look
at all of the political rhetoric on here and wonder what are we
thinking. Here are two simple things we should all see. Whatever our
stance on spending is, the debt ceiling has to be raised to pay for what
we have one way or another already spent or committed to spend. Raising
the debt ceiling isn't about new spending, it is about paying for what
we have already spent.
The answers to this is
simple. We need to make budgets and approve them far in advance. We
shouldn't be making budgets in September (October) . We should have the
budget finished and the rule-making done before the fiscal year begins.
We certainly shouldn't make a budget then wonder how the debt we
created in the budget got there. Pay the debts we made.
How to
decrease spending? That one is easy too. YES EASY! If we ask the
executive departments to reduce their demands by 15% and let them
actually make the cuts, they can and will live off of them. The problem
is congress wants to decide where the cuts are made. They want to spend
on programs that are advantageous to their districts even when the
department (especially defense) has the project at a lower priority or
even doesn't want it at all.
The bottom line is both sides of
the aisle voted for the budget. Both sides of the aisle made it into
what it is. That brings us to the second thing: Congress. They have a 5%
approval rate. Why don't we throw them out? The bottom line is that a
couple of things happen that keep us from it. The first is that we
believe that the ones that we would replace them with wouldn't be any
better than the ones we threw out. The other is that there is far more
power in incumbency that anyone wants to admit. To the political parties
it isn't about America, it is about the balance of the aisle. You would
keep anyone as long as they were usually dependable to the cause of the
largest donors and partisan media.
The whole problem is
simply that NO ONE is accountable. As long as we have a permanent
congress who doesn't have to come back to their district and live as one
of us, it is NEVER going to improve. I have lots more where this came
from. This is too important to ignore. The problem is congress from both
sides of the aisle have failed and now they are all blaming someone
else.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
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