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For those calculating, that is a one-third debt
increase in only three years. The United States took 226 years to
run up a debt of $6 trillion. In three years, an additional $2
trillion was tacked on.
According to The Privateer, present projected
spending will push the official debt to $11 trillion before the end
of Bush's second term. If this becomes reality, in only eight years
the official federal debt will have nearly doubled. Additionally,
there are the "off-books" liabilities.
Unfunded U.S. government liabilities—Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid, military pensions, federal workers'
pensions, and other promise such as picking up the tabs for bankrupt
corporate pensions—will reach $50 trillion by the end of the year
and climb to $70 trillion by the end of Bush's second term.
The official debt is the accumulation of years of
federal deficit spending. This fiscal year's deficit (October 1,
2005 thru September 30, 2006) is projected to be $521 billion.
Deficit spending looks to get worse.
Pulling statistics from the respected
Congressional Budget Office's January report on the federal budget
and economy, Citizens for Tax Justice show annual deficits under
Bush policies skyrocketing to $1.164 trillion by 2015. These
projections are seven times the Bush administration's numbers
because the White House assumes, among other things, that current
tax cuts "sunset," that Iraq and Afghanistan expenditures will
suddenly end, and that federal appropriations will "plummet" as a
share of the economy.
The Congressional Budget Office forecasts that by
2013 "the government is likely to be spending more to pay interest
on the debt than on all domestic appropriations put together." Any
wonder the price of gold topped $500?
It appears unlikely that the problem of deficit
spending will be addressed any time soon in Washington. Sadly, our
lawmakers do not yet even see it as a problem. While it is true that
Democrats never miss an opportunity to carp about Bush's refusal to
"roll back" his tax break for "rich Americans," the Democrats would
be as quiet as church mice if the deficit spending were for welfare
programs. Either way, the results would be the same: continued
deficit spending.
The way gold topped $500 was a big deal because
the price of gold is the thermometer for the health of a nation's
currency. A rising price for gold suggests a fever is building.
However, the reporting suggests that few reporters understand the
United States is infected with a deadly virus, not a common cold.
Bill Haynes heads CMI Gold & Silver Inc, one of
America's oldest precious metals dealers. See CMIGS’ website at
http://www.cmi-gold-silver.com/
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