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Nothing like a wolf pack eating the fetus out of a cow elk in your front yard.
Finally a boomer who admits it. Pretty refreshing.To have $30+ Trillion in debt means that we, mostly my generation and older, have asked for $30+ Trillion of government services that we were unwilling to pay for. That's $30+ Trillion of wealth sitting on the balance sheets of older Americans that should have been used to pay for the services we demanded.
Boomers claim we have been such a hard working, prosperous, and industrious generation, which could be true, but one truism beyond any doubt is that we sure don't like to pay our own way. We've used the election and legislative process to force future generations to pay for our desired level of services.
If you read the amendment, it doesn’t prevent the sale of federal lands. It only states that the proceeds from such a sale cannot be used to reduce the deficit. It literally calls for the creation of a “deficit neutral fund” to place those proceeds in, so that they can only be used to prevent the deficit from going up.I believe this is the amendment that was rejected
Yep. His post reminded me of a conversation I had with a guy that was smoking a cigarette and wearing an “I’m with her” hat in early 2008. I was in college, and had just finished mowing his lawn for $30. Standing in front of his $250k house(2008 dollars), he began to tell me why we needed to make insurance mandatory and make everyone pay the same amount regardless of age and health status because he couldn’t afford how much his insurance cost as he got older. I said so “so it’s okay for you to pay almost nothing for insurance while you get married, have kids, and buy a very nice home, but before I can have kids and buy a house I have to pay 5X what I currently pay for health insurance so that yours won’t increase in price?” He just told me that I would understand when I was his age.Finally a boomer who admits it. Pretty refreshing.
Trouble is, the boomers are still running all three branches of government and have set the narrative through the media they own for decades now.
Boomers grew up with government subsidized outdoor recreation, which is why they don't have a clue about the real cost of managing public land.
He's my Senator ... another gazillionaire, Montana "cattle rancher", aerial fire fighting company owner, former Navy Seal, Naval Academy graduate, mid-America raised with wealth, highly subsidized political newcomer with full force of the party behind him ... but NO clue about Montana values, problems, public lands legacy, and so much more of importance to real Montanans currently.Tim Sheehy was the Sen
He's my Senator ... another gazillionaire, Montana "cattle rancher", aerial fire fighting company owner, former Navy Seal, Naval Academy graduate, mid-America raised with wealth, highly subsidized political newcomer with full force of the party behind him ... but NO clue about Montana values, problems, public lands legacy, and so much more of importance to real Montanans currently.
This military veteran with the highest of credentials and a stellar resume has the background, the smarts, and the potential to be another great US Senator from Montana ... however, so far he has demonstrated only loyalty to the throne and displays the same political puppetry traits encumbering the rest of the Montana delegation.
I will acknowledge and applaud each of their stances and leadership regarding "public lands in public hands" ... but that's the extent of any applause for their positions and integrity.
Yes, interesting.You might watch this.
Okay. Wonder when let me AI that for you will be the new let me google that for youYes, interesting.
You might sum it up as many here may not care to invest over an hour into the interview.
This is true. A large fraction of the US voters want free stuff from the Govt and our politicians (both sides) are more than willing to buy their votes.We're not talking serious math when it comes to the US Budget. Only complication is in Congress and the whining constituents who want services beyond what they are willing to pay for.
If we aren't willing to tackle 84% of the problem on the spending side, just raising revenue isn't going to solve the problem. Both issues need to be addressed.Gross revenues - $4.92 Trillion
Mandatory expenditures (Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Interest) - $4.13 Trillion
This is where you have lost me. Whether DOGE is doing it right or not is certainly open for debate. But if the USG isn't taking a hard look at how it spends the monies it already collects and can't demonstrate those funds are being used efficiently, it doesn't seem very smart to give them more. I don't for a second believe that SS, Medicare, and Medicaid are operating at 100% efficiency and are free of waste or fraud. If they were at 90% efficiency (which is a major stretch already), eliminating that other 10% would save the US taxpayer $400B plus. Seems worthwhile to me to pursue that kind of savings.It makes me laugh that DOGE is going to change the financial picture in a meaningful way. ...
Cut every dollar of discretionary spending, shut down all basic government services, and we are still adding more to the current $32-35 Trillion of net debt.
It won't. But your previous discussions around getting more revenue for the public land use we already allow should be a no-brainer to implement. But can it survive the whining constituents who don't want to pay higher beef, gasoline, or electricity prices, among several others?And somehow selling our public land is going to solve Congress' budget dereliction?
Again, this is where you have lost me. Pew Research has published several studies that show that currently it is the younger generations that are supporting larger USG spending. 66% for 18-29 yr olds, 55% for 30-49 yr olds. Boomers are the lowest group. And perhaps (likely) that is because they have already taken their piece of the pie and don't want to buy a bigger one in their ending years. I doubt they are unique in this perspective. But to say that only Boomers are asking for services they are unwilling to pay for is a stretch.To have $30+ Trillion in debt means that we, mostly my generation and older, have asked for $30+ Trillion of government services that we were unwilling to pay for. That's $30+ Trillion of wealth sitting on the balance sheets of older Americans that should have been used to pay for the services we demanded.
I think this is partially true but doesn't capture the whole story. Again, this is my opinion only. But I take Obama-care as a great recent example. The ACA was built on the premise that younger, healthier people would predominantly pay into the system and that older generations (and less well-off groups) would get reduced-cost benefits. That mostly fits your Boomer narrative. But the ACA was pushed by one political party and was nearly universally endorsed by all age groups within that party. Politics trumped pocketbooks. And without trying to be too political, the view of the size/role of the USG in providing services has very much been a political one and not a generational one for decades and if you believe Pew, the divide grew from 2:1 (Dems/Cons) in the 70's and 80's to nearly 4:1 now.Boomers claim we have been such a hard working, prosperous, and industrious generation, which could be true, but one truism beyond any doubt is that we sure don't like to pay our own way. We've used the election and legislative process to force future generations to pay for our desired level of services.
Agree. I am 100% in favor of raising revenues but not as the only means to get out of the debt hole. Spendong cuts have to happen as well. And that means to you have to tackle the big items. Saving a few billion here and there on the discretionary side won't achieve much but it's also low-hanging fruit.The reality is, without revenue increases, we will never get out of this hole.
I disagree. For the reasons stated above and for the fact that your statement can only be true in the realm of a non-progressive-tax structure.There are 76 Million Boomers still alive. If you divide $30 Trillion of debt among those 76 million of us Boomers, we each benefited, on average, by $394,000 that we didn't pay to cover the services we demanded from our government.
How do you define efficiency? Everyone seems to be using that word a lot but no one is defining it.I don't for a second believe that SS, Medicare, and Medicaid are operating at 100% efficiency and are free of waste or fraud. If they were at 90% efficiency (which is a major stretch already), eliminating that other 10% would save the US taxpayer $400B plus. Seems worthwhile to me to pursue that kind of savings.
Wow. That's rich. You think our debt problem and not touching entitlement spending is because of the last election of the House? Amazing. I think history tells another story however.Big Fin nails it nicely. The big stuff largely hasn't been touched, and the reason for that is because the House has elections every two years and a lot of new Republican voters are on medicaid. Oh, the irony. ... We are seeing the winners shove the stuff they want down the losers throats ...
I had it on in the background while processing some pics. It was fine to hear about the fire stuff, but it was basically background noise
You might watch this.
Huh? I didn't say that.Wow. That's rich. You think our debt problem and not touching entitlement spending is because of the last election of the House?