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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: debt

Attack of the $5 Trillion Gubmint

14 Tuesday May 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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2019, budget, crazy, debt, Federal government

There’s just no need for elaboration. These numbers speak for themselves:

The federal government spent $2,573,708,000,000 in the first seven months of fiscal 2019 (October through April), setting an all-time record for real federal spending in the first seven months of a fiscal year, according to data published in the Monthly Treasury Statements.

Prior to this fiscal year, the most that the federal government had ever spent in the first seven months of a fiscal year was in fiscal 2011, when it spent $2,476,257,690,000 in constant April 2019 dollars (adjusted using the Bureau of Labor Statistics inflation calculator).

That’s a high price for an Empire that’ll be gone in a decade and a half. It’s like wasting everything on a luxury model for use as a beater that you can’t even afford to insure. Should have gone with the economy republican model. Or even a mid-sized Monarchy or something. Hey, it’s just (fake) money in (and at) the end.

Economic Absolution

12 Sunday May 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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debt, economics, jubilee, Paul Craig Roberts

PCR writes about an ancient practice, one we could sorely use today in America.

In actual fact, these civilizations were more advanced and more humanitarian than our own. They were more advanced because the rulers were focused on ensuring the society’s longevity by maintaining a livable balance between debtors and creditors. It has all been downhill ever since.

The rulers maintained social balance and, thereby, the life of the society by periodically cancelling debts. The rulers understood that compound interest resulted in debt growing faster than the economy. The consequence would be foreclosures on agricultural land, which would shift riches and power into a small oligarchy of creditors. The ruler and the society would be deprived of a self-supporting population on the land which provided tax revenues, soldiers for the military, and corvee labor to maintain public infrastructure. Disaster would follow. A grasping oligarchy could overthrow the ruler or the dispossessed population could flee to a potential invader offering their military services in exchange for debt forgiveness.

To protect their societies from dissolution by unpayable debts, rulers periodically cancelled agrarian debts owed by the citizenry at large, but not mercantile debts among businessmen.

The reason for debt forgiveness was stability, not egalitarianism.

One difference between the debts of then, there, and now and here, is that the ancients generally had debts based in actual currency, debased to a degree perhaps, but based nonetheless. Ours, in contrast, is pure fiat, wished into being by a cartel of financial criminals. What can be made with a wish, could easily be wished away. But, that’s wishing for a lot.

In America today the population is drowning in unpayable debts—student loan debt, credit card debt, home mortgage debt, state and local government debt, and business debt—but policymakers have reserved forgiveness only for the debt associated with the bad and irresponsible investments of the big banks and financial institutions. The Federal Reserve printed $4 trillion to buy up the banks’ bad debt while permitting ten million homeowners to be foreclosed. Student loan debt prevents university graduates from forming independent households. Mortgage and credit card debt prevents households from having discretionary income with which to drive retail sales. But modern day economics has no prescription for preventing our society from failing from debt overload.

…

In the US today we have a situation in which the New York banks control Federal Reserve policy and financial legislation—the deregulation of the banking system and its subsequent bailout, for example. We have a situation in which monopolies, monopsonies, and oligopolies are stronger than the central government, which is unable to rein them in or act against them in any way. Corporations dispossess citizens of their jobs by offshoring the jobs. Creditor demands prevent university graduates from forming households. Debt service preempts retail demand except by further debt expansion.

This is an economy headed down, not up. Clearly, Hammurabi did far better for the Babylonians than Washington can do for Americans.

Cue Darth Sidious: “Wipe [the debts out]. All of them.” Make debt illegal, usurious lending a capital felony.

Pocahontas Might be on to $omething

23 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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debt, Elizabeth Warren, politics

The debt burden has to go. Adding it as a campaign plank makes sense, even if you (like Warren) have no intention of carrying through.

Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren has identified something else to finance with her proposed wealth tax: wiping out student debt and tuition at public colleges.

She says her proposal would benefit 95% of the 45 million Americans carrying student debt and wipe it out for 75% of them.

Warren’s plan would also cut off federal money from for-profit colleges, which she says “enrich themselves while targeting lower-income students, service members and students of color and leaving them saddled with debt.”

My plan would get rid of all student loan debt and all other debts too. And, it wouldn’t require any taxes on anyone. And, it would get rid of a bunch of the most despicable criminals on Earth. Too bad I’m not an American Indian like Lizzy.

Debt and the New Dark Age

08 Monday Apr 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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dark age, debt, economics, economy, Vox Day

Vox Day and Michael Hudson have it right about the doom of debts in society.

Jesus wasn’t just talking about sin when he told us to pray for the forgiveness of our debts. That’s one of the reasons the Pharisees hated him so much. Michael Hudson is interviewed concerning a very important trilogy of economic history he is writing:

MH: The key public concern throughout history has been to prevent debt from crippling society. That aim is what Babylonian and other third-millennium and second-millennium Near Eastern rulers recognized clearly enough, with their mathematical models. To make an ideal society you need the government to control the basic utilities — land, finance, mineral wealth, natural resources and infrastructure monopolies (including the Internet today), pharmaceuticals and health care so their basic services can be supplied at the lowest price.

All this was spelled out in the 19th century by business school analysts in the United States. Simon Patten [1852-1922] who said that public investment is the “fourth factor of production.” But its aim isn’t to make a profit for itself. Rather, it’s to lower the cost of living and of doing business, by providing basic needs either on a subsidized basis or for free. The aim was to create a low-cost society without a rentier class siphoning off unearned income and making this economic rent a hereditary burden on the economy at large. You want to prevent unearned income.

To do that, you need a concept to define economic rent as unearned and hence unnecessary income. A well-managed economy would do what Adam Smith, David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, Marx and Veblen recommended: It would prevent a hereditary rentier class living off unearned income and increasing society’s economic overhead. It’s okay to make a profit, but not to make extractive monopoly rent, land rent or financial usury rent.

JS: Will human beings ever create such a society?

MH: If they don’t, we’re going to have a new Dark Age.

If an executive order and some attendant regulations can ban bump stocks, then some similar measures could easily make debt (all of it) illegal. Usurers would turn in their notes to the police to be destroyed. Future usury would become a felony. There’s also bankruptcy; if Congress could be bothered to govern, they could involuntarily draft everyone (including the US government, the states, and the cities) into court for mandatory clean-slating.

Or we could just have the dark age.

Priced Out

05 Friday Apr 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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averages, debt, economics, economy, money, prices, real estate

Numbers don’t lie.  Politicians and economists do.

There (before the last housing bubble) was this rule of thumb: hypothetical folks could afford (via debt instruments) a house costing approximately three times their annual income. Applying that rule in 2019 works like this: $63,000 per year income X 3 = $189,000 home price (with zero down and no costs, etc.). The $63,000 is the average American household income. Therefore, through the magic of usurious multiplication, the average American family should be able to purchase a $189K home.

It doesn’t work out quite that way sometimes. Other debts and expenses eat away at the equation. But, by the old rule, and with a little money down (or some extra financial tricks), Ma and Pa ‘Murica should hypothetically be able to buy the average All-American home for around $200,000. Except, they can’t do that.

Even if all the tricks are in play, it all falls apart because the average US house now sells for $300,000.

The median asking price for a U.S. home hit $300,000 for the first time ever in March, according to housing data from Realtor.com to be released later Thursday and provided early to USA TODAY. That topped the previous peak of $299,000 reached in June and July of last year.

Is there a new 5X rule? It would fit with the new average waistline anyway. But, no. People are just being priced out of the average. That’s now, during the boom to end all booms. If and when prices fall, look for incomes to do the same.

We definitely need more foreign wage competitors in the USE. More financialization too. More politicians and economists.

Mum’s Not the Word

20 Wednesday Feb 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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debt, Republicans

The national government’s debt, again, hit a record high.

Washington (AFP) – More massive than the US economy, the national debt hit a new record of $22 trillion under President Donald Trump but Republicans who traditionally rail against debt and deficits have remained mum.

The sum of borrowing to cover chronic deficits as well as growing interest payments, this mountain of debt already stood at $19.95 trillion when Trump entered the White House, reaching the equivalent of US GDP for the first time since World War II.

The Republicans have not been silent. They’ve been Yea-ing along the whole time.

Little Ditty Bout Debt and Decline

19 Tuesday Feb 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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debt, decline

Oh yeah, debt goes on,

Long after the American nation is gone…

A few facts and figures.

“All the gold ever mined would only pay off the debt accumulated under Obama.”

“Debt from one Trump term could pay for another WWII.”

Up, Up, and Away … FedGov Debt at $22 Trillion

12 Tuesday Feb 2019

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Up, Up, and Away … FedGov Debt at $22 Trillion

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America, debt, Federal government

Another stupendous milestone on the road from incompetence to ruination:

The national debt surpassed $22 trillion for the first time on Tuesday, a milestone that experts warned is further proof the country is on an unsustainable financial path that could jeopardize the economic security of every American.

The Treasury Department reported the debt hit $22.012 trillion, a jump of more than $30 billion in just this month.

The national debt has been rising at a faster rate following the passage of President Donald Trump’s $1.5 trillion tax-cut package a little more than a year ago and as the result of congressional efforts to increase spending on domestic and military programs. The nation has added more than $1 trillion in debt in the last 11 months alone.

“Reaching this unfortunate milestone so rapidly is the latest sign that our fiscal situation is not only unsustainable but accelerating,” said Michael A. Peterson, chief executive officer of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, a nonpartisan organization working to address the country’s long-term fiscal challenges.

I vaguely recall when both the debt and the annual budget passed the $1 Trillion mark – now a mere year’s deficit. I’m sure this is all Trump’s fault. Nothing the Long Green Mile Deal won’t cure. Strike that. Nothing the Grace Commission can’t conserve our way out of.

Screenshot 2019-02-12 at 6.37.27 PM

Figure dated 2/12/19, PM – surely higher now … hell, was nearly $50,000 higher immediately after I screenshot…

By the Time They Notice…

26 Wednesday Dec 2018

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

debt, economics, recession

It’s already started. Summers speaks concern:

The markets aren’t looking good, but former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers says not to panic … yet.

Amid a month of falling stocks, Summers cautioned that “weak markets” don’t necessarily mean “economic disaster is around the corner.” Still, he’s increasing his prediction of a recession from “a bit less than 50 percent” to 60 percent, he tweeted Wednesday.

Not yet… When it’s been noticeably in progress for six to nine months, then they’ll admit it.

Allegedly, we’ve been in a recovery, a boom market for many years now. According to Keynes, this was the time to pay off debts used to jump out of the last downturn. That didn’t happen. As-is, Fed-Gov has been spending the funny money like there’s no tomorrow.

The federal government has added another $1,370,760,684,441.54 to the debt since last December 25, according to numbers published by the U.S. Treasury.

On Dec. 25, 2017, the federal debt was 20,492,874,492,282.58, according to the Treasury.

According to the latest numbers published by the Treasury, which show where the debt stood on Dec. 20, 2018, the federal debt was $21,863,635,176,724.12.

Almost back on track for $40 T by 2024. Not that that really matters anymore.

 

The Total Debt Solution – clearing the drafts

14 Friday Dec 2018

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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debt, economics, freedom

***Note*** I’ve got a lot of drafts sitting around, some in existence and unpublished since 2013. It became obvious to me that I’m in no hurry to get around to them. But, they’ve survived various draft purges over the years. If they’re that important I can just come back and elaborate later. For now, I offer them, kind of as-is, in this, a lightning publishing round. The fun will continue while supplies last. Make of these what you will. Or not. I don’t care.

There will be more on this later. As-is, a short from Feb. of 2013:

Repudiate the entire federal debt and all other debts in the U.S. Take other steps to keep from repeating.  National bankruptcy is easier than one might suppose.  It’s critical now; the debt, all of it, is fake, evil, and deadly. Let 2019 be the Year of Jubilee.

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