Correct Rex,
Taxes are a component
of inflation.
Vita,
We're not talking isolationism. We're talking not paying to have folks kiss the usa ass.
Pretty soon, we're talking real money.This is never going to happen because both parties are addicted to debt. It would be interesting though to see what would happen if the debt ceiling were not raised. As long as the government kept making its interest payments and convinced people that was its first priority, I don't buy the doom and gloom. It would be like having a balanced budget amendment -- the government would be forced to live within its means. Or taking a credit card away from your 16 year old who went wild with it.
https://www.desmoinesregister.com/st...rs/5885974001/ Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
This is never going to happen because both parties are addicted to debt. It would be interesting though to see what would happen if the debt ceiling were not raised. As long as the government kept making its interest payments and convinced people that was its first priority, I don't buy the doom and gloom. It would be like having a balanced budget amendment -- the government would be forced to live within its means. Or taking a credit card away from your 16 year old who went wild with it.That sounds like a terrible risk. We’ve never defaulted and the basis of our currency as well as our ability to be the major currency of the world is predicated on our never defaulting. There’s no guarantee that we could pay even the service on our debt much less obligations like SS and Medicare.
That said, people who know more about economics than I do could probably shoot to hell what I'm saying here. And I imagine in the event of a recession or periods of high inflation like we're having right now, they'd be right. Originally Posted by Tiny
Do any of you really believe that the “average” American gives a shit about the deficit or the national debt.No they don’t.
It’s just some huge number that means absolutely nothing in peopl s everyday lives. Originally Posted by Jackie S
That sounds like a terrible risk. We’ve never defaulted and the basis of our currency as well as our ability to be the major currency of the world is predicated on our never defaulting. There’s no guarantee that we could pay even the service on our debt much less obligations like SS and Medicare. Originally Posted by NoirManI don't think I explained that very well. We wouldn't default in the scenario I described. We'd continue to pay on our debt. Instead we'd cut other expenditures -- military, corporate and farm subsidies, and a whole lot more. If you don't raise the debt ceiling, it's the same as having a balanced budget. When times are good, when the economy is growing and there are lots of jobs out there, like now, that might make sense. Although admittedly it would be difficult to engineer overnight. And like I said, it's a moot point, both parties are addicted to debt.