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originally posted in:Liberty Hub
6/7/2016 5:07:00 AM
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Facts About U.S. Debt w/ some grim humor

For anybody who hasn't read Mark Steyn's [i]After America[/i], I suggest that you give it a chance. Steyn and I share some pretty deep ideological divides, but he gets some compelling points across using some wit and comedy. Now, it was Steyn's chapter on debt that made it hard for me to sleep at night. Here are some of the things that he pointed out regarding debt, spending, and state power. I [i]urge[/i] you to read through each of these. They're frightening, but Steyn is a master of grim humor. [quote]since 1970 overall public school employment has increased ten times faster than public school enrollment — with no discernible benefit to student performance. — P.148[/quote] [quote]In one year (2009), Medicare handed out $98 billion in improper or erroneous payments. A tenth of a trillion? Ha! Rounding error. Look for it in the line items under “Miscellaneous.” For an accounting fraud of $567 million, Enron’s executives went to jail, and its head guy died there. For an accounting fraud 10 times that size, the two Democrat hacks who headed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Franklin Raines and Jamie Gorelick, walked away with a combined taxpayer-funded payout of $116.4 million. Fannie and Freddie are two of the largest businesses in America, but they’re exempt from SEC disclosure rules and Sarbanes-Oxley “corporate governance.” burdens, and so in 2008, unlike Enron, WorldCom, or any of the other reviled private-sector bogeymen, they came close to taking down the entire global economy. What then is the point of the SEC? By 2005, the costs of federal regulatory compliance alone (that is, not including state or local red tape) were up to $1.13 trillion — or approaching 10 percent of GDP. In much of America, it takes far more paperwork to start a business than to go on welfare. — P.85[/quote] [quote]In the fifties, one in twenty members of the workforce needed government permission in order to do his job. Today it’s one in three. — P.49[/quote] [quote]The United Auto Workers is the AARP in an Edsel; it has three times as many retirees and widows as “workers” (I use the term loosely). GM has 96,000 employees but provides health benefits to a million people. How do you make that math add up? Not by selling cars: Honda and Nissan were making a pretax operating profit per vehicle of around $1600; Ford, Chrysler, and GM a loss of $500 to $1500. That’s to say, they lose money on every vehicle they sell. — P.218[/quote] [quote]In 2009, the average civilian employee of the United States government earned $81,258 in salary plus $41,791 in benefits. Total $123,049. The average Americans employed in the private sector earned $50,462 in salary plus $10,589 in benefits. Total: $61,051. So the federal worker earns more than twice as much as the private sector worker. Plus he has greater job security: he’s harder to fire, or even to persuade to take a small pay cut. — P.75[/quote] [quote]As Congressman Paul Ryan pointed out, by 2004, 20 percent of U.S. households were getting about 75 percent of their income from the federal government. As a matter of practical politics, how receptive would they be to a pitch for lower taxes, which they don’t pay, or lower government spending, of which they are such fortunate beneficiaries? How receptive would another fifth of households, who receive about 40 percent of their income from the feds, be to such a pitch? — P.73[/quote] [quote]The CBO numbers foresee net interest payments rising from 9 percent of revenue to 36 percent in 2030, then to 58 percent in 2040, and up to 85 percent in 2050. If that trajectory holds, we’ll be spending more than the planet’s entire military budget on debt interest. But forget mid-century because, unless something changes, whatever goes by the name of “America” under those conditions isn’t worth talking about. — P.5[/quote] [quote]John Kichen of the U.S. Treasury and Menzie Chinn of the University of Wisconsin published a study in 2010 entitled: Financing U.S. Debt: Is There Enough Money in the World — and At What Cost? The fact that sane men are even asking this question ought to be deeply disturbing. As to the answer, foreign official holdings of U.S. Treasury securities have usually been less than 5 percent of the rest of the world’s GDP. By 2009, they were up to 7 percent. By 2020, Kitchen and Chinn project them to rise to 19 percent of the rest of the world’s GDP, which they say is….do-able. Whether the rest of the world will want to do it is another matter. A future that presumes the rest of the planet will sink a fifth of its GDP into U.S. Treasuries is no future at all. But on Big Government’s streetcar named Desire we have come to depend on the kindness of strangers. — P.10[/quote] [quote]Within a decade, the United States will be spending more of the federal budget on its interest payments than on its military. You read that right: more on debt service than on the armed services. According to the CBO’s 2010 long-term budget outlook, by 2020 the government will be paying between 15 and 20 percent of its revenues in debt interest. Whereas defense spending will be down between 14 and 16 percent. — P.5[/quote] Whew. Seriously, it's a lot to read, but I urge you to take the time. Steyn writes like a human, not a robot. Anyways, keep these numbers in the back of your head tonight. Debates in America are always held over topics like this, but we only ever touch on the tip of the iceberg. It isn't a matter of shifting a few billion dollars around through the departments. It's about giving some of the Federal Hydra heads a good axing and subsequent torching.

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  • On a side note, I suggest you watch this video. It's pretty funny. [spoiler]Also, not sure if I ever linked you this video. I made a thread about it a long time ago and it's a really good video. https://youtu.be/NbNFJK1ZpVg [/spoiler]

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    • 1) In response to the Paul Ryan quote, a significant portion of that 20% is retirees/disabled workers collecting Social Security/Disability payments. And that number will continuously ebb and flow with the times, due to birth and mortality rate. 2) The Military needs a good budget reduction, even now. If we put that towards paying our debt or providing better quality for things like education and housing, or focused it towards bolstering our academic output and investing in our future, we'd be a lot better off than frittering it away on playing cowboy cop or developing absurd new tech that won't be used for decades.

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      • [spoiler][quote]For anybody who hasn't read Mark Steyn's [i]After America[/i], I suggest that you give it a chance. Steyn and I share some pretty deep ideological divides, but he gets some compelling points across using some wit and comedy. Now, it was Steyn's chapter on debt that made it hard for me to sleep at night. Here are some of the things that he pointed out regarding debt, spending, and state power. I [i]urge[/i] you to read through each of these. They're frightening, but Steyn is a master of grim humor. [quote]since 1970 overall public school employment has increased ten times faster than public school enrollment — with no discernible benefit to student performance. — P.148[/quote] [quote]In one year (2009), Medicare handed out $98 billion in improper or erroneous payments. A tenth of a trillion? Ha! Rounding error. Look for it in the line items under “Miscellaneous.” For an accounting fraud of $567 million, Enron’s executives went to jail, and its head guy died there. For an accounting fraud 10 times that size, the two Democrat hacks who headed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Franklin Raines and Jamie Gorelick, walked away with a combined taxpayer-funded payout of $116.4 million. Fannie and Freddie are two of the largest businesses in America, but they’re exempt from SEC disclosure rules and Sarbanes-Oxley “corporate governance.” burdens, and so in 2008, unlike Enron, WorldCom, or any of the other reviled private-sector bogeymen, they came close to taking down the entire global economy. What then is the point of the SEC? By 2005, the costs of federal regulatory compliance alone (that is, not including state or local red tape) were up to $1.13 trillion — or approaching 10 percent of GDP. In much of America, it takes far more paperwork to start a business than to go on welfare. — P.85[/quote] [quote]In the fifties, one in twenty members of the workforce needed government permission in order to do his job. Today it’s one in three. — P.49[/quote] [quote]The United Auto Workers is the AARP in an Edsel; it has three times as many retirees and widows as “workers” (I use the term loosely). GM has 96,000 employees but provides health benefits to a million people. How do you make that math add up? Not by selling cars: Honda and Nissan were making a pretax operating profit per vehicle of around $1600; Ford, Chrysler, and GM a loss of $500 to $1500. That’s to say, they lose money on every vehicle they sell. — P.218[/quote] [quote]In 2009, the average civilian employee of the United States government earned $81,258 in salary plus $41,791 in benefits. Total $123,049. The average Americans employed in the private sector earned $50,462 in salary plus $10,589 in benefits. Total: $61,051. So the federal worker earns more than twice as much as the private sector worker. Plus he has greater job security: he’s harder to fire, or even to persuade to take a small pay cut. — P.75[/quote] [quote]As Congressman Paul Ryan pointed out, by 2004, 20 percent of U.S. households were getting about 75 percent of their income from the federal government. As a matter of practical politics, how receptive would they be to a pitch for lower taxes, which they don’t pay, or lower government spending, of which they are such fortunate beneficiaries? How receptive would another fifth of households, who receive about 40 percent of their income from the feds, be to such a pitch? — P.73[/quote] [quote]The CBO numbers foresee net interest payments rising from 9 percent of revenue to 36 percent in 2030, then to 58 percent in 2040, and up to 85 percent in 2050. If that trajectory holds, we’ll be spending more than the planet’s entire military budget on debt interest. But forget mid-century because, unless something changes, whatever goes by the name of “America” under those conditions isn’t worth talking about. — P.5[/quote] [quote]John Kichen of the U.S. Treasury and Menzie Chinn of the University of Wisconsin published a study in 2010 entitled:Financing U.S. Debt: Is There Enough Money in the World — and At What Cost?The fact that sane men are even asking this question ought to be deeply disturbing. As to the answer, foreign official holdings of U.S. Treasury securities have usually been less than 5 percent of the rest of the world’s GDP. By 2009, they were up to 7 percent. By 2020, Kitchen and Chinn project them to rise to 19 percent of the rest of the world’s GDP, which they say is….do-able. Whether the rest of the world will want to do it is another matter. A future that presumes the rest of the planet will sink a fifth of its GDP into U.S. Treasuries is no future at all. But on Big Government’s streetcar named Desire we have come to depend on the kindness of strangers. — P.10[/quote] [quote]Within a decade, the United States will be spending more of the federal budget on its interest payments than on its military. You read that right: more on debt service than on the armed services. According to the CBO’s 2010 long-term budget outlook, by 2020 the government will be paying between 15 and 20 percent of its revenues in debt interest. Whereas defense spending will be down between 14 and 16 percent. — P.5[/quote] Whew. Seriously, it's a lot to read, but I urge you to take the time. Steyn writes like a human, not a robot. Anyways, keep these numbers in the back of your head tonight. Debates in America are always held over topics like this, but we only ever touch on the tip of the iceberg. It isn't a matter of shifting a few billion dollars around through the departments. It's about giving some of the Federal Hydra heads a good axing and subsequent torching.[/quote][/spoiler] I'd be cautious about getting your ideas for topics from rightwingnews.com

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        • Just on the first "quote". The teachers part varies by location. I know for a fact my school district is in desperate need of teachers. They are practically hiring anyone with a bachelors of anything at this point. Also my college went from a unionized school to a privatized. The teachers were no longer under any protections and feared for their jobs. When you take political science or international relations you have a teacher that is supposed to stick to the program or else. Fortunately I got the rebellious ones. Privatizing is kicking out the local student coffee ship and putting in a Starbucks instead because it generated more money for the school. In the recession years many school students didn't get field trips and each program had to fund their own trips. If you suggest "axing" anything may I suggest military spending before you start to pick on education

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