That's a fair point to make, and I agree that the vast majority of politics is theater. However, there are real consequences to letting some of these people dictate policy. For example, here in NC instead of putting forth legislation to actually keep our state from becoming a shithole like the states that surround us, they'd rather focus on social regression and environmental devastation. There is no longer a middle ground so sane people to actually have a reasonable discussion.
7/27/2011 3:26:21 PM
7/28/2011 3:40:12 AM
republicans start of with the plan they want as thier plan and democrats start off with a compromised plan. Republicans then force the democrats to move to the right of thier original plan. Its a joke and its happened with healthcare, bush tax cuts and now this.
7/28/2011 10:11:19 AM
Now I'm confused, how could good leaders allow this? Also nothing changes if they do indeed kick the can again. We are still insolvent, still borrowing .40$ of every dollar we spend, and still printing $ till the end. Guns gold and silver till the end.
7/28/2011 12:05:52 PM
till the end[Edited on July 28, 2011 at 2:45 PM. Reason : till the end]
7/28/2011 2:44:29 PM
I think we're in for Boehner tears tonight. One way or another.
7/28/2011 7:06:11 PM
7/29/2011 6:24:22 AM
^Yes we all know the only way to fix debt is with more debt. Why can't they just spend what they earn? There is 2.5 trillion in revenue, make it work clowns.
7/29/2011 11:46:22 AM
lets get the fuck out of the mideast. that should help
7/29/2011 1:10:47 PM
^This
7/29/2011 1:20:10 PM
The Tea Party nutjobs are definitely holding us all hostage right now.
7/29/2011 1:23:14 PM
But how can we protect freedom here if we aren't micromanaging every country on earth?
7/29/2011 1:23:35 PM
7/29/2011 1:59:19 PM
7/29/2011 2:08:41 PM
7/29/2011 2:20:26 PM
7/29/2011 2:33:18 PM
Do future cuts ever happen?
7/29/2011 2:41:10 PM
7/29/2011 2:53:50 PM
1.3% GDP this morning
7/29/2011 3:01:23 PM
That's high, historically. It's not slash and burn high, though.Entitlements are going to consume us in the next couple decades, but howsabout we wait until we're not in a sputtering recovery before we start slashing stuff.[Edited on July 29, 2011 at 3:59 PM. Reason : ]
7/29/2011 3:56:32 PM
Because that time isn't going to come. There's not going to be a recovery anytime soon. No matter how many Ph.D economists and administration officials tell us we're in a recovery, we're still in a recession, and things are getting worse.The gig's up, for real. Now we have to figure out how to return to legitimate growth, but it requires major changes in how the government operates. Hint: the solution won't come out of Washington.
7/29/2011 4:07:49 PM
Oh man-- I just remembered to whom I was talking. When's the hyperinflation coming? Are you stocking up on gold coins and boxes of .223?
7/29/2011 4:51:51 PM
Remember when you were saying things are about to get better two years ago? Yeah, me too.[Edited on July 29, 2011 at 4:54 PM. Reason : ]
7/29/2011 4:54:22 PM
Given that I haven't yet resorted to cannibalism, I'd say my forecast was much more accurate than yours.
7/29/2011 4:59:04 PM
So, things have gotten worse, and continue to get worse, and somehow you're the one that's right?You won't find a post anywhere where I say something like "we're going to have hyperinflation in the next two years." Why? Because hyperinflation isn't inevitable. It could be prevented. What can't be prevented is a default in some form - whether it's us printing the difference or simply not paying bondholders.Now, I don't think there's a very good chance at all of us ending bond payments. If that happened, the bond market would obviously crash. People would be scrambling to get out of treasuries. Once that happens, the deficit would have to be immediately cut...or the Fed would have to buy bonds.Feel free to point out the flaws in my reasoning.[Edited on July 29, 2011 at 5:06 PM. Reason : ]
7/29/2011 5:03:57 PM
The flaw is quite obvious: the US has an ungainly tradition of debt aversion. This is why we are having a political knock-down drag-out right now even though our actual debt is no where near a problem.
7/29/2011 8:18:44 PM
Debt and printing money to finance the debt not a problem, tell me more. I thought once debt levels reach a certain % of GDP it begins to impede growth. We have seen a internet bubble a housing bubble and now a debt bubble. The fed kept rates low to stem the losses from the internet bubble and jump start the economy with cheap $$. That money poured into housing. That went bust and the losses were transferred to to the public through printing $ , asset swaps etc. We have not seen a non bubble economy in 20+ years, all the while levering up through a flood of cheap $. I just dont see this getting better, in our current system. We have had GDP to debt ratios this high in ww2 but the $$ was spent on factories, energy , roads etc while producing the Tanks etc win WW2, things that made the post war boom. Shoveling $$$ at banks and covering losses does nothing for the real economy. How do you expect a consumer driven economy to survive when the debt engine is deflating? The expansion of monetary base has not sparked severe inflation, it has been offset by the banks suffering deleverging. Banks are stuffing cash in their vaults so they can pretend to have the ratio requirements to not be insolvent. They have massive losses to cover even at the fairy tale prices they have them marked on the books. You' re telling me they can roll it again? I wanna know how, and do it with the debt engine insolvent and its workhorse the dollar smashed?
7/29/2011 9:24:38 PM
7/29/2011 9:41:55 PM
7/29/2011 10:15:37 PM
7/30/2011 8:24:48 AM
7/30/2011 9:37:24 AM
7/30/2011 11:01:17 AM
http://www.youtube.com/user/RepJoeWalsh
7/30/2011 11:10:33 AM
7/30/2011 11:54:48 AM
As we come close to hitting the debt limit, the interest rate on treasures has fallen further. This is not money printed from the federal reserve, this is the nation's investment capital that is being dumped into treasuries at $1.27 trillion a year. Meanwhile, in 2010 the net private investment was only $177 billion. As such, of all the available savings, the vast majority of it is going to the government, depriving the economy more than it otherwise would.
7/30/2011 12:18:49 PM
Yes, investment is going to the government, but I'm arguing that with gov't only offering 0-3% interest and with inflation being 2-3%, it's not like it's robbing the private sector of investment. I seems as if if it weren't for the government, banks and businesses would be keeping their money under mattresses.
7/30/2011 1:05:06 PM
7/30/2011 1:43:19 PM
we sell debt. we are america and have our own exclusive powerful currency. we're nothing like greece and will never be.
7/30/2011 2:03:15 PM
Ability to pay off our debt. Which wasn't going to come under doubt for a decade or two.**Until the Republicans gave people cause for concern.
7/30/2011 2:04:52 PM
7/30/2011 3:38:30 PM
Shouldn't we pay the money we owe? This money has already been committed.What happens when you miss a credit card payment? Your mortgage?[Edited on July 30, 2011 at 8:37 PM. Reason : ...]
7/30/2011 8:37:18 PM
7/30/2011 8:46:30 PM
^ Case in point. If you were Greek you wouldn't be mocking that position.
7/31/2011 1:57:34 AM
7/31/2011 11:09:40 AM
7/31/2011 6:12:34 PM
We have plenty of revenue to pay "bills" with. It's the other shit that has to go. When they start talking about cutting military spending at all, you'll know that they're serious.
7/31/2011 7:08:31 PM
why not:close 3/4 of our foreign basesbring those troops homebuild bases along our border for relocated troopsprotect border, infuse money into our economy via construction, bring troops home, spend money at home rather than abroad
7/31/2011 7:32:41 PM
7/31/2011 7:36:20 PM
^^ much of that is fine. but it doesn't fix everything. entitlements will dwarf military spending in 10 years and are projected to cost 50% of our GDP
7/31/2011 7:50:43 PM
7/31/2011 7:56:43 PM