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bjbj Announcer: You're listening to The David Pakman Show. David: Welcome back to The David
Pakman Show. If you missed it, Midweek Politics is gone, Louis. Today is the last time Midweek
Politics will be on the air. Next week we will be back Mondays and Thursdays, 3:00 pm
Eastern, with the David Pakman Show, DavidPakman.com is up. And today on the bonus show, you know
what we're going to be talking about, there's been an ongoing situation. I actually had
a conversation with Louis off the air about whether he was going to vote this election
or not, because there's been an ongoing issue with Louis. Bonus show, we'll talk about did
Louis vote, and if he didn't, I don't actually know yet, he hasn't told me, I've told him
not to tell me, there is going to be hell to pay, I'm just warning you right now, Louis.
And also have we discovered a cure for the common cold, more on the behind-the-scenes
not-safe-for-work type of election stuff that's going on, and much, much more. So make sure
to log onto DavidPakman.com/membership, become a member, it's fantastic. I'm telling you,
Louis's entire family just absolutely loves it. Now, let's talk a little bit about what
is going to happen in the next year, in the next two years before the 2012 election. First
of all, what can we expect narrative-wise post-election? Here's the things you can expect.
You decide whether they're true or not, a lot of these sound silly to me. Number one:
Democrats lost because Obama failed to connect with voters, maybe even because he uses a
Teleprompter. Barack Obama lost a lot of races for Democrats because he is an elitist, or
is seen as an elitist. He failed to establish a clear rationale for his agenda. He's too
articulate, even though before the election, he was just articulate. He's too liberal,
or he's not liberal enough and he should've shown more resolve. Expect to hear any or
all of those things in the leadup to the 2012 election. Now, some people didn't fall for
that, but some did. And I hate to do it, but again, there were... I don't want to talk
about... let's have an honest discussion, as we did before the show, let's have an honest
discussion about the, what am I trying to say here? About the awareness of reality of
the electorate, of the people who are voting. I mean, we saw people asked, "Why did you
vote for Rand Paul?" "Well, I thought it was time for a change." A change. That is why
you vote for someone who says you know what, it actually should be OK to have signs saying
"No Blacks Allowed" outside of a business, or we should abolish the Department of Education.
It was time for a change. That's the reason. So here's some of the misconceptions that,
in talking to voters and looking at exit polls and looking at different polls, certainly
played into what's going on here. Now, don't get me wrong. I am not saying Democrats lost
because people, they're stupid. I'm not saying that. But in every election, we can look at
what people believe and how they vote as a result, and here are some of the things. For
example, many people believe that President Obama tripled the deficit. The reality is
that Bush's last budget had a $1.4 trillion deficit, and Obama's first budget reduced
that to $1.29 trillion. Simply not true, Louis, but many people believe that. And you know
that some of the people you talk to say hey, the spending! Spending, Obama's spending too
much. Louis: Right, well, that's usually what they say about any Democratic president. David:
President Obama raised taxes, which hurt the economy. The reality is Obama cut taxes. 40%
of the stimulus was wasted on tax cuts which only create debt, which is, it was so much
less effective than it could've been. The stimulus didn't work. The reality is the stimulus
did work, it clearly wasn't enough. Stimulus raised employment by between 1.5 to 3.5 million
jobs. People have a hard time with the it-wasn't-as-bad-as-it-would-have-been logic. I mean, I understand that, Louis. That's
a hard logic to sell as to why you should reward Democrats, is it not? Louis: Right,
well, especially this day and age, considering how polarized everything is. David: And then
the idea that businesses would hire if they only got tax cuts. You know, the reality is
businesses hire the right number of employees to meet the demand for whatever product or
service they offer. If you have extra cash, you wouldn't hire. If a business has a demand
all of a sudden, they will find the money to hire. Businesses need customers, not tax
cuts. Louis: Right. It's hard to incentivize a small business to do anything if you're
government. David: You need demand, essentially. Louis: Right. David: You essentially need
demand. And of course, health care reform cost a trillion bucks, it actually saved $138
billion. These are not minor points, these matter. hR.W :pR.W [Content_Types].xml Iw},
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