Note: this is a cross-post from The Realignment Project. Follow us on Facebook!
 
 
Introduction:
Following the on-going drama of the Deficit Commission - which just  adjourned without even voting on its own proposal, and which never came  close to getting the necessary votes to trigger an up-or-down vote in  the Senate - has been rather painful. Especially in light of the  Republican takeover of the House and the ongoing dispute over extending  the Bush tax cuts and raising the debt ceiling, the grip of austerity  thinking seems paradoxically strong and weak at the same time, pervasive  enough to be omnipresent within the media yet not actually persuasive  enough to get anyone to vote for anything they dislike.
However, there is one point that needs to be cleared up - behind the  banalities of "living within our means" and other balanced-budget  platitudes, there is ideology at work. The budget is not just a  technical issue, but a moral document - it is a choice between a high  road or a low road to the future.
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