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On to the next crisis! The government shutdown. Do you want a fix that keeps DC in business until Oct 31, or Nov 21? Those are our only choices . . .



Photo above - would you prefer to have the next government shutdown this month, on Halloween, or at Thanksgiving?

The story thus far: America is $37 Trillion in debt. Republicans want to increase deficit, but create another shutdown showdown on November 21st. Democrats want to increase it the debt even more, and accelerate the next shutdown crisis to Halloween. All this is completely true. See link below.

Okay, my first priority – giving thanks that the Fed cut rates by ¼ point yesterday. I’m warming up the car right now to go house hunting (insert sarcasta-bang here). It’s also possible that the interest rate on my credit card will come down from 22.25% (national average for retail purchases) to an even 22.00%. Think of all things I can buy with THAT windfall. Chase Manhattan Bank, I’m looking at you! And by the way, did you finishing moving into your new Park Avenue headquarters yet? 60 stories high, which cost $3 billion.

There are no good guys in this mashup of govt shutdowns-fed funds-and wickedly expensive corporate palaces. Everything politicians do is calculated to up get votes in the next election cycle. That’s how we got $37 million in hock to China and Saudi Arabia in the first place. Everything Wall Street and too-big-to-fail banks do ends up draining our savings so that we can probably never buy a home.

I wish I could tell you that I had a solution, but unlike politicians for life in DC I’m not certain of anything. Anyway, here’s an experiment I’d like to try:

1 – insist on a government funding measure that covers a complete budget year. No more of this 3 or 4 weeks at a time $hit. Budget and operate normally. If you’re going to borrow money, tell us how much up front, and how much it’s going to cost us. Like a mortgage or car loan.

2 – let the next “too-big-to-fail” bank actually go down. Pay off those innocent depositors with FDIC insurance coverage, so they don’t lose a dime. But don’t bail out that bank. Don’t spend tax money bribing another bank to merge with it. Don't let the bank execs hang onto their lavish office suites. Just let potential buyers of that failed bank pay whatever the actual market value is. Crowdsource the solution.

I don’t think either of these scenarios will be a world-ending catastrophe, like the media is constantly claiming. The media should just tell the truth instead of taking sides. Stop hoodwinking us.

Stop buying stuff that we can’t afford, and allowing poorly run companies go out of business . . . these are hallowed American traditions.

I’m just sayin’ . . .


Democrats unveil funding alternative to counter GOP in shutdown brawl
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Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40 Best Comment
There is actually only one way to fix a deficit and get yourself on the even again and that is to say we have X amount of money we have got to budget correctly and make do with what we have available with it we can achieve doing only A this year to make a tiny improvement plus pay off some of that hideous amount of debt we have. Yes there are going to be some hard choices and some hard times ahead folks.

Increasing Debt constantly is a recipe for disaster eventually you become such a bad risk and a danger of being a defaulter that people either won't lend you money or the interest rate just gets higher and higher.
Also each time you borrow more you have less and less in the pot that you are collecting to use other than to pay that loan back.

There is also a massive imbalance already between the pot you can collect from and the pot that has to be paid into. There are in reality to few people paying in versus people that "need" to get money from the system.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@Avectoijesuismoi voted best comment. unfortunately 98% of senators, and all presidents in the past 30 years disagree with this.
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