Sixteen trillion
dollars:
That’s about how much money the United States of
America is in debt to creditors today – a sum which
won’t be paid off anytime soon, if ever.
And that debt is
growing by leaps and bounds. Millions of dollars are
added to the total every few minutes. Interest alone
just to service this mountain of debt is now
accumulating at the rate of about $200 billion every
year.
It’s going to get
worse.
Sooner or later the
bubble is going to pop, and when it does there’s
literally going to be hell to pay. The time is fast
approaching when the United States government will
have no choice but to default on its loans. Uncle
Sam will become a deadbeat.
If that happens,
the value of the U.S. dollar will plummet. If the
government decides to print more cash to pay off the
loans, the value of your money and mine will
likewise plummet. It’s a no-win situation for every
American rich and poor.
Former president
George W. Bush started the trouble with wild
military spending and on the unnecessary wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Barack Obama is
compounding the problem by doing absolutely nothing
to stop the profligate spending.
Romney and Ryan
really don’t have a clue about how to stop the
pending avalanche but at least they recognize there
is a problem.
Perhaps the first
people to be screwed will be the post-World War II
generation of baby boomers, myself included, who are
just now beginning to retire on the government’s
promise to pay social security and Medicare
benefits. Their savings have already been decimated
by the housing implosion brought on by George W.
Bush so they will need their retirement benefits
more than ever.
One thing is for
certain. The last people to suffer will be those on
the government payroll. They’ll continue to get
theirs with honey on top.
We know that the
GSA scandal was just the tip of the iceberg. Now we
learn that a small group of
federal judges in the western U.S. circuit are
planning to spend more than
$1 million taxpayer dollars on a
Maui Hawaii conference (vacation).
They’ll stay at the upscale Hyatt Regency Maui
Resort & Spa in rooms costing 230 to $250 per night
for four nights. Accommodations alone are expected
to total more than $500,000, plus each participant
will enjoy per diem expenses starting at a base
level of $289. Add to that the travel costs and the
total is outrageous for four days of conference
activities which could just as well be accomplished
over the Internet at a fraction of the costs.
These judges have been spending this kind of
taxpayer cash every year now for several years and
they’re not about to give up their lavish perks
without a fight.
Meanwhile,
nearly $100,000 worth of "coffee break refreshments"
was among the itemized expenses revealed Friday from
two controversial
Veterans Affairs conventions,
whose combined price tag topped $5 million,
including $52,000 wasted on "Patton-style" video
that surfaced earlier this week.
“As we learn
more about these conferences, I am more and more
concerned about the clear lack of leadership,
accountability, and transparency at VA,"
U.S. Rep. Jeff Miller, said in a written statement.
"To see that VA
employees were treated to tens of thousands of
dollars in refreshments, a $300,000 Audio Visual
Center and a night of Karaoke
($863) does not invoke confidence in employees
who are entrusted with the nation’s monies for
veterans."
The price tag on
the VA conferences far exceeds the roughly $830,000
spent by the General Services Administration at a
2010 Las Vegas conference, a lavish affair that drew
outrage on Capitol Hill.
With out of control
spending like this, it’s no wonder America is
underwater in debt to the tune of $16 trillion and
there is no end sight.
Comment:
Don't forget the planned unfunded future liabilities. That brings it up to $60 trillion.
© 2010 Timothy J Taylor. Simple template. http://authoritycon.blogspot.com
Comment:
Don't forget the planned unfunded future liabilities. That brings it up to $60 trillion.
© 2010 Timothy J Taylor. Simple template. http://authoritycon.blogspot.com