Showing posts with label debt ceiling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debt ceiling. Show all posts

Monday, May 16, 2011

Debt ceiling expired today, but U.S. holds on?


The money weasel Tim Geithner informed Congress today that the United States has now reached the debt ceiling level, but rest assured, Geithner says the country can hold until August.

How strange when you consider that for many months now, Geithner has been jumping up and down about the necessity for Congress to raise the debt level; otherwise the United States would default on its financial obligations and face severe economic consequences.

So today that deadline expired, but Geithner says we can hold on until August because thanks to Geithner. he came up with an extra $200 billion just last week to meet the country’s obligations for a temporary period of time.

Where did this money come from Mr. Treasury Secretary? Some reserve fund that you and Ben Bernanke totally forgot about? A generous donation by George Soros?

According to Geithner, the debt is now at $14.3 trillion which is the legal limit as to how much the United States can borrow. However the debt is likely to increase to $15 trillion by September.

For the interim, the Obama Administration is stopping payments to retirement plans and pension funds to federal workers. Will we see protests from union thugs like we did in Wisconsin when Governor Scott Walker decided to cut state worker funds to balance his state budget? Probably not. Because the Obama Administration, as well all know by now, is untouchable. Even though they are now theoretically doing the same thing that Governor Walker did in Wisconsin. But I digress.

But the bickering under the circus tent on Capitol Hill continues. Republicans and even some Democrats are refusing to raise the debt ceiling limit any further because it is recklessly and fiscally irresponsible and Democrats continue to demand only a status quo for supporting the same federal programs that have contributed to the downfall of the United States. They’ll only raise the debt ceiling limit if there is a compromise on reducing spending drastically since Congressman Paul Ryan’s budget plan was not exactly favorable. The reality is that taxpayers simply cannot continue to subsidize these programs any longer and the country continues to spend more than it takes in.

But the real reality is the United States is owned by global investors, not the tax payers. This in itself is a rather scary scenario. As every man and woman in America continues to struggle to put food on the table, pay a bill, look for work in an economy that will most likely never recover, or their children having to grow up in a “new America”, there is a very wealthy internationalist in China that wants either your welfare or social security check.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Decision to raise the debt ceiling draws closer

The United States Congress is going to have to make a decision within the next week: Either to raise the national debt ceiling to its legal limit, which the debt is now $14 trillion, or let the United States go into default.

It has been nothing more than a circus act between the two failed parties over the course the last several months and America’s attention on our major financial problems were diverted this week because of the killing of Osama bin Laden.

The Republican controlled House is refusing to do anything with relation to raising the debt, unless the Obama Administration agrees to additional budget cuts, and Democrats want the status quo. In short, they want everything to remain the same. History has shown that keeping everything the same is what got us into this mess in the first place.

As the decision to raise the debt ceiling draws closer, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner decided to tap into a $200 billion reserve fund that seemed to have just come out of nowhere, to make some of the nation’s obligations. Well, the $200 billion was quickly depleted within a week’s span. I guess that verifies what we thought about raising taxes on the rich, which if Congress were to tax even 100% all of the people in this country annually making $250,000 or more, would net the Federal Government an estimated $1.4 trillion. So if Tim Geithner can spent $200 billion in a week, then $1.4 trillion would only fund the Federal Government for maybe four to five months.

Furthermore, Geithner has been warning Congress that if the debt ceiling isn’t raised and the United States doesn’t pay its obligations, we would have another economic crisis similar to what we had experienced in 2008 and the unemployment would reach 17%, which by the way, the unemployment in this country is much higher than they really want you to know. The April 15th edition of USA Today had a stunning report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics which found that only 44.4% of Americans actually held jobs in 2010, which means 55% of Americans did not have jobs. How does the Federal Government seriously determine that the current unemployment rate is only at an average of 9%? Surely, they're only counting the percentage of Americans that are actually collecting real unemployment benefits.

To address the debt ceiling from another perspective, on the April 19th blog of Independent Word, I commented on a report from Professor Antony Davis of Duquesne University Donahue School of Business who insists the debt ceiling is really nothing more than a work of fiction. In his analysis, Professor Davis indicated that the debt ceiling has been raised by the U.S. Congress 70 times since 1970. Despite the Federal income tax ranging from 77% in 1969 to averaging between 30% and 40% for the years from 1990 to 2011, the average GDP remained the same at about 18%. Davis’s conclusion is the if tax brackets are fixed to jump up and down through four decades, but the GDP remained the same, then our debt problem is nothing more than a pure spending problem.

But does anyone in Washington really believe this nation has a severe spending problem?

I guess not. If that were the case, then we probably should have cut substantial government cost two years ago following the financial collapse. This way, Geithner wouldn’t be whining right now about raising the nation’s debt limit.







Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Debt ceiling doesn't exist?

For the last month or so, we've been hearing from the circus in Washington D.C., about our nation's dire financial issues. The fact is that we have a national debt of nearly $15 trillion and more than $100 trillion in unfunded financial liabilities. As everyone knows by now, this nation has endlessly borrowed so much money and accumulated so much debt, that it is inevitable sometime down the road, the country may be entirely untenable, whereas a default is likely to be anticipated.

But President Obama's little weasel of a Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has been attempting to stop a default from happening. He's been pleading with Congress all month to approve raising the debt ceiling and it is apparent that in the coming days, if the debt ceiling is not raised, the United States will not be able to pay its bills and we'll all be in for perhaps another severe economic collapse.

Now hear is something very intriguing. According to Professor Antony Davis at Duquesne University Donahue School of Business, he says that the so called 'debt ceiling' really doesn't exist and that Americans shouldn't waste time listening to all of the lies coming out of Washington.

Davis says that since 1970, Congress has raised the debt ceiling limit more than 70 times and says it is nothing more than a complete work of fiction. If you are anticipating a default, you simply stir up a bunch of scare tactics and then you raise the barrier bar, by a few notches.

Furthermore, Davis implies that since 1969, Federal income tax ranged from 77% to a low of just a slender 28% in the early 1990's and then going up and down between 30% to 40% from 1993 to 2010. Federal revenues from 1969 to 2010 remained about the same, an average of roughly 18% of GDP.

In short, Davis suggests that the Federal Government really has no control over its own revenue. He adds that if the tax brackets are actually fixed, then it is completely obvious that our so called debt problem is really nothing more than spending problem.

Despite this, it looks like Geithner has the Republican lawmakers in the House, deep in his pockets. No pun intended.