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Guns Guns Guns
Guest

A look at some of the claims by the Wisconsin congressman and Romney, and how they compare with the facts.
ROMNEY: "Unlike the current president, who has cut Medicare funding by $700 billion, we will preserve and protect Medicare and Social Security and keep them there for future generations."
THE FACTS: You could fill an arena with all the details left out in this statement.
Ryan's reputation as a fiscal conservative is built on a budget plan that would overhaul the Medicare program and introduce a voucher-like plan that future retirees could use to buy private health insurance.
Whether that results in a better or worse situation for Medicare recipients is a matter of debate.
But under Ryan's plan, traditional Medicare would no longer be the health insurance mainstay, just one of many competing options.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates the Ryan plan — which Romney endorsed in broad strokes in the past — would slow the increases in money for seniors.
A typical 66-year-old would receive about 35 percent more than last year — $7,400 in 2011 dollars.
Under current law, that person would probably receive at least 56 percent more in 2030, and quite possibly 75 percent more — $9,600 in 2011 dollars.
The CBO said his plan grows spending for Medicare enrollees "at a much slower rate" than under current law or other policy scenarios.
In Washington, a slower increase in spending is tantamount to a spending cut.
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-250_162...ims-when-mitt-romney-introduces-running-mate/