Nick87
Well-known member
I'm afraid that's right.If that is true then term limits would serve zero purpose as the only thing that would change is the name of the crazy, not the crazy.
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I'm afraid that's right.If that is true then term limits would serve zero purpose as the only thing that would change is the name of the crazy, not the crazy.
Exactly. Being concerned about how your money is spent is a good thing as long as it is with understanding that it is beneficial to have allies and building those relationships takes time and money. I cited the example of Venezuela earlier. Implement sanctions in 2019 and feel great about it, only to see thousands of immigrants show up at our doorstep after the economy collapses. It is literally impossible to know what is the best economic tradeoff on any of these. I am sure that we will continue to send money to a lot of countries. The only thing that supports the idea is we have had it pretty safe on our side of the ocean compared to the rest of the world.Of course Americans are going to say they are taxed to much when we are watching "Tax dollars" get sent over to overseas wars that most people dont want to be apart of. I dont think most people like watching that happen. Especially considering there is zero foresight and risk assessment that the American people cant see clearly.
$$$$ to foreigners is a tired trope. Setting aside a proxy war vs Russia, we spend well less than 0.5% of federal budget on foreign aid (incl. military). The UK, Sweden, Norway and several others out spend us by a wide margin on a percentage basis. If we spent $0 dollars outside our boarders we would only shrink 2023 fiscal year deficit by 3%. The only reason it comes up so often is our fear/hatred of "the other" and our complete lack of understanding of where our money really goes.Exactly. Being concerned about how your money is spent is a good thing as long as it is with understanding that it is beneficial to have allies and building those relationships takes time and money. I cited the example of Venezuela earlier. Implement sanctions in 2019 and feel great about it, only to see thousands of immigrants show up at our doorstep after the economy collapses. It is literally impossible to know what is the best economic tradeoff on any of these. I am sure that we will continue to send money to a lot of countries. The only thing that supports the idea is we have had it pretty safe on our side of the ocean compared to the rest of the world.
@npaden, sorry, and I get your point, but everything is political to some degree. You see that here. First it was "don't support them because they can't win", then it was "don't support them because Putin will use nukes", and now it is "don't support them because of the budget deficit". As far as updates, I try to keep abreast, but hard to trust anything on this interwebby thingy.
I think it should be addressed and its pathetic it has not, and there doesnt seem to be any consequences for it. I'm not saying to shouldnt be there for our ally in a time of need. But we need to start seeing some checks and balances in place so when we run into an Israel getting attacked situation, we know what we can do.Anyone else just stop and question the fact that they say they don't have the resources to continue to help the Ukrainians but have the resources to help Israel? or that the Pentagon has failed the last 5 audits and can't account for 60% of the yearly defense budget? should that not be addressed before anything else?
When?Just like the pharmaceutical industry doesnt want to cure diseases, the American gov doesnt want to end wars. A slow rolling stalemate is much more profitable. Its all about money. As the (current) global reserve currency we have that luxury of running deficits and printing money. We are beyond broke though and it (our gov and economy) will come crashing down thanks to reckless spending.
I can't claim to be an expert about global macroeconomics, though I can read a balance sheet, and maybe we're at the point where mom and dad cut off the credit cards for a while.Just like the pharmaceutical industry doesnt want to cure diseases, the American gov doesnt want to end wars. A slow rolling stalemate is much more profitable. Its all about money. As the (current) global reserve currency we have that luxury of running deficits and printing money. We are beyond broke though and it (our gov and economy) will come crashing down thanks to reckless spending.
The US is not broke or bankrupt. Far from it. You are looking only at the debt/liability and freaking out at the all the zeros. You are not considering the assets at all. This happens because the government's ability to tax is what generates income (the asset side). And no one likes taxes. But to your point, if you look at every country, every country of material size is running a deficit. It is all Fugazi, fairy dust.We are beyond broke though and it (our gov and economy) will come crashing down thanks to reckless spending.
Paper money SAJ-99. Debt wheel is going start smoking.The US is not broke or bankrupt. Far from it. You are looking only at the debt/liability and freaking out at the all the zeros. You are not considering the assets at all. This happens because the government's ability to tax is what generates income (the asset side). And no one likes taxes. But to your point, if you look at every country, every country of material size is running a deficit. It is all Fugazi, fairy dust.
<iframe src="https://giphy.com/embed/hs8SqOYWARxO8" width="480" height="274" frameBorder="0" class="giphy-embed" allowFullScreen></iframe><p><a href="">via GIPHY</a></p>
But that is driven by moving funds to "safe return" of treasuries - not concern we have too much debt.Paper money SAJ-99. Debt wheel is going start smoking.
Dow closes nearly 300 points lower after 10-year Treasury yield tops 5% for the first time since 2007: Live updates
A runup in Treasury yields rocked the equities market this week, leaving the major averages on pace for weekly losses.www.cnbc.com
As long as we are international reserve currency and issue our debt in our own currency we can carry a much larger debt load than any other country. As said before, alienating the international finance/govt treasuries is a far bigger fiscal risk than the actual amount of debt we hold. Pushing Russia off SWIFT and into the arms of China has much greater consequences than an extra trillion here or there in debt total.The US is not broke or bankrupt. Far from it. You are looking only at the debt/liability and freaking out at the all the zeros. You are not considering the assets at all. This happens because the government's ability to tax is what generates income (the asset side). And no one likes taxes. But to your point, if you look at every country, every country of material size is running a deficit. It is all Fugazi, fairy dust.
<iframe src="https://giphy.com/embed/hs8SqOYWARxO8" width="480" height="274" frameBorder="0" class="giphy-embed" allowFullScreen></iframe><p><a href="">via GIPHY</a></p>
...listen to this man.As long as we are international reserve currency and issue our debt in our own currency we can carry a much larger debt load than any other country. As said before, alienating the international finance/govt treasuries is a far bigger fiscal risk than the actual amount of debt we hold. Pushing Russia off SWIFT and into the arms of China has much greater consequences than an extra trillion here or there in debt total.
Once in a while, the blind squirrel finds an acorn.But that is driven by moving funds to "safe return" of treasuries - not concern we have too much debt.
Normalization of yield curve. The narrative that "no one wants to buy our debt because we are bankrupt" is horseshit. Other countries buy our debt as a currency management tool. Japan has explicitly intervened in currency markets before and the Yen at 150 is a bigger problem for treasury rates than the amount of debt. We lived with artificially low rates for too long and now we have to get back to normal.Paper money SAJ-99. Debt wheel is going start smoking.
Dow closes nearly 300 points lower after 10-year Treasury yield tops 5% for the first time since 2007: Live updates
A runup in Treasury yields rocked the equities market this week, leaving the major averages on pace for weekly losses.www.cnbc.com
Inflation is a backdoor tax increase as it forces taxpayers up into higher brackets, reduces real asset values and devalues current govt debt obligations.Once in a while, the blind squirrel finds an acorn.
Higher Rates Stoke a Growing Chorus of Deficit Concerns (Published 2023)
A long period of higher interest rates would make the government’s large debt pile costly, a possibility that is fueling a conversation about debt sustainability.www.nytimes.com
If everyone is moving into treasuries wouldn't the rates being going down?But that is driven by moving funds to "safe return" of treasuries - not concern we have too much debt.