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The Democratic Party was the first of the currently existing national parties to be formed in this country. 
 
Thomas Jefferson is credited to be the founder of the Democratic Party at its earliest.
 
(The Republican Party wasn't formed until sometime around 1854 and President Lincoln was its first candidate elected to the office of the Presidency.  Lincoln started his political career as a Whig.  There is some dispute about where the Republican Party started. 
Some claim it was formed in Ripon, Wisconsin in 1854.
Some claim it was a spontaneous outpouring of anger over the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska act which, in 1854 had the effect of repealing the Missouri Compromise, passed in 1820, which stated that the lands of the Louisiana Purchase would be free of slavery, except for Missouri itself.
 
Democratic Senator Stephen A. Douglas (Illinois) was a speculator and invested in opening up the western territories, made up of the Louisiana Purchase.  Part of that, the Nebraska Territory was then split up into two units, Kansas and Nebraska.  He proposed a bill that would leave the slavery issue up to the territorial legislatures to decide, as a matter of "popular sovereignty".
 
But because it effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise, it enraged most Northerners and abolitionists.  In spite of that, Southern leaders insisted on a formal amendment that specifically repealed the (anti) slavery provisions of the compromise.
 
The bill was bitterly fought in Congress and Douglas won in 1854.
Democratic President Franklin Pierce signed the bill immediately.  This reopened the debate on the slavery issue and caused a major shift in the political parties.  Republicans dominated in the North, and pro-slavery Democrats dominated in the south.  Pierce lost his bid for re-election.  Franklin Pierce, you may recall, is an ancestor of Barbara Pierce Bush, the wife of George H.W. Bush and mother of George W. Bush.
 
While Franklin Pierce did ally himself with President Andrew Jackson (Democrat), as a congressman in 1832, in fighting against the Bank of the United States (this is a good thing), his closest ally was Jefferson Davis, who would shortly thereafter become the President of the Confederacy.  After his defeat for re-election in 1856, he railed against the policies of Abraham Lincoln, the Emancipation Proclamation and against abolitionists.
 
Abraham Lincoln later debated against Stephen A. Douglas in the campaign for Senate.
 
James Buchanan (Democrat) defeated Franklin Pierce (Democrat) in the Presidential race of 1856.  He was against slavery, but felt that it was protected in the U.S. Constitution.  Slavery wasn't specifically prohibited or abolished until the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution on December 6, 1865.  This was the first new amendment adopted in more than 60 years.  Slavery had existed in the colonies and slaves were owned by most of the plantation owners, including George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.
 
 
Buchanan thought that the Supreme Court Decision in the Dred Scott case in 1857, had resolved the slavery issue. 
 
Liberal justices wanted to free Dred Scott under the terms of the Missouri Compromise.   Conservative justices wanted to deny freedom to Scott and rule the Compromise unconstitutional.
 
While, in the end, the Supreme Court was unable to reach a single decision, the positions of Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, a former slave owner himself, prevailed.
 
He found that:
  • Dred Scott had no standing in the court system because blacks, regardless of whether they were free or slave, were not and could not be citizens.
  • A slave was the property of the slaveowner and that temporary residence north of the Missouri Compromise’s 36˚30’ line did not bestow freedom.
  • Congress, under the Fifth Amendment, lacked the authority to deprive citizens of their property, a ruling that served to wipe out the slavery provisions of the Missouri Compromise.
 
News of this decision irrepairably split the Democratic Party into two factions, the anti-slavery North and the pro-slavery South.
 
Senator Stephan A. Douglas was opposed to the decision because it voided his solution of "popular sovereignty" of the states/territories.
 
President Buchanan thought that it put the slavery question to rest.
 
Southern Dixie-crats wanted to secede from the Union because of the "States Rights" and sovereignty issues.
 
Because James Buchanan did not support Stephen Douglas, however, he did not back him in his Presidential race against Lincoln in 1860.
 
This split the Democratic Party which opened the door for Lincoln to win the Presidency.
 
While the Civil War is thought to be a war to end slavery, it was really about holding the union together, to prevent secessionists from leaving the union.  Abraham Lincoln was elected President on November 6, 1860.  On December 20, 1860 South Carolina secedes from the Union, followed within two months by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, George, Louisiana and Texas.
 
When Lincoln won the Presidency, he used the military to force the secessionist states to comply with federal laws and remain in the Union.
 
After four years, the Civil War was officially ended on April 9, 1865, with General Robert E. Lee's surrender to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomatox Court House in Virginia.
 
On April 14, 1865 President Lincoln is shot by John Wilkes Booth, a member of an ultra-conservative organization who believes that he can rally the South to rise up again with Lincoln's murder.  Lincoln dies the next morning.
 
Over 620,000 soldiers died during the Civil War, with disease killing twice as many as lost in battle.  50,000 survivors return home as amputees.
 
It is believed by many historians that had Lincoln lived, he would have been much more lenient and forgiving of the southern states, and would have helped with reparations to help rebuild the South, and even his Vice President Andrew Johnson (Democrat) offered more lenient and forgiving plans to bring the Southern states back into the Union.  But the Republican controlled congress, still upset about Lincoln's assassination, weren't so forgiving, and the south suffered economically for decades after.
 
Postwar Reconstruction lasts from 1865 to 1876.  During that time the 13th (abolishing slavery) , 14th (defining citizenship and the privileges of citizens - also defines the rights to vote for only male adult citizens) ratified July 9, 1868, and 15th (establishing the right to vote without any restrictions based on race, color or previous condition of servitude) ratified Feb 3, 1870, Amendments to the Constitution were passed. 
 
But the establishment and existence of these laws did not guarantee the rights to vote, nor did it guarantee the safety of those who attempted to lawfully vote.
 
After Reconstruction, the Ku Klux Klan rose to power, and they terrorized African Americans for many decades following.
 
Southern land owners, having lost their ability to plant or harvest their crops with slave labor, broke up their properties into smaller plots of land which they would lease out to black farmers for a large share of the crop.  This share-cropping kept the majority of southern blacks in poverty and lasted for a hundred years, and kept the South half of the United States the poorest part for many years.  This was really nothing more than a repackaged version of plantations worked by slaves.
 
The economy of the country didn't turn around until the "Roaring '20's" - until the Stock Market Crash of 1929, and the resulting Great Depression, which lasted for ten years.
 
Starting under Calvin Coolidge (Republican), during his last years in office, and continuing throughout Herbert Hoover's (Republican) first and only term, because Hoover believed in "laissez faire", or allowing the market to go wherever it went without any interference by the government.
 
At the height of the Great Depression in 1933, there was 25% unemployment, or 12,830,000 people.  Wages dropped almost 43% between 1929 and 1933.  Farm prices dropped so drastically that many farmers lost their farms.  Families split up and traveled around the country looking for work.  People lived in shantytowns made of packing crates, abandoned cars and scrap metal and called them "Hoovervilles", named after President Hoover, who steadfastly claimed that he couldn't do anything about the economy, so he did nothing.
 
As money stopped flowing; banks were unwilling to lend to other banks, and loan to businesses, more and more businesses shut down.  It was a domino effect.  As more businesses closed and jobs were lost, it put even more downward pressure on the economy. 
 
Unable to fend for themselves, businesses and individuals looked to the government, and dissatisfied with Hoover, they elected FDR President in 1932.  Roosevelt was a bold experimenter and a man of action. Early on in his administration he assembled the best minds in the country to advise him. This group of men were known as the "Brain Trust." Within one hundred days the President, his advisors and the U.S. Congress passed into law a package of legislation designed to help lift the troubled Nation out of the Depression .

 

Roosevelt's program was called the "New Deal." The words "New Deal" signified a new relationship between the American people and their government. This new relationship included the creation of several new federal agencies, called "alphabet agencies" because of their use of acronyms. A few of the more significant of these New Deal programs was the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) which gave jobs to unemployed youths and to improve the environment, the WPA (Works Progress Administration) gave jobs to thousands of unemployed in everything from construction to the arts, and the NRA (National Recovery Administration) drew up regulations and codes to help revitalize industry. Later on came the creation of the Social Security System, unemployment insurance and more agencies and programs designed to help Americans during times of economic hardship. Under President Roosevelt the federal government took on many new responsibilities for the welfare of the people. The new relationship forged in the New Deal was one of closeness between the government and the people: a closeness which had never existed to such a degree before.

 

Although Roosevelt and the New Deal were criticized by many both in and out of government, and seriously challenged by the U.S. Supreme Court, they received the overwhelming support of the people. Franklin D. Roosevelt was the only president in U.S. history to be elected for four terms of office.

 
Despite all the President's efforts and the courage of the American people, the Depression hung on until 1941, when America's involvement in the Second World War resulted in the drafting of young men into military service, and the creation of millions of jobs in defense and war industries.
 
In other words, the U.S. Government stepped in and created millions of jobs to stimulate the economy, by building up the country's infrastructure and improving the environment.  It was the only entity which was large enough to take on the task, and even then it still took almost ten years after FDR took office to turn it around, after more than four years of inaction on the part of Republican Presidents Coolidge and Hoover.
 
 
 
After WWII, and the Korean War, people started coming back home and building civilian lives for themselves, and rebuilt an economy based on consumer product consumption, and home building, rather than on building bombs and weapons of war, which more often than not, ended up rusting on foreign soil, or at the bottom of the ocean.
 
Post WWII was a boom economy for the United States, because it was relatively untouched in comparison to other war torn countries which had been flattened by years of bombing.  It was the only country that could produce consumer products in massive quantities.  It would take almost fifty years for that to almost completely reverse.
 
Countries that had been completely destroyed by war rebuilt anew.  That included their factories, which oftentimes were more modern and efficient than the ones in the United States which were still operating with old technology and old infrastructures.
 
But in the 1960's we were in a cold war with the Russians.  The military wanted to have a war in Vietnam, and the outgoing President Eisenhower (Republican), the Supreme Allied Commander of the Allied Forces, advised John F. Kennedy (Democrat) to stay out of Vietnam, even though Eisenhower had already allowed U.S. Military advisors to support the South Vietnamese.  In Eisenhower's fairwell address to the nation, he famously warned the country against the military industrial complex:
 

But threats, new in kind or degree, constantly arise. Of these, I mention two only.

 

A vital element in keeping the peace is our military establishment. Our arms must be mighty, ready for instant action, so that no potential aggressor may be tempted to risk his own destruction. Our military organization today bears little relation to that known of any of my predecessors in peacetime, or, indeed, by the fighting men of World War II or Korea.

 

Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense. We have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security alone more than the net income of all United States cooperations -- corporations.

 

Now this conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence -- economic, political, even spiritual -- is felt in every city, every Statehouse, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet, we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources, and livelihood are all involved. So is the very structure of our society.

 

In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.

 

Akin to, and largely responsible for the sweeping changes in our industrial-military posture, has been the technological revolution during recent decades. In this revolution, research has become central; it also becomes more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government.

 

Today, the solitary inventor, tinkering in his shop, has been overshadowed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing fields. In the same fashion, the free university, historically the fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery, has experienced a revolution in the conduct of research. Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers. The prospect of domination of the nation's scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present -- and is gravely to be regarded.

 
 
 
President John F. Kennedy heeded President Eisenhower's advise, and was in the process of pulling out all U.S. Troops out of Vietnam by Christmas of 1963, when he was assassinated in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963.
 
Earlier, he had avoided nuclear war between the United States and Russia, in a stand off over the Cuban Missile Crisis.  Republicans, including then Congressman George H.W. Bush, criticized Kennedy for being soft on the Russians and pushed for military action.  Flyovers, conducted by military spy planes, over Cuba, had discovered missile bases in Cuba, but no one knew at what stage of completion they were.
 
Kennedy had put an embargo on any shipments to Cuba, particularly from Russia, and ordered his Naval Blockade to stand firm, but not fire on the Russian ships as the Republicans and Military were advising him to do.  Republicans and the Military wanted a war with Cuba, including the Russians, thinking that they could win this easily.
 
What they didn't know, and what didn't come out until only just recently, after almost fifty years of silence from the Russians, was that there was a Russian submarine, armed with nuclear missiles, shadowing the Russian cargo ships on their way to Cuba.  The captain revealed that had the cargo ships been attacked by U.S. military forces, that he would have responded to that attack, not against the naval vessels, but with a nuclear strike against U.S. cities.   And what was worse, was that he was out of radio contact with Moscow, and would not have been able to have been called off.
 
The Cuba Missile Crisis ended with the Russians pulling out their missiles from Cuba, and the U.S. pulling out obsolete missiles from regions near Russia.  The whole crisis had been started because the CIA had told Kennedy that they could easily take Cuba and remove Castro from power.
 
The Bay of Pigs invasion, which ended up disastrously because the popular uprising of the citizens, which the CIA told Kennedy would occur with the invasion, didn't happen. 
 
When Kennedy realized that he had been conned by the CIA, he threatened to "break them up into a thousand pieces", and forced the resignation of the CIA Director, Allen Dulles and his top Lieutenants.
 
Knowing that he needs to shore up support from Democrats in southern states to prepare for the 1964 elections, Kennedy travels to Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963, along with his Vice President LBJ, former Senator from Texas, hoping that in meeting with the people, he can win their support.  He decides to ride in an uncovered limosine "if it's a nice day", instead of using the bullet proof glass "bubble top" which would block the view of well-wishers.
 
After Kennedy's assassination, Dulles was one of the people charged with investigating the assassination.
 
Civil Rights legislation which John F. Kennedy had been pushing for, but which was stalled when he was alive, is passed under LBJ's administration.  But it comes at a price.  The southern Dixie-crats, who were almost a separate party from the rest of the Democrats since the Civil War - revolt, and most of the Southern Democrats switch parties and become Republicans.  What used to be a Democratic Southern Stronghold, suddenly becomes predominantly Republican, and for the most part has remained that way ever since.
 
Attorney General Robert Kennedy (Democrat) was not happy with how Lyndon Baines Johnson (Democrat) took over the White House after JFK's assassination, and wasn't happy with his changes in policies regarding the Vietnam war.  Only a few days after JFK's assassination, LBJ met with his military advisors and reversed JFK's decision to withdraw troups from Vietnam, and instead escalated the U.S.'s involvement.  The rest of the Vietnam story, is how they say, history.
 
Increasingly dissatisfied with LBJ, Senator Robert Kennedy decides to run for President in the primaries against LBJ in 1968.
 
On April 4, 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King is assassinated while he was standing outside his motel room, on a balcony while preparing to go to dinner, prior to their planned Civil Rights march in Memphis, Tennessee.
 
James Earl Ray was later convicted of the assassination, but there were so many discrepancies in the investigation, and other oddities that led many researchers, and the Martin Luther King Family as well, to believe that he was innocent and framed to cover up a conspiracy.
 
That night on the campaign trail in Chicago, Robert F. Kennedy announces the news to the crowd in a park, later named Martin Luther King Jr. Park, that Dr. Martin Luther King had been assassinated earlier that evening.  He spoke to the attendees and reminded them, that he too, had lost a member of his family to assassination, and asked them to refrain from violence in response to the news of Dr. Martin Luther King's assassination.  This was the only major city in the country that did not report riots as a result of Dr. Martin Luther King's assassination.
 
Shortly after midnight on June 5, 1968 after speaking to a crowd at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, announcing their Democratic Primary win in California, Senator Robert F. Kennedy is assassinated while leaving the ballroom.
 
 
Three assassinations of top Democratic politicians and activists, in the space of four years.  All surrounded with unanswered questions, evidence which is being withheld from the public, and so much controversy that few believe the stories that they have been told by their own government regarding the "facts" of the assassinations.
 
 
Since LBJ, we've only had President Carter (1 term) and President Clinton (2 terms) serving in a Democratic Presidency, until President Obama won in 2008.
 
In between that time, it was Richard Nixon (Republican), who won two terms in office but was forced to resign after being impeached for covering up the wiretap and burglary at the Democratic National Committee's offices at the Watergate Hotel. 
 
His Vice President Spiro Agnew (Republican), was forced to resign on October 10, 1973 when it became public that he was taking bribes when he was a public servant in Maryland, which continued when he was Vice President, and for tax evasion.  Congressman Gerald Ford (Republican from Michigan, also famous for his being on the Warren Commission which investigated JFK's assassination) was tapped for Vice President by Nixon, just before Nixon had to resign.  Nixon was pressured to resign from office by then RNC Chairman George H.W. Bush, who had also been Nixon's Ambassador to China, (opening up trade with China, and the outsourcing of jobs as well).  Bush had been upset with his distant cousin, Richard Nixon, because Nixon hadn't picked Bush to become his Vice President.  When Nixon was forced to step down in disgrace, Gerald Ford became the only person in history to ever become President of the United States without ever having been elected to either the Vice Presidents office, or the President's office.  He served out Nixon's term, and was defeated the following term, by President Carter (Democrat).
 
Carter only lasted for one term, which was unfairly characterized by the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Iran in 1978 after the Shah of Iran was deposed, and 62 Embassy workers were held hostage.  54 of them for more than a year.
 
It came out about 40 minutes after President Reagan and Vice President George H.W. Bush were sworn in office that, Iran had released the hostages.  A later investigation showed that Reagan and Bush had negotiated with the Iranians to hold the hostages as long as possible, to embarrass Carter, so they could win the election, and then release the hostages when they took office with the promise of delivery of hundreds of Stinger missiles.  (Who is it that doesn't negotiate with terrorists?)
 
Investigations during the Iran-Contra affair, showed that Reagan and Bush were involved in illegal weapons trading with terrorists, which Congress had banned.
 
Reagan served two terms, and Bush only one, after he went back on his promise of "Read my lips, no new taxes", and raised taxes after realizing that he couldn't balance the books without raising taxes.  He still couldn't balance the books, even with the increase in taxes.
 
Bush lost to Bill Clinton and the Republicans spent six years trying to get him removed from office because of his dalliances with a White House intern.
 
In spite of that, the Clinton Administration and Democrats in Congress still managed to improve the economy with 23 million new jobs, balanced the Federal Budget AND get rid of the Federal Deficit, with a projected surplus regardless of the different accounting methods Republicans tried to use to disprove the accomplishment.  The Federal Budget was balanced and the Federal Deficit was erased regardless of whether or not you included Social Security in your calculations.
 
 
 
The Clinton years showed the effects of a large tax increase that Clinton pushed through in his first year, and that Republicans incorrectly claim is the "largest tax increase in history." It fell almost exclusively on upper-income taxpayers. Clinton's fiscal 1994 budget also contained some spending restraints. An equally if not more powerful influence was the booming economy and huge gains in the stock markets, the so-called dot-com bubble, which brought in hundreds of millions in unanticipated tax revenue from taxes on capital gains and rising salaries.

Clinton's large budget surpluses also owe much to the Social Security tax on payrolls. Social Security taxes now bring in more than the cost of current benefits, and the "Social Security surplus" makes the total deficit or surplus figures look better than they would if Social Security wasn't counted. But even if we remove Social Security from the equation, there was a surplus of $1.9 billion in fiscal 1999 and $86.4 billion in fiscal 2000. So any way you count it, the federal budget was balanced and the deficit was erased, if only for a while.

Update, Feb. 11: Some readers wrote to us saying we should have made clear the difference between the federal deficit and the federal debt. A deficit occurs when the government takes in less money than it spends in a given year. The debt is the total amount the government owes at any given time. So the debt goes up in any given year by the amount of the deficit, or it decreases by the amount of any surplus. The debt the government owes to the public decreased for a while under Clinton, but the debt was by no means erased.

Other readers have noted a
USA Today story stating that, under an alternative type of accounting, the final four years of the Clinton administration taken together would have shown a deficit. This is based on an annual document called the "Financial Report of the U.S. Government," which reports what the governments books would look like if kept on an accrual basis like those of most corporations, rather than the cash basis that the government has always used. The principal difference is that under accrual accounting the government would book immediately the costs of promises made to pay future benefits to government workers and Social Security and Medicare beneficiaries. But even under accrual accounting, the annual reports showed surpluses of $69.2 billion in fiscal 1998,  $76.9 billion in fiscal 1999, and $46 billion for fiscal year 2000.  So even if the government had been using that form of accounting the deficit would have been erased for those three years.

-Brooks Jackson
 
Under Dubya, Republicans were spending money on "special appropriations" (read that no bid contracts to Republican donors), and earmarks like there was no tomorrow.  The problem was that they refused to properly account for the spending.  They refused to include special appropriations in the Federal Budget so that the Budget would look better than it was, even when it still looked terrible.  And trade deficits were mushrooming bigger than Dubya and Condolezza's "mushroom cloud".  Trade deficits with Communist China were more than half a TRILLION Dollars annually, due partly because of Dubya's brother Neil's schemes with Shanghai businesses to outsource jobs and entire industries to China.  Neil was paid Million$ for his "consulting services".  The information became public, when he was going through a divorce with his wife Sharon, who was probably fed up with the fact that he was getting sexual favors from prostitutes who were paid by his Shanghai partners to give them better deals at the expense of the United States.
 
She went public with some tidbits at first, but then clammed up when the Bush family paid her an undisclosed amount to get the divorce out of the public eye, and back under wraps.
 
The Federal Government was over $12 Trillion in the HOLE when Republicans and the Bush Administration left office.  And all that time, you never heard a PEEP from them about being responsible with their spending, or balancing the budget, or getting rid of the deficits.  (And we're not even close to seeing the end of the costs from the war in Iraq - You're looking at another couple of TRILLION dollars just to replace lost and broken equipment and provide medical benefits to the vets who are coming home.)
 
Dubya and all of his Economic "Experts" were all talking about how the economy was great, until the Stock Market completely tanked.
 
What he hadn't told us - what his administration was covering up - was that we had been in a Recession since December 2007.  Anyone living in reality, could have told you that just by opening up their eyes and walking down any average street in America.

 
And then the White House aides who were trying to reassure Congress and the American people that they had been putting together the $700 Billion bailout plan "for months" so that they wouldn't think that it was just slapped together, suddenly realized that by saying that, it meant that they knew about the crisis for months, and didn't bother to tell anyone about it, even the Committees in Congress who are tasked with dealing with these issues.  In fact, they had been lying to Congress and the American people, and telling people the exact opposite for the entire time.
 

On September 15, 2008 Republican Presidential Candidate John McCain was telling everyone in the morning that "the economy is strong."

 

In the afternoon, after Lehman Brothers tanked in the biggest bankruptcy in United States history (at that point), the Stock Market lost 500 points.

 

It was the worst single day crash since the first day of George W. Bush's presidency. (Was being the operative word here.  It got worse later.)

 

That afternoon John McCain was spinning his nonsense by saying "The fundamentals of our economy are still strong."

 

Barack Obama responded with the best line of the day by saying "What economy are you talking about?"

 
 
On September 29, 2008 stocks were crushed after Congress voted against the $700 Billion bailout.  The Stock Market lost nearly 778 points, losing about $1.2 Trillion in value in ONE DAY.   This drop surpassed the 684.91 drop on September 17, 2001, the first trading day after the 9/11 attacks.
 
 

That afternoon John McCain was spinning his nonsense by saying "The fundamentals of our economy are still strong."

 

Barack Obama responded with the best line of the day by saying "What economy are you talking about?"

 

On September 29, 2008 stocks were crushed after Congress voted against the $700 Billion bailout.  The Stock Market lost nearly 778 points, losing about $1.2 Trillion in value in ONE DAY.   This drop surpassed the 684.91 drop on September 17, 2001, the first trading day after the 9/11 attacks.

 

Congress ended up voting for the $700 Billion bailout so that they could avoid a complete panic and a crash worse than the Great Depression.

 

The reality is that when the economy tanks, most of the banks, businesses, and individuals don't have much money to throw around, and they are afraid to spend any because they think they are going to see even more losses down the line.  In that environment, when even big banks aren't spending any money, only the U.S. Government is big enough, to spend enough money to stop the downward spiral and try to turn it around.  Any stimulus, to have any noticeable impact in this type of situation requires a lot of money being spent, and very quickly.  So, while I'm not happy about it, I agree it needed to be done.

 

I just don't agree that we should have been giving this money out to banks and insurance companies who were throwing the money out the window faster than we could put it back into the banks, particularly when they were paying out on their credit default swaps, which are nothing more than fancy gambling instruments to raid cash reserves of banks and insurance companies.

 

When times are good, and there is no default on loans, the credit default swaps created easy money for the banks and insurance companies.  But because they were so heavily leveraged, it was like a 14 to 1 bet.  For every dollar that someone bet on the mortgages tanking, the credit default swaps were paying out 14 dollars if they did tank.  So, the banks and insurance companies were paying out TWICE on the SAME BET.  The first time, when the mortgage failed to be repaid, and then lost huge chunks of value, and the second time, when they paid out on the credit default swaps.  The problem was, that they weren't just losing the value of the mortgage.  They were losing the value of the mortgage PLUS ANOTHER 14 TIMES what it was worth (used to be worth) because of the payout to the gamblers.

 

The only good thing about the bailouts is that while $700 Billion was appropriated, only about $450 Billion was shelled out, with the rest held in reserve, and of that about $121 Billion has been paid back.

 

But the economy has improved in spite of the fact that we are still losing jobs.

 

One year ago, when we were still under the Bush Administration and they were doing NOTHING, we were losing an average of 691,000 jobs a MONTH.   Now, we just lost 85,000 jobs last month, and it looks like it might be slowing down.

 

But in order to really turn this around we need to be CREATING NEW JOBS, not just keeping people employed.  Without the increased money flow, with more people putting money into the economy, and paying their share of their taxes, we are still going to be struggling.

 

Some people are talking about balancing the budget to pay off the Federal debt - but what they are talking about is coming up with $13-14 TRILLION all at once to pay off the debt.  That's impossible.  The only way that you can get yourself out of the hole that these guys dug, was to stimulate the economy, by putting money into it, so there is more money flow.  That way you still have people employed and paying their taxes, so that those taxes can be used to pay down that debt.  That will take time, but it is the only reasonable, logical action to take.  It is idiotic to think that you can pay off the $13 - 14 TRILLION all at once, given that that amounts to more than the value of the Gross Nation Product of the Entire United States for an entire year.  

 

 
 
 
 
 
Thank Democrats For What They Have Done For You
 
 

Because of the efforts of the late Senator Edward Kennedy:

 

  • there are no poll taxes which prevent the poor and minorities from voting.

 

  • 18 year olds who were old enough to die in our wars, but weren’t allowed to vote, are now allowed to vote today.

 

  • ERA was passed because of his efforts.

 

He rejected Robert Bork for Supreme Court Justice

 

He fought against watered down compromises for civil rights and immigration quotas.

 

Senator Ted Kennedy was the 3rd longest serving senator in U.S. History. 

 

Jean Kennedy founded the Arts for the Handicapped.

 

Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded Special Olympics, which began in the late '50s and early '60s, which  became an international event for the first time at Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois, in 1968.

 

Eunice Kennedy Shriver was involved with Special Olympics until her death in 2009.

 

 

Landmark Civil Rights Legislation, which was championed by John F. Kennedy, was not passed until after his assassination, under the Lyndon Baines Johnson (Democrat) administration.

 

 

Senator Claiborne Pell

 

Pell died on January 1st, 2009 at the age of 90 having battled Parkinson’s disease since the mid-1990s. If you are, or have been one of the more than 50 million Americans to receive a Pell Grant, you owe it to yourself to learn a little more about the man.

 
Though he excelled in his role as senator and representative of the people of Rhode Island for the better part of 36 years, college students are likely to be familiar only with the man’s last name and his mark on education. The Senator was of course the founder of the Pell grant program, one that has helped tens of millions of Americans attend college.

 

It was striking that the idea to help those with financial need came from the son of a New York congressman. Believing that financial aid should be given directly to students rather than distributed by colleges and universities, Pell actually spent his entire political career pursuing help for those who were less fortunate than he.

 

The educational grant goes to students whose families earn less than $20,000.

 

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, the average award given to a student is $2,040. In February of 2008, Congress passed the Higher Education Reauthorization Act that is supposed to go into effect within 2009-2012, which will raise the average award per student to $9,000.

 

The grant covered approximately 75 percent of a student's expenses in 1979, and only about 33 percent was covered in 2006.

 

Due to the rising cost of tuition, the grant will no longer cover a significant amount of student's tuition, which is another reason why the Higher Education Reauthorization Act is tackling this issue.

 

It has been estimated that a college education, on average, results in $1 million greater income over one's lifetime, than with just a high school education alone.

 

 

FactCheck.org confirms that the federal budget was balanced and the federal deficit erased under the Clinton Administration.

 

President Clinton presented a balanced federal budget to Congress in 1998.

 

This in spite of the fact that he raised taxes on the very rich.

 

And contrary to the Republican naysayers, 23 million more people were employed as a result of Clinton's policies than those of the administration before him, George H.W. Bush's.

 

By contrast, George W. Bush's administration ended up with the country having a federal debt of $12 TRILLION DOLLARS!  (But Republicans never said a peep during those eight years, about the federal debt, until after President Obama inherited it!)

 

In 2007, the House of Representatives, based on a CBO analysis, released a report which showed that the Bush Administration, based on its own estimates, transformed the $5.6 Trillion projected ten year (2002-2011) surplus into a $2.5 Trillion deficit over the same period.  An $8 TRILLION swing!    

 

Under Dubya, Federal Spending increased nearly twice as fast as the actual U.S. economy.  Welfare state spending under Bush, increased by 32% in constant dollars over what was spent in the Clinton administration.  Medical care expenses by the Federal Government went up 54% under Dubya.

 

Q:
During the Clinton administration was the federal budget balanced? Was the federal deficit erased?
A:
Yes to both questions, whether you count Social Security or not

 

Clinton's large budget surpluses also owe much to the Social Security tax on payrolls. Social Security taxes now bring in more than the cost of current benefits, and the "Social Security surplus" makes the total deficit or surplus figures look better than they would if Social Security wasn't counted. But even if we remove Social Security from the equation, there was a surplus of $1.9 billion in fiscal 1999 and $86.4 billion in fiscal 2000. So any way you count it, the federal budget was balanced and the deficit was erased, if only for a while.

Update, Feb. 11: Some readers wrote to us saying we should have made clear the difference between the federal deficit and the federal debt. A deficit occurs when the government takes in less money than it spends in a given year. The debt is the total amount the government owes at any given time. So the debt goes up in any given year by the amount of the deficit, or it decreases by the amount of any surplus. The debt the government owes to the public decreased for a while under Clinton, but the debt was by no means erased.

Other readers have noted a
USA Today story stating that, under an alternative type of accounting, the final four years of the Clinton administration taken together would have shown a deficit. This is based on an annual document called the "Financial Report of the U.S. Government," which reports what the governments books would look like if kept on an accrual basis like those of most corporations, rather than the cash basis that the government has always used. The principal difference is that under accrual accounting the government would book immediately the costs of promises made to pay future benefits to government workers and Social Security and Medicare beneficiaries. But even under accrual accounting, the annual reports showed surpluses of $69.2 billion in fiscal 1998,  $76.9 billion in fiscal 1999, and $46 billion for fiscal year 2000.  So even if the government had been using that form of accounting the deficit would have been erased for those three years.

On Economic Metrics:

 

http://www.eriposte.com/economy/other/demovsrep.htm 

OTHER

DEMOCRATS v. REPUBLICANS on the issue of the U.S. ECONOMY

Last Update 10/24/04

Printable PDF version

INTRODUCTION
In this section, I feature statistics on commonly used metrics used to measure U.S. economic growth and strength, and the relative impact that Democratic Presidents have had with respect to Republican Presidents. For the moment, I am largely featuring links to already published data on the web, but I hope to review and analyze the data myself sometime in the future. The data is in the table below and my own comments are below the table

As we approach Election Day 2004, a common refrain from Republicans and Independents who have doubts about John Kerry is that he would raise taxes and cause economic trouble. In this page I show that this concern is unfounded because it has no basis in reality. I show this in two ways. 

1. First the data compiled in the table below shows that there is no proof that Republican Presidents are better for the U.S. economy than Democratic Presidents.  Indeed, the data indicates the opposite is likely true.

2. There are multiple other facts in addition to this data that show that the superficial argument about taxes is just that: superficial. For those arguments, click here (or scroll down below the table).

NOTE: If you have challenges to the data below or further independent confirmation of the data, do let us know by emailing us at feedback-at-eriposte-dot-com. If you feedback is data-driven (as opposed to mere assertions or beliefs), we will be willing to provide links to it, as appropriate. Critiques and responses to critiques are here.

MAILING LIST: If you want to get on my mailing list for notifications on updates to this page, let me know by emailing me at feedback-at-eriposte-dot-com

DATA TABLE

Acronyms: BLS = U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; BEA = U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

MetricSource of data/
analysis
Average under
Democratic 
Presidents/
Administrations
Average under
Republican 
Presidents/
Administrations
Who measured better 
on this metric?
(See critiques page)
Average Ranking (lower the 
number the better
)
for 
highest GDP growth,
real disposable personal 
income, employment/
unemployment, deficit reduction

1953-2001
Average rank calculated 
from ranking data from 
Dan Ackman, Forbes.com
Overall rank: 4.58 
(top 3 are Democrats)

GDP rank: 3.8

Real Disposable 
Personal Income 
rank: 5.0

Employment rank: 4.6

Deficit Reduction 
rank: 4.2

Overall rank: 6.44
(Reagan is #4)

GDP rank: 7.2

Real Disposable 
Personal Income 
rank: 6.0

Employment rank: 6.4

Deficit reduction 
rank: 6.38

Democratic 
Presidents

[Also see this data 
comparison from Michael
Kinsley in the 
Washington Post
]

Real Disposable Personal 
Income Growth per year

1953-2001
Dan Ackman, Forbes.com3.65%3.08%Democratic 
Presidents
Employment gains per year
1953-2001
Dan Ackman, Forbes.com1.684 million/year1.279 million/yearDemocratic 
Presidents
Unemployment
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the BLS
5.1 %6.75 %Democratic 
Presidents
Unemployment
1947-2001
Assuming that each President's 
policies took effect 1 year after 
his inauguration
Larry Bartels, Los 
Angeles Times
4.8 %6.3 %Democratic 
Presidents
(trend similar if 2
year shift assumed)
Unemployment:
1948-2001
Assuming Presidents are also
responsible for economic 
performance 3-5 years after 
they leave office
CalPundit, using 
data from the BLS
3-yr lag: 5.06 %

4-yr lag: 5.04 %

5-yr lag: 5.01%

3-yr lag: 6.16 %

4-yr lag: 6.18 %

5-yr lag: 6.21 %

Democratic 
Presidents
Average After-Tax Return on 
Tangible Capital:

Jan 1952 - June 2004
Roger Altman, 
Wall Street Journal
(data from Federal Reserve)
4.3%3.2%Democratic 
Presidents
[For a Bush I + Bush II
vs. Clinton comparison,
see here]
GDP growth
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the BEA
3.9 %2.9 %Democratic 
Presidents
GDP growth:
1948 - 2001
Assuming Presidents are also
responsible for economic 
performance 3-5 years after 
they leave office
CalPundit, using 
data from the BEA
3-yr lag: 3.56 %

4-yr lag: 3.78 %

5-yr lag: 3.71 %

3-yr lag: 3.35 %

4-yr lag: 3.16 %

5-yr lag: 3.21 %

Democratic 
Presidents
GDP growth
1930-2000
Carol Vinzant 
in Slate
5.4%1.6 %Democratic 
Presidents
Inflation
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the BLS
4.26 %4.96 %Democratic 
Presidents
Inflation:
1948-2001
Assuming Presidents are also
responsible  for economic 
performance 3-5 years  after 
they leave office
CalPundit, using 
CPI data from 

Economagic
3-yr lag: 3.33 %

4-yr lag: 3.07 %

5-yr lag: 3.20 %

3-yr lag: 4.36 %

4-yr lag: 4.60 %

5-yr lag: 4.48 %

Democratic 
Presidents
Percentage growth in
Total Federal Spending
:
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the U.S. Govt.
Budget 2003
6.96 %7.57 %Democratic 
Presidents if lower 
Govt. spending is 
better
; Republican 
Presidents if higher 
spending is better

NEW Note, however, that 
total spending other
than for Medicare and
Social Security has 
been dropping since
1983
(CalPundit using
U.S. Govt. Budget
data
). The decrease
was more significant
in the 90s under Clinton.

Percentage growth in
Non-Defense Federal Spending
:
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the U.S. Govt.
Budget 2003
8.34 %10.08 %Democratic 
Presidents if lower 
Govt.  spending is 
better
; Republican 
Presidents if higher 
spending is better

NEW Note, however, that 
total spending other
than for Medicare and
Social Security has 
been dropping since
1983
(CalPundit using
U.S. Govt. Budget
data
). The decrease
was more significant
in the 90s under Clinton.

Non-defense Federal 
Government Employees
:
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the U.S. Govt.
Budget 2003
Rose by 59,000
(16 % of total rise
over 40 years)
Rose by 310,000
(84% of total rise 
over 40 years)
Democratic 
Presidents
(assuming smaller 
Govt. is better
)
Yearly budget deficit:
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the U.S. Govt.
Budget 2003
$36 billion$190 billionDemocratic 
Presidents
Increase in National Debt:
1962-2001
P.L.A., using data 
from the U.S. Govt.
Budget 2003

See follow-up by P.L.A.
solidifying the 
conclusions

Total debt 
increased by 
$0.72 trillion
(20 years)
Total debt 
increased by 
$3.8 trillion
(20 years)
Democratic 
Presidents
Annual stock market return:
1927 (through) 1998
Pedro Santa-Clara and 
Rossen Valkanov
Research Paper, UCLA
 
(via Atrios)
Results are "statistically 
significant" 

Also reported by 
CNN Money

~ 11%
(value weighted CRSP 
index minus 3 month 
Treasury Bill)
~ 2%
(value weighted CRSP 
index minus 3 month 
Treasury Bill)
Democratic 
Presidents

(Delta increases to 16% for 
equal-weighted case)

The study says:
"
The difference comes from 
higher real stock returns and 
lower real interest rates, 
is statistically significant
and is robust in subsamples. 
The difference in returns is not 
explained by business-cycle 
variables related to expected 
returns, and is not concentrated 
around election dates. There 
is no difference in the riskiness 
of the stock market across
presidencies that could 
justify a risk premium."

Annual stock market return:
(1900) 1927 - 2000
Carol Vinzant 
in Slate
12.3 % (S&P 500)8.0 % (S&P 500)Democratic 
Presidents
Annual stock market return:
(1900) 1927 - 2000
Carol Vinzant 
in Slate
Democratic Senate 
10.5 % (S&P 500)
Democratic House 
10.9 % (S&P 500)
Republican Senate 
9.4 % (S&P 500)
Republican House 
8.1 % (S&P 500)
Democratic 
Senate or
House (but see article
for qualifications
)
Annual stock market return:
(1900) 1927 - 2000
Stock Traders' Almanac 
as reported by 
Carol Vinzant in Slate
13.4 % (Dow)8.1 % (Dow)Democratic 
Presidents
Rankings for highest GDP growth,
biggest increase in jobs, biggest 
increase in personal disposable 
income  after taxes, biggest rise in 
hourly wages, lowest Misery Index 
(inflation  plus unemployment), etc. 
(until 2001)
Arthur Blaustein, 
Mother Jones
N/A.
But all these best case 
metrics were under
Democratic Presidents
N/ADemocratic 
Presidents
.....
District spending by Congress:
1995 - 2001
Associated Press
report: 1, 2
Democratic districts:
$3.9 billion in 1995 to
$5.2 billion in 2001
(34% increase)
Republican districts:
$3.9 billion in 1995 to
$5.8 billion in 2001
(52% increase)
Hard to say who is 
better but certainly 
not
 Republicans, who 
shifted spending to 
RICHER
districts from poorer
.

APPENDIX: TAX MYTHS
As a companion to the above table, I would like to present my review of myths v. reality on tax policy and issues in the U.S. 

eRiposte Review of Myths v. Realities on Personal and Corporate Taxes


DETAILED COMMENTS 

The data in the above table clearly shows that there is no real evidence that Republican Presidents are better for the economy or your wallet than Democratic Presidents. The data strongly indicates that the opposite is likely true. So why do intelligent people keep complaining about Democratic tax policies or regulations, saying they are anti-business, while believing Republicans are by default better for business. I suspect the reason for this thinking commonly breaks down along the following lines (not necessarily exclusively).

1. Some people believe wealth creates wealth and that the tax cutting agenda of the Republican Party therefore must be better for the economy and that tax increases are not. This is a superficial argument that overlooks various other facts. 

2. People commonly associate the Republican party with being better for the economy because they are a pro-business party. What they fail to recognize is that deregulation and massive tax cuts for companies may be good for (some) companies in the short term but that does not mean it is good for the economy as a whole [or for other (smaller) companies in particular]. 

  • The "Red" states which have been most subject to Republican tax-cutting, "supply side" experimentation for a long time have historically trailed the "Blue" states in economic performance. Thus, turning a state into a Wal-Mart for businesses by gutting labor laws and pressuring workers wages and benefits downward and increasing tax cuts for the super rich has produced much weaker economic performance than in states which did the opposite. Indeed, the Blue states are not only economically stronger overall, but they tend to subsidize the Red states with their Federal tax dollars. What an irony! Indeed, as Matthew Yglesias pointed out in The American Prospect (most of the bold text is my emphasis):

    ALABAMAS EVERYWHERE! I've long wondered why anyone would take seriously the notion that the country as a whole ought to adopt the low-tax, low-wage, no-union, no-regulation formula that's brought such a lack of economic success to the Deep South, but if I were to say that I'd be castigated as some kind of northeastern elitist, so I'll just quote son-of-the-south Ed Kilgore instead:

    If you had to identify one simple reason for [the South's] grinding poverty, it was the perpetual delusion of southern political and business leaders that the region had to stay poor and dumb in order to attract the capital necessary to eventually climb out of the ditch. Like some of today's third world countries, the South, right up to the 1970s, was paralyzed by the idea that decent wages, unionization, protection of natural resources, business regulation, progressive taxes, and quality education were all impossible because they would "price" the region out of opportunities for economic development. All of the South's social and economic weaknesses were perceived as essential to maintaining a "good business climate." And that benighted belief also helped perpetuate Jim Crow, since the ability to keep roughly a third of the region's population in semi-serfdom gave the South a cost advantage no other part of the country could ever meet.

    Gradually, by the 1970s and 1980s, southern political leaders, and even many business leaders, woke up to the fact that deliberately maintaining a low standard of living wasn't worth the paltry payoff in low-wage textile jobs. And slowly but surely, a consensus developed that decent education and adequate public services were positive, not negative, factors in long-term economic development. The states that pursued this "high road" strategy--especially North Carolina and Georgia--tended to prosper. The states that stayed on the low road--especially Mississippi and Alabama--didn't.

    That's why it is so profoundly depressing to see the theory of economic development that my home region finally began to abandon over the last few decades now being embraced by the national government as the way for America to successfully compete in a global economy.

    Quite so. This is also the theme of Michael Lind's fascinating book, Made in Texas (at least when he isn't casting aspersions on all people of Scotch-Irish descent). The most recent iteration of Bush's stump speech says "I believe in the energy, innovation, and spirit of America's workers and small business owners, and farmers, and ranchers. And that is why we unleashed that spirit with the largest tax cut in a generation." Leave aside the question of whether the tax cut was really aimed at "small business owners, and farmers, and ranchers" (and the president's odd refusal to note the absolutely vital role played by giant corporations -- think Boeing, Microsoft, Disney -- in the American success story) and ask yourself: Exactly which terrible things were going on in the economy before this spirit was unleashed?

    Well, there weren't any. The entreprenurial spirit of the country was hardly in shackles during the 1990s. The economy can grow just fine under the old, higher tax rates. What it can't do is finance the costs of running the federal government under the new, lower rates.

  • Consider this --- the states of California and New York, amongst the more liberal (left leaning) states in the United States had the #1 and #2 largest gross state products (GSP) in the country (also see census.gov and BEA). CA in particular, was the world's 6th (or 5th along with France, depending on how many decimal places you look at) largest economy if it is considered as a country by itself! Overall, there is pretty good evidence that Democratic Presidents are indeed better for the economy than Republican Presidents.

  • Moreover, adding to the profit growth of already heavily profitable (but slow growth) companies is one way to address economic issues - but economic growth historically has largely occurred through innovation. Innovation is far more common in new or small companies that have to fight established competitors - than in large companies. If Government did not act to restrict monopoly power (which Republicans have been more loathe to do in recent years), innovation and new/small companies will have a very tough time. Moreover, a startup has little use for tax cuts when it has no income. A small business has only marginal use of a tax break if their customer base is drying up because their own jobs and incomes are under siege. As this Washington Post article pointed out:

    ...Jerry Bailey is precisely the kind of taxpayer President Bush had hoped to bestow his tax cuts on: an entrepreneur brew-pub owner, a job provider, not overly rich by Washington area standards but well off enough to pay a hefty sum to the federal government each year.

    But after three tax cuts in three years, the part-owner of Loudoun County's Old Dominion Brewing Co. is not exactly celebrating his gains. Sure, his federal tax bill was trimmed, by a healthy $5,600, according to a rough calculation by Clint Stretch, director of tax policy at the accounting firm Deloitte & Touche LLP.

    But other factors having nothing to do with federal taxes have clouded Bailey's situation. This year, the property tax bill on his Bethesda home will reach $6,725, a $950 increase over his payment four years ago. The annual cost of his 56-mile-a-day commute has jumped more than $300 since 2001, and the long, slow decline of business profits these past four years has left Bailey far behind, no matter what his federal tax payment may be.

    "I'm not paying any taxes at all because we're not making any money," Bailey said with a sigh. "I loved paying taxes. It meant we were doing all right." ...

3. Other people like to think that they got great wealth with little help from Government - and therefore believe massive deregulation favored by the Republican party creates wealth. This is very simplistic thinking that is often in contradiction with reality. 

  • The fact of the matter is that regulations (which we will separate qualitatively from "controls"), if imposed judiciously can significantly help the economy overall and produce net financial benefits - this is proven by this Bush Administration OMB Report. Not enforcing reasonable regulations, by weakening bodies like the FERC, SEC, EPA, etc.,  hurts consumers and small businesses more in the long run than it helps. 

  • Sure, a few people may have succeeded beyond their wildest dreams without much help from the Government, but most people owe their success in part to what the Government does and has done for them - not to mention environmental factors (such as location) which in turn are a function of the effectiveness of local Governments. See for example this report titled "Responsible Wealth".

The rags-to-riches story fits elegantly with our national self-identity, forged in opposition to hereditary aristocracies of Europe. Unlike rigid caste societies of the ancien regimes, America aspired to be a country of individual initiative, freedom and opportunity. To Wyllie, however, there was a "fatal weakness" in this "success cult...that explained everything in terms of inner qualities and nothing in terms of the environment."6

This individual success myth overlooked a number of key social and environmental factors. One was location. No matter what personal qualities someone had, if they didn’t live in a booming commercial center like New York City, Boston or Philadelphia, or an ascendant industrial town like Lawrence, Lowell or Rochester, they didn’t become rich.

Another unique external factor was the opportunity that existed then thanks to expanding frontiers and seemingly unlimited natural resources. The US was conquering and expropriating land from native people, and distributing it to railroads, white homesteaders and land barons. Most of the major Gilded Age fortunes were tied to cornering a market and exploiting natural resources such as minerals, oil and timber. Even P.T. Barnum, the celebrated purveyor of individual success aphorisms, had to admit in The Art of Money-Getting that "in a new country, where we have more land than people, it is not at all difficult for persons in good health to make money."7 He might have added that it also helped to be male, to be free rather than a slave, and to be white. People of color were explicitly excluded from federal largesse. Alien land laws, for example, prohibited most non-whites from owning land. 

Then there was the luck of timing. Those born in the first half of the 19 th century who survived the Civil War caught the wave of resource exploitation and industrial expansion. This was a time akin to the 1990s technology boom. Wyllie notes that from a statistical point of view, being born in 1835 was "the most propitious birth year for a poor boy who hoped to rise into the business elite."8 Andrew Carnegie hit this lottery perfectly. He was born in 1835, held a desk job during the Civil War and reached business maturity after the fighting ceased.

[...much later in the report...]

In 1962, [Ross] Perot founded Electronic Data Systems, a one-man data processing company that went on to employ more than 70,000 people. But in its early days, EDS owned no computers and rented office space from Texas Blue Cross. The company struggled to make a profit in its early years. In 1964 it had earnings of $400,000, but made only $4,100 in profit. But EDS was a company that was in the right place at the right time. 

In July of 1965, the US Congress passed legislation establishing the Medicare and Medicaid programs. A cornerstone of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society initiative, these insurance programs would entitle 30 million US citizens to health benefits. This would in turn create an enormous volume of paperwork and an acute need for data processing systems. 

EDS moved into this enormous market, using its inside connection with Texas Blue Cross, the agency that would administer the federal program in Texas. Texas Blue Cross gave EDS its computer data business without any competitive bid. In their 1968 contract with Texas Blue Cross, EDS was paid $250,000 to develop a computer program to process Medicare claims. While government funds paid for research and development of the system, EDS retained ownership of the program. Essentially, the research and development costs for EDS’s main product were paid for with tax dollars.

Gerald Posner, in his biography of Perot, called him the "Welfare Billionaire":

The EDS program, developed with the help of Texas Blue Cross and paid for by federal funds, was the same one that Perot kept reselling at a significant profit to other states...The issue was of no small consequence, because between 1966 and 1971...the federal government paid EDS $36 million. Its closest competitor during the same time, Applied Systems Development Corporation, received just $275,000. 54

The EDS Medicare contract was a windfall. There is no question that the early relationship with Texas Blue Cross helped build the company and enabled it to catch a veritable wave of opportunities.

Go read the full report. It has numerous other examples of millionaires who became millionaires in large part due to Government spending (and some, who later claimed to be against big Government while continuing to increase spending to benefit their contacts). 

The bottomline is this: Using pre-conceived notions  or ideology or sound bites from ignorant millionaire talking heads on TV or op-ed writers in the media is not the best way to judge which party does better on the economy. Reality is a  better judge of reality.