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otisptoadwater wrote:
By Terence P. Jeffrey
September 11, 2012
(CNSNews.com) - According to the most recent official estimate by the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Gross Domestic Product for 2012 will be $15.6061 trillion--or about $440.5 billion less than the $16.0466 in debt that the federal government had accumulated as of the close of business on Monday.
In other words, the debt is now approximately 103 percent of GDP.
Read more: http://cnsnews.com/news/article/americas-underwater-debt-equals-103-percent-gdp
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archer wrote:
otisptoadwater wrote:
By Terence P. Jeffrey
September 11, 2012
(CNSNews.com) - According to the most recent official estimate by the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Gross Domestic Product for 2012 will be $15.6061 trillion--or about $440.5 billion less than the $16.0466 in debt that the federal government had accumulated as of the close of business on Monday.
In other words, the debt is now approximately 103 percent of GDP.
Read more: http://cnsnews.com/news/article/americas-underwater-debt-equals-103-percent-gdp
At what point does it get bad enough that congress will agree on a bill that BOTH cuts spending AND raises revenue? A one dimensional approach will never do it....we can't cut enough to bring down the debt fast enough.....we absolutely have to increase revenue NOW, not wait till maybe, perhaps, possibly, the so called job creators the GOP wants to pander to with further tax cuts, decide for the first time that they might trickle down some money to the masses and create jobs at some undetermined future date.
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It's as simple as that... you can't tax away a 16 trillion dollar debt, it only goes away when the people are working, when the businesses can afford to hire. This country was not built by the government, it was ultimately built by the people who create revenue in the first place.RenegadeCJ wrote:
archer wrote:
otisptoadwater wrote:
By Terence P. Jeffrey
September 11, 2012
(CNSNews.com) - According to the most recent official estimate by the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Gross Domestic Product for 2012 will be $15.6061 trillion--or about $440.5 billion less than the $16.0466 in debt that the federal government had accumulated as of the close of business on Monday.
In other words, the debt is now approximately 103 percent of GDP.
Read more: http://cnsnews.com/news/article/americas-underwater-debt-equals-103-percent-gdp
At what point does it get bad enough that congress will agree on a bill that BOTH cuts spending AND raises revenue? A one dimensional approach will never do it....we can't cut enough to bring down the debt fast enough.....we absolutely have to increase revenue NOW, not wait till maybe, perhaps, possibly, the so called job creators the GOP wants to pander to with further tax cuts, decide for the first time that they might trickle down some money to the masses and create jobs at some undetermined future date.
Raising revenue is the problem. How do you do it? Tax increases on a select few don't necessarily increase $$ to the treasury. How much should the govt take from any one individual in taxes? 50%? 75%? 90%? 100%?
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well - my mortgage is higher than my annual income, and nobody's declaring me bankrupt ----
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Using your personal example, are you more concerned about your own situation than the people in Washington are about the debbt in this country? I'll bet you are because it's YOUR money. People in washington play with the future of all Americans and as long as they are getting a fat paycheck, the debt won't be keeping them up at night like your person debt probably does (or should).bailey bud wrote: well - my mortgage is higher than my annual income, and nobody's declaring me bankrupt ----
so I'm not ready to pound my chest and cry "it's finished."
That said - it's certainly moving in the wrong direction --- and accumulation of additional debt is not in our best interest.
Step 1 is to slow and then eliminate deficit spending. (something no president has done in a decade)
Step 2 is to eliminate debt
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bailey bud wrote: well - my mortgage is higher than my annual income, and nobody's declaring me bankrupt ----
so I'm not ready to pound my chest and cry "it's finished."
That said - it's certainly moving in the wrong direction --- and accumulation of additional debt is not in our best interest.
Step 1 is to slow and then eliminate deficit spending. (something no president has done in a decade)
Step 2 is to eliminate debt
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