You make look at it that way, but I look at it as a starting point for negotiation.
Look, the thing about Ryan is that you might not like how he gets there, but at least he is up front with problems. D's softly dance around the entitlements problem and, IMO, do a disservice to the American people because they point to the how (which is somehwat justified) but never talk about the why.
Frankly, as a country, we talk way too much about the how and not nearly enough about the why.
This is a bit of a stretch. I'll give him the benefit of the doubt on the first budget he released. He may well have been trying to establish a starting point. I don't think this is right, but I'll concede the point anyway. That was before the election happened, and although I think they were dillusional, they actually thought their message was selling and that the American people may have been on their side.
Then the election happened. The very points in his original budget were rejected out of hand by voters. Even many of those who voted for him and Romney, when polled, didn't agree with the lengths he went with his budget recommendations. I think it is clear that Ryan rejected that voter rejection. He choses to ignore the fact that his approach was not what the country wanted. Sure, he may lie to himself like a lot of others on the right do that it was just the delivery of the message that cost them the election, that the Dems pandered to the poor by lavishing them with gifts of food stamps and health insurance. The fact is that people don't agree with that radical right wing ideology -- not in enough numbers to matter anyway.
Earlier this week, Ryan released his second budget. This one far more radical than the first. In it he tries to abolish Obamacare, the signature piece of legislation of the previous four years. Thirty four times the House Republicans tried to repeal the law and 34 times they were rejected. During the election, the ACA didn't carry the baggage that the Republicans thought it did. Despite their aggressive efforts to demonize the law, voters chose Obama/Biden over Romney/Ryan. But, he ignores all of that and introduces the repeal of the law for a 35th time in his budget. That is not a starting point -- that is trying to p*ss the Dems off with something outrageous and insulting. He knows this budget doesn't have a shot of passage and that it is a million miles away from a "starting point." The guy who won the election gets to set the starting point, which he did with the grand bargain before the election and kept it on the table after he won the general election by more than 5 million votes and 130+ electoral votes.
The fact that Ryan left tax cuts on the richest of Americans in place, the ones that during the election he insisted would crush the economy and cost jobs, is comical. And while he removed the "care" portion of Obamacare, he left the "taxes" from the program in place. He has no credibility and I have no idea why the Republicans hold him in such high regard.