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And the Debt Bomb Ticks On
CNS News ^ | 1/25/11 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 01/25/2011 2:09:19 AM PST by markomalley

With his approval rating moving up to 50 percent and higher in some polls, the pundits are all agreed. President Obama has turned the corner. He is now the winter-book favorite in 2012.

How, two months after his "shellacking," did he do it?

First, by taking the wheel from Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, cutting a deal to extend the Bush tax cuts, bringing aboard Bill Daley, and separating himself from the demonizers of Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck as moral accomplices in the Tucson massacre.

Second, Obama has been the beneficiary of bullish news.

Corporate profits are coming in higher than expected. The stock market has surged. Nine of 10 economists surveyed by USA Today are more positive about the economy than they were three months ago. The ratio of businesses that anticipate new hires over businesses that anticipate new layoffs has not been better in a decade.

There is a feeling that at last we are coming out of the Great Recession.

But has the debt bomb really been defused?

On Jan. 20, The New York Times had two front-page stories that ought to concentrate the mind.

"A Path is Sought for States to Escape Their Debt Burdens," was the headline over the first, which reported that bankruptcy lawyers were being consulted by congressional aides on how states like California might go into Chapter 9, "leaving investors in state bonds ... possibly ending at the back of the line as unsecured creditors."

Illinois, the story said, might, with federal help, do what GM did.

But GM bondholders were wiped out, as some of us know all too well.

Should states win the right to seek bankruptcy protection against their state bondholders, the $3 trillion municipal bond market, which has lately been taking hits, could crater.

The second Times story wrote of a rebellion in the House Republican Study Committee by conservatives and Tea Partiers who think the leadership is being too timid in cutting this year's budget.

Rep. Paul Ryan & Co. want to cut $60 billion to $80 billion. But, says, Mick Mulvaney, a freshman from South Carolina, "We want more." These conservatives want $100 billion cut from discretionary programs.

Among their ideas: a five-year freeze on federal salaries, a 15 percent cut in federal employees, a rollback to 2006 spending levels, $300 billion in long-term funding cuts from such programs as foreign aid, Amtrak, public broadcasting and the Washington, D.C., subway system.

As the Tea Partiers' proposed cuts do not touch the military, Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security or interest on the debt, the biggest budget items, slashes in transportation, education, domestic security, law enforcement and medical research, said the Times, "would be nothing short of drastic."

Undeniably. Yet, consider. The federal deficit for the fiscal year 2011, which ends Sept. 30, is projected at between $1,200 billion and $1,500 billion.

Thus, the $100 billion in cuts the firebrands are pushing, and few think they will get, add up at best to 8 percent of the deficit and 2.5 percent of the $3.87 trillion budget Obama proposed.

Thus, at best, this Congress will only slightly reduce the rate of speed at which we are heading toward a debt default.

The last few days have brought other news bearing on the debt bomb hanging over the Western world.

The Irish, upon whom austerity has been imposed as a condition of an EU bailout, saw their government fall this weekend. Elections are in March, and the ruling Fianna Fail, at 13 percent approval, is expecting a wipeout.

Will the Irish accept endless austerity, or vote for populists who will default and let EU governments and banks take the hit?

Should Ireland default, she will not be the last to do so.

Also this weekend, the European Central Bank chief warned that inflation in the global economy -- the rising prices for oil, food, minerals and precious metals -- may mandate a rise in interest rates. That would be bad news for bondholders and governments everywhere, including our deeply indebted states that now borrow to cover operating costs.

Then there is the crisis in the housing market that continues to deepen.

"All previous postwar recoveries," writes Mort Zuckerman, "have been able to depend on a growing U.S. housing market."

But 8 million homes are today in foreclosure or their owners are delinquent in their mortgage payments. Some 5.5 million are occupied by families whose mortgages are at least 20 percent higher than the value of the property, making them prime candidates for foreclosure.

This weekend, Bank of America reported fourth-quarter losses of $1.6 billion and a 2010 yearly loss of $3.6 billion. Its credit card unit took a $10 billion write-down, and its home loan business is still reeling from the fallout of the exploded housing bubble.

Now, facing trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see, House Republicans are balking at agreeing to raise the debit limit of $14.3 trillion, though the national debt just crossed the $14 trillion mark.

Are the happy days really here again?


TOPICS: Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: patbuchanan

1 posted on 01/25/2011 2:09:20 AM PST by markomalley
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To: markomalley

Don’t forget the gas prices.


2 posted on 01/25/2011 2:39:13 AM PST by gusopol3
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To: markomalley

Boy, they’re really plumping him, aren’t they? Nothing has changed at all. He and the evil people behind him know that they have already gotten all they can get legislatively, so there’s no longer any need to be public about it or have those nasty political arguments that permit people to openly diasgree with The One.

Obama and the gang have the infrastructure and will now simply impose their will by fiat. Hence the “review” of regulations, essentially to centralize them and make them and the agencies that issue them much more powerful than anyone ever dreamed. And then Obama, like any good dictator anywhere (think Chavez) will float out and make populist speeches full of a combination of dreamy utopianism and self-righteous menace.


3 posted on 01/25/2011 2:53:24 AM PST by livius
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To: markomalley

But the DJIA is almost at 12,000! Obama has saved 6 trillion jobs! There’s no reason to lift our foot of the spending pedal! /srm_obot


4 posted on 01/25/2011 2:55:05 AM PST by PogySailor (The ruling class will not go down easily. And neither will their paid hacks.)
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To: markomalley
I really can't believe the polls. Nothing has changed.
Unemployment is still too high. Actual numbers are not known because when someone becomes ineligible for unemployment they are no longer counted as unemployed. Real unemployment probably near 20% and rising not falling.
Gasoline & heating oil way too high, if we had a conservative administration that would be headlines daily.
Food prices increasing
Our debt approaching unmanageable. . . .
5 posted on 01/25/2011 3:22:19 AM PST by DeaconRed (Everything IS Broken. . . . MSM won't report it. . . . The community organizer can't fix it.)
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To: markomalley
I'm all for pumping him up. Let his polls soar. Once reality hits like a ton of bricks mid-stride during his 2012 campaign, there will be no time to push more lies.

President Palin will be swept into office with ease.

6 posted on 01/25/2011 4:44:49 AM PST by Caipirabob ( Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
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To: markomalley

But GM bondholders were wiped out unemployment above 9% food and fuel prices on the up swing and the left say happy days here again,idiots on the march.


7 posted on 01/25/2011 4:56:25 AM PST by Vaduz
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To: livius
make populist speeches full of a combination of dreamy utopianism and self-righteous menace.

And I fear get reelected. He will have all of congress to blame for the economy not improving and besides the cuts they want to make will "starve school children and cause old people to eat dog food."

8 posted on 01/25/2011 7:48:05 AM PST by thirst4truth (The left elected a mouth that is unattached to an eye, brain or muscle.)
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To: livius

>>Hence the “review” of regulations,

Red tape rising
The regulatory state is expanding sharply.

http://www.economist.com/node/17961890?story_id=17961890

Yet ***the order also expands the scope of regulations***
by telling agencies that they may consider “values that are difficult or impossible to quantify, including equity, human dignity, fairness, and distributive impacts”. That is an important consideration for rules such as better access to toilets for the disabled. The risk is that such criteria could be used to justify rules that cost the earth.


Useful graph at the link showing that Bush, partially due to the TSA, also increased regs and associated Federal employment.

But the clause above in the review guidelines is a doozy!


9 posted on 01/25/2011 11:36:40 AM PST by swarthyguy (KIDS! Deficit, Debt,Taxes! Pfft Lookit the bright side of our legacy -America is almost SmokFrei!)
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To: swarthyguy
Yet ***the order also expands the scope of regulations*** by telling agencies that they may consider “values that are difficult or impossible to quantify, including equity, human dignity, fairness, and distributive impacts”.

Yes, essentially that gives them scope to do anything they (or the executive branch) may want to do, with absolutely no legislative intervention or oversight.

10 posted on 01/25/2011 12:19:17 PM PST by livius
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To: markomalley
Speaking of debt, estimates of California's long-term debt alone run to $737 BILLION, much of it in unfunded pensions guaranteed to state workers. Jerry Brown hasn't addressed any of that in his recent budget proposals.

http://articles.sfgate.com/2011-01-19/opinion/27036341_1_debt-ceiling-debt-service-unfunded-pension-liability

11 posted on 01/25/2011 12:23:41 PM PST by Deo volente (God willing, America will survive this Obamination.)
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To: Deo volente

I read the Federal debt is now around 90% of GDP.

Add in the State, County and Municipality obligations and I venture we are way above 100%.

The only reason the IMF and the World Bank haven’t come down hard on us, like on Indonesia, Argentina, or the EU on Greece etc etc is because we are the world’s reserve currency and run both institutions.


12 posted on 01/25/2011 12:30:14 PM PST by swarthyguy (KIDS! Deficit, Debt,Taxes! Pfft Lookit the bright side of our legacy -America is almost SmokFrei!)
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