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The problem is the debt ceiling, we're gonna have to raise it. If we don't our economy will crumble in time. Congress will fight and threaten each other, but they only have a few months to increase it and in the end they will.
Course this is like putting another finger to plug another hole in the Hoover dam. The world economy will be totally different in the future. |
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US thinks it is untouchable. But it no longer is. The longer it hesitates to learn that lesson and tries to bully and intimidate others into buying worthless US boinds, the harder the crash on learning day. The US has a fundamental structural problem, and its financial resources have started to break away. For Americnas, this is unimaginable , since America is believed to be what Rome was for Romans: the shining centre of civilisation in a dark universe of barbarism. And if anyone thinks that China with rising marks would ever accept to endlessly depend on the US while America is in freee fall, then he has not understood whom he is dealing with. It would be incompatible with Chinese self-understanding to be the most superior community on Earth, to accept this injust "coexistence" endlessly, and at their own cost. The dragon has awakened once again, and in the long run he will not accept any poor, bigmouthed debtor as an equal to talk to. If you read the signs in the news, you can see that it already has started. It is the small nuances that are important. The US, in all this historic change, will either accept to relaunch, and then on a much smaller scale accept a place in the second row of seats only, by becoming bancrupt. Or it will reject the simple facts and try to turn the wheel of time bvackwards - and by that become most likely a rogue nation itself and a totalitarian dictatorship fighting against all odds, and all others. That are the two most likely scenarios I can imagine, currently, ignoring unpredictable events like global pandemics, meteor impacts and such things. |
Well said, Skybird. I think the past ten years alone should have taught us a thing or two. We are about to get our teeth kicked in, and unfortunately we've been ignoring the warnings for years.
Not to knock or insult my own country, but our culture has (or at least "had") a nasty habit of thinking that we're the best thing since buttered toast. Pride often goeth before a fall, right? I have sincere doubts that we will remain as a major power for much longer. While sad in a way, it is also not entirely surprising that this would come to pass. Eventually, all empires must collapse under their own enormity. :yep: Interesting times ahead, yes? :hmmm::lol: |
Well, America expects others to behave in a self-damaging and stupid way - and that is a sign of a certain kind of stupdity - at least blindness - on its own side. It is not clever to depend on a "strategy" that bases on the other's cooperation by acting stupid.
All these are developements for which the mighty and powerful and expensive American military is no suitable tool. Instead, due to its costs, it serves as a catalyst for these developements and causes costs to the internal structure of the country: the money it takes to run this military is not available for education, modernising the economic structure, the powergrid, the traffic network... Ironic, from a historian's point of view. It'S sad, in a way, since there is so much potential still left. But it gets wasted by not making necessary, dramatic changes to the country'S general course and setup. It seems it wants to stay like it has been, forever, and tramples with the feet like a stubborn child that does not get what it wants. But every box of Monopoly gets delivered with only so many toy notes of money, and not more. Sorry, kid. |
It's already obvious politicains are preparing us for a two class soceity. It seems politicians are more interested on how to keep and create wealth globally for a few. I have no doubt somewhere in our future economics will be run by some world council. All leading economist say were headed for collapse, you just won't hear it from the government. Slowly as possible government will move more and more into poverty, a lil at a time so chaos doesn't ensue. All studies show 50% of the next generation won't have medical insurance, medicare and caid can't be funded. They've ignored the fixes for 20 years, now it's too late, millions will suffer. Fuel will be an issue, food, wages lowered. Anyone under 50 knows they can forget seeing all the money they paid into SS and medicare, etc..
We've had 11 years in which the Social Security program did not take enough in FICA taxes to pay the current year's benefits, so they use Trust Bonds to make up the difference. We're nearing a 100 trillion in total debt across the board, money spent or money currently owed, 60 trillion in medicare alone to those paid in...but it's all gone. Add SS and the national debt, state debt, etc...all that money went somewhere. I think we all know we've longed crossed the point of it can be fixed. It's really no different than any past history of great nations. Again, the middle class will be a thing of the past. |
yes, thats true, the upper class wield far too much power in this country, soon it will be either you are rich or poverty. I am scared for my future
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The situation is not good, that's for sure. |
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P.S. No I'm not saying that First Officer is any better than Captain nor otherwise around. |
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Maybe Americans need to accept the fact that taxes need to be uhm....adjasted. |
To adjust taxes would only be giving them a bigger shovel to dig an even deeper pit for us to fall into. They would just spend it on pork barrel projects or social engineering (vote getting) programs.
NOTHING at all would be done about the deficit or debt just more spending. The government needs to get out of most of the businesses it's in. "He who governs least governs best." Don't remember who said that. Is it too late, maybe but one thing for sure is we will find out soon enough. If there isn't some real movement on spending in the up coming battle over the debt ceiling there may be little hope left. Magic |
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As magic said, this will not work. It has already been tried. When a "compromise" has been reached higher taxes are levied, but the deal soon falls apart, as Congress has little discipline. After the promised spending cuts evaporate, all that is left are the tax increases. Really, the extra tax revenues just encourage Congress to spend more. Furthermore, higher taxes would almost certainly initiate a "double-dip" recession, and likely be counterproductive. |
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Money market funds would break the buck - you'd destroy every pension fund, public fund, retirement fund and investor in the country. You think your city/state/municipality has trouble now? If their cash holdings were wiped out, you'd see trouble for real. Good luck keeping a police force or firefighters when you have no money to pay them. God help us if the people in charge of things have the same lack of economic understanding as those opposed to raising the debt ceiling do. |
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