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nom=de=plume nom=de=plume is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2009
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"Jack" wrote in message
...
On Jan 27, 8:05 pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
"Jack" wrote in message

...
On Jan 27, 6:52 pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:





"Eisboch" wrote in message


m...


"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...
"Eisboch" wrote in message
om...


Just finished reading this. It's worth consideration, I think.


Short summary can be viewed and read he


http://www.house.gov/ryan/press_rele...ses/RoadmapSum...


Detailed report with the numbers to back it up he


http://www.house.gov/budget_republic...dmap_detailed_...


Have fun,
Eisboch


Competely DOA as thunder said. Now is the time to spend money not
contract. If the private sector doesn't create jobs, the gov't must.
This
was learned the hard way by the Hoover administration.


Pssst... (looking around nervously) .... the "gov't" is broke.....


Eisboch


No it isn't. It's called deficit spending.


Broke implies insolvent or lacking in funds.
"Deficit spending is the amount by which a government, private
company, or individual's spending exceeds income"


Let's see... I spend more than I make, so I'm lacking in funds, so
therefore I'm "broke".


Really? So, I guess you've never purchased anything on your credit card
that
you couldn't immediately afford. You've never bought a house, because
you'd
be unable to pay off the mortgage immediately. Same goes with a car.


Having a line of credit and being broke are not mutually exclusive.
Signing up and getting credit neither rescues you from being broke,
nor does it protect you from it. In fact, it exposes you even more to
the possibility of ending up broke.


Never said it did. I said that using your credit doesn't mean you're broke.
Which is what you're claiming.

Never heard of an entity overextending their credit line or buying
such a large house that they become insolvent, broke, and ultimately
they have to file for bankruptcy? Really? Someone is broke, uses a
line of credit, then are still broke and can't service that credit?


Since the US gov't isn't insolvent, broke, perhaps you would like to try for
some other point? We're servicing the debt just fine. It can't go on
forever, but it's still manageable.

If you're broke and you have to reach into a line of credit to buy
some gas, you aren't "less" broke when your tank is full. In fact,
you're even more "broke".


You're saying the same thing over and over, hoping it will make a different
point. It won't.

Sure you went to school? They taught this basic stuff at least by the
8th grade or so.


I guess you missed that grade then.

Just... think.


Good advice.


Yep, hope you take it!


You really sound pathetic. Why not just admit you're wrong.


--
Nom=de=Plume