Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF
Let me explain it where you might be able to grasp it easier by asking you a question.
Do you count the 2 billion reserved for say paying your future taxes as as an asset or liability? Do you count your tax obligations as assets or liabilities? Because it sure seems like you are counting you tax obligations as a joke.
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Let me explain it where you might be able to grasp it easier.
Your old lady is a spendthrift who takes every dime you make and spends it on Louie Vuitton purses and Louboutin shoes. And she's a fat pig. She's ugly. She looks like LBJ or Jimmy Carter. Their corpses.
You're going to have to spend $200,000 in about 10 years to keep your house from falling down. You wonder how you're going to be able to borrow the money because your wife is going to keep growing your credit card balance. Fortunately you have a credit card that only charges you 3% interest, exactly the same rate you make on your bank deposits.
So you open a bank account, and you start squirreling away money for the major house repairs. Your wife keeps growing the credit card balance.
Except for the psychological effect on your fat pig wife, it doesn't matter whether you're keeping cash in one account and growing your debt. Or if you use the cash to pay off the debt. Same result.
So what difference is it?
When Reagan took over, the balance in the Social Security Trust Funds was only around $24 billion. The increase in the contributions he and Congress engineered has resulted in a balance in the trillions today -- see the chart I linked to above.
You give Reagan no credit for shoring up social security. In fact you call it a regressive tax, because apparently you believe the top 1% of income earners should pay for 40% of people's retirement and 40% of their medical expenses after age 65. Like they pay 40% of the income tax.
You want to put Social Security Trust amounts into a separate bucket and totally disregard them.
And what's even more bizarre, you don't think the government debt held by the Fed, acquired for example because of quantitative easing, should be subtracted from gross debt. That amount, in a number of years, probably exceeded the amounts in the trust funds - I'm too lazy to look it up.
Please listen to reason. I honestly want you to get over your Stockholm Syndrome.