http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20060803/1a_coverart03.art_dom.htm
8/3/2006 3:27:26 PM
8/3/2006 3:31:25 PM
indeed....this is a very serious topic with me....i want to write alot but dont have time...but the way governmental accounting works is complete and utter nonsense...zero accountabilitythe government SHOULD be run like a good business....more later
8/3/2006 3:37:39 PM
we need to elect that exxon ceo that helped make record profits to run the countrystreamline this shit
8/3/2006 4:11:12 PM
I agree with te GAAP accounting. I'd wager <2% of the population cares about the debt anyway, might as well use the real numbers
8/3/2006 4:14:02 PM
What use is good accounting when you can just put a gun to the heads of your customers?
8/3/2006 4:14:37 PM
IIRC, they "can't." At least not unless they're going to go V for Vendetta style. They can take away your shit and throw your ass in jail for tax evasion, though.
8/3/2006 4:23:32 PM
^[off-topic]damn son, how did you get 13K+ posts?[/off-topic]
8/3/2006 4:37:19 PM
8/3/2006 11:00:25 PM
8/4/2006 12:31:09 AM
Yeah, its a scare tactic because people don't understand how government deficits and personal deficits are totally different.
8/4/2006 8:06:41 AM
8/4/2006 8:59:24 AM
I agree that the government should use something like GAAP, but I don't think this is right:
8/4/2006 9:05:08 AM
8/4/2006 9:59:13 AM
8/4/2006 11:02:52 AM
radu kind of hits on my "confusion" about this. I'm not exactly sure how they factor in some of the stuff.When one talks about a "budget deficit," I tend to think of it as a yearly thing. As in, if I had a budget deficit of 500 bux, that means I spent 500 bux more than I had last year. Based on that, it's hard for me to think of a "future liability" as being applied continuously, the way the article makes it sound, because that would mean to me that I am adding that liability many times.The "future liability" seems to be more in line with the notion of the "national debt," which seems entirely different. To me, that's a weighing of all of our liabilities versus assets, or really just an accumulation of all of our deficits. But that's odd, because in the article it talks about Clinton running a "surplus," but I find it hard to believe that he eliminated the national debt...
8/5/2006 1:08:07 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._public_debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeficitYou really need to refine your understanding of the difference between those two concepts.
8/5/2006 1:16:32 AM
I'm sure I do. But the article you posted seems to intertwine the two...
8/5/2006 1:19:33 AM
8/5/2006 8:55:25 AM
8/5/2006 4:31:39 PM
8/6/2006 12:21:19 AM
No one has promised to need prescription drugs either.
8/6/2006 12:46:04 AM
But really is an 8 trillion dollar expense for items to be accrued in the future not an asset, like pre-paid rent?
8/6/2006 12:51:19 AM
8/6/2006 10:13:01 PM