informed that they may well go for this sort of bullshit.
However, once the Presidential campaign starts, things may start to turn around. I have no idea who the Republican nominee will be, but based on the current field, it looks like that nominee will be as bankrupt on real ideas as all the right wing parrots here. Eliminating the Federal Reserve and repealing Amendment to the Constitution at least are new ideas, but they're as nutty as a fruit cake. And even your ignorant Bubba doesn't think that they will create jobs.
Going back to the bankrupt policies of George Bush is a slightly better idea in terms of being able to sell it to the masses, but while the memory of the voting public is short, I don't think it's that short. Of course Obama has done himself no favors by kissing the ass of Wall Street at every opportunity and sucking up to big business when he should have been excoriating them at every opportunity. And his failed Wall Street reforms that allow too big to fail banks to remain in place damage his credibility as a messenger, but the free the Wall Street, unbridled rapacious capitalism crowd got a lot of guts coming in only two years after the economic collapse and asking the public to double down and get a double dose of what just nearly killed them. It will be an interesting election.
Meanwhile, Paul Krugman has in interesting article where he comments on the dearth of Republican solutions to the jobs problem:
In early 2009, as the new Obama administration tried to come to grips with the crisis it inherited, you heard two main lines from critics on the right. First, they argued that we should rely on monetary policy rather than fiscal policy — that is, that the job of fighting unemployment should be left to the Fed. Second, they argued that fiscal actions should take the form of tax cuts rather than temporary spending.
Now, however, leading Republicans are against tax cuts — at least if they benefit working Americans rather than rich people and corporations.
And they’re against monetary policy, too. In Wednesday night’s Republican presidential debate, Mitt Romney declared that he would seek a replacement for Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, essentially because Mr. Bernanke has tried to do something (though not enough) about unemployment. And that makes Mr. Romney a moderate by G.O.P. standards, since Rick Perry, his main rival for the presidential nomination, has suggested that Mr. Bernanke should be treated “pretty ugly.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/09/op...r-on-fire.html
In other words, we're against everything, we hate working people, (and by implication we don't give a shit about anybody but the rich).