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#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 13:06:53 -0400, wrote:
On Sun, 24 Apr 2011 22:52:55 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 00:41:22 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 24 Apr 2011 09:53:15 -0700, wrote: On Sun, 24 Apr 2011 02:13:28 -0400, wrote: Do you even have a clue how much of our debt is in short term notes that roll over in months not years so the interest rate can change in a flash. You keep talking about "long term" and "years down the road" but we could get clobbered in a matter of months. There's no evidence to support that fear. One of these days you will hear a democrat say it and then it will have been obvious all along to you. The fact remains that there are a lot of these short term notes being rolled over into long term paper. In a way that is good because you do not have to keep going to the well for the money but the bad news is the interest rate is about 10 times as high, being over 3% instead of the 0.3% they pay on short term paper. Right now our average interest rate on the debt is around 1.5% ($206.7 Billion a year) Right now, we're trying to recover from a devastating financial calamity. Right now is not the time to try and fix a long-term problem. We are not actually recovering anything if we are creating an unsustainable debt. Every time you buy a house and get a mortgage, you create an unsustainable debt, since you have no absolute guaranty that you'll have a job long enough to pay off the mortgage. The key word of course is "if." Our debt may be "unsustainable" if you assume the very worst case scenario. In all other scenarios, the problem can be (and actually is being) address, even though you want to believe otherwise. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 15:35:32 -0400, wrote:
On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 10:59:15 -0700, wrote: Do you even have a clue how much of our debt is in short term notes that roll over in months not years so the interest rate can change in a flash. You keep talking about "long term" and "years down the road" but we could get clobbered in a matter of months. There's no evidence to support that fear. One of these days you will hear a democrat say it and then it will have been obvious all along to you. The fact remains that there are a lot of these short term notes being rolled over into long term paper. In a way that is good because you do not have to keep going to the well for the money but the bad news is the interest rate is about 10 times as high, being over 3% instead of the 0.3% they pay on short term paper. Right now our average interest rate on the debt is around 1.5% ($206.7 Billion a year) Right now, we're trying to recover from a devastating financial calamity. Right now is not the time to try and fix a long-term problem. We are not actually recovering anything if we are creating an unsustainable debt. Every time you buy a house and get a mortgage, you create an unsustainable debt, since you have no absolute guaranty that you'll have a job long enough to pay off the mortgage. It is not an unsustainable debt if you are generating enough revenue to pay down the principle. We are not even stopping the growth of the principle. The key word of course is "if." Our debt may be "unsustainable" if you assume the very worst case scenario. In all other scenarios, the problem can be (and actually is being) address, even though you want to believe otherwise. I only assume the projected scenario in the best case examples given by the people who have plans they can't even get passed. (like Simpson Bowles or Ryan) There is only one budget proposal out there that has the debt coming down by 2021 but it gores so many oxen I doubt you could even get most of the democrats to support it and you wouldn't get any republicans. http://grijalva.house.gov/uploads/Th...2%20Budget.pdf How about we start with subsidies and the military budget. The Ryan proposal calls for $165B cuts in Medicare ... basically eliminating it. The big oil subsidies, tax cuts for millionaires (Bush's cuts), tax breaks for corps that create jobs overseas (lost revenue) is about $170B. Let's end those subsidies. Then there's the military budget. How about not $1 more, as proposed in the NYT op-ed piece.. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/20/opinion/20wed1.html |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 17:25:44 -0400, wrote:
On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 13:22:41 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 15:35:32 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 10:59:15 -0700, wrote: Do you even have a clue how much of our debt is in short term notes that roll over in months not years so the interest rate can change in a flash. You keep talking about "long term" and "years down the road" but we could get clobbered in a matter of months. There's no evidence to support that fear. One of these days you will hear a democrat say it and then it will have been obvious all along to you. The fact remains that there are a lot of these short term notes being rolled over into long term paper. In a way that is good because you do not have to keep going to the well for the money but the bad news is the interest rate is about 10 times as high, being over 3% instead of the 0.3% they pay on short term paper. Right now our average interest rate on the debt is around 1.5% ($206.7 Billion a year) Right now, we're trying to recover from a devastating financial calamity. Right now is not the time to try and fix a long-term problem. We are not actually recovering anything if we are creating an unsustainable debt. Every time you buy a house and get a mortgage, you create an unsustainable debt, since you have no absolute guaranty that you'll have a job long enough to pay off the mortgage. It is not an unsustainable debt if you are generating enough revenue to pay down the principle. We are not even stopping the growth of the principle. The key word of course is "if." Our debt may be "unsustainable" if you assume the very worst case scenario. In all other scenarios, the problem can be (and actually is being) address, even though you want to believe otherwise. I only assume the projected scenario in the best case examples given by the people who have plans they can't even get passed. (like Simpson Bowles or Ryan) There is only one budget proposal out there that has the debt coming down by 2021 but it gores so many oxen I doubt you could even get most of the democrats to support it and you wouldn't get any republicans. http://grijalva.house.gov/uploads/Th...2%20Budget.pdf How about we start with subsidies and the military budget. The Ryan proposal calls for $165B cuts in Medicare ... basically eliminating it. That is less than half of what they spend but I see your point. I doubt anyone is really taking his idea seriously but I applaud the bravery to even open the dialog. We do need to find a way to get a handle on costs. Less than half of what Medicare spends? So what. It's the meat of it, as you know. Ryan is NO HERO. He's a pandering jerk who wants to deny people basic healthcare cover for the sake of big business and his own political aspirations. He did "open the dialog" at all. The big oil subsidies, tax cuts for millionaires (Bush's cuts), tax breaks for corps that create jobs overseas (lost revenue) is about $170B. OK Let's end those subsidies. Then there's the military budget. How about not $1 more, as proposed in the NYT op-ed piece.. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/20/opinion/20wed1.html That is the hardest nut to crack, maybe even harder than entitlements, simply because virtually every state gets pork from DoD. I agree we build far too many unneeded weapons platforms. Unfortunately, they all represent high tech jobs for someone. As said, all that has to happen is not spend more. Spending the same is a good start. I liked Ed Rendell on one of the talking head shows proposing that we take all of that effort and declare war on our aging infrastructure with the same zeal we used to counter the various enemies, real or imagined. The other thing in the CPC budget Harry and I have been talking about for years is defunding the Iraq and Afghanistan crusades. The right wing is staunchly opposed to spending money on infrastructure, unless of course, it's in their district. The Iraq war is winding down, as you know. There's no need to pull the rug out from a largely successful campaign to get us out without allow the country to collapse. The Afg. war is in the make or break stage. While no war monger, I think it's worth following Patreaus' advice for now. There are a reported 150 suspected (mostly low level) terrorists in Afghanistan and we have 150,000 people looking for them. That is projected to be $1.8 trillion in 10 years. Instead we are spending another couple hundred billion on other adventures in the middle east and we are not even sure who the people we are putting in power will turn out to be. A couple of hundred billion or things other than the Iraq/Afg wars? Huh? Where are you getting that number? |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 21:06:15 -0400, wrote:
On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 15:07:43 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 17:25:44 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 13:22:41 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 15:35:32 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 10:59:15 -0700, wrote: Do you even have a clue how much of our debt is in short term notes that roll over in months not years so the interest rate can change in a flash. You keep talking about "long term" and "years down the road" but we could get clobbered in a matter of months. There's no evidence to support that fear. One of these days you will hear a democrat say it and then it will have been obvious all along to you. The fact remains that there are a lot of these short term notes being rolled over into long term paper. In a way that is good because you do not have to keep going to the well for the money but the bad news is the interest rate is about 10 times as high, being over 3% instead of the 0.3% they pay on short term paper. Right now our average interest rate on the debt is around 1.5% ($206.7 Billion a year) Right now, we're trying to recover from a devastating financial calamity. Right now is not the time to try and fix a long-term problem. We are not actually recovering anything if we are creating an unsustainable debt. Every time you buy a house and get a mortgage, you create an unsustainable debt, since you have no absolute guaranty that you'll have a job long enough to pay off the mortgage. It is not an unsustainable debt if you are generating enough revenue to pay down the principle. We are not even stopping the growth of the principle. The key word of course is "if." Our debt may be "unsustainable" if you assume the very worst case scenario. In all other scenarios, the problem can be (and actually is being) address, even though you want to believe otherwise. I only assume the projected scenario in the best case examples given by the people who have plans they can't even get passed. (like Simpson Bowles or Ryan) There is only one budget proposal out there that has the debt coming down by 2021 but it gores so many oxen I doubt you could even get most of the democrats to support it and you wouldn't get any republicans. http://grijalva.house.gov/uploads/Th...2%20Budget.pdf How about we start with subsidies and the military budget. The Ryan proposal calls for $165B cuts in Medicare ... basically eliminating it. That is less than half of what they spend but I see your point. I doubt anyone is really taking his idea seriously but I applaud the bravery to even open the dialog. We do need to find a way to get a handle on costs. Less than half of what Medicare spends? So what. It's the meat of it, as you know. Ryan is NO HERO. He's a pandering jerk who wants to deny people basic healthcare cover for the sake of big business and his own political aspirations. He did "open the dialog" at all. He is only brave for even bringing up the idea that we have to look at the sustainability of these programs the way they are. He is not brave even for that. He took zero risk. The big oil subsidies, tax cuts for millionaires (Bush's cuts), tax breaks for corps that create jobs overseas (lost revenue) is about $170B. OK Let's end those subsidies. Then there's the military budget. How about not $1 more, as proposed in the NYT op-ed piece.. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/20/opinion/20wed1.html That is the hardest nut to crack, maybe even harder than entitlements, simply because virtually every state gets pork from DoD. I agree we build far too many unneeded weapons platforms. Unfortunately, they all represent high tech jobs for someone. As said, all that has to happen is not spend more. Spending the same is a good start. We need to cut DoD. Where is that peace benefit we heard about? Talked to death by GHWB and Thatcher. Talk to them. There are a reported 150 suspected (mostly low level) terrorists in Afghanistan and we have 150,000 people looking for them. That is projected to be $1.8 trillion in 10 years. Instead we are spending another couple hundred billion on other adventures in the middle east and we are not even sure who the people we are putting in power will turn out to be. A couple of hundred billion or things other than the Iraq/Afg wars? Huh? Where are you getting that number? We are spent over $600m in a week in Libya and that is only one week in one little war. Who knows how all of this will shake out and what other wars we will end up in that area? Syria?, Yemen?, maybe even an undesired outcome in Egypt? The genie is out of the bottle over there, we have our fingerprints all over it and if it all implodes we bought it. It was more than 1/2 that as best I can see. We're not flying missions. Feel free to remain paranoid about all the other countries that GWB would invade if he were still president. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 22:10:10 -0400, wrote:
On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 18:44:47 -0700, wrote: There are a reported 150 suspected (mostly low level) terrorists in Afghanistan and we have 150,000 people looking for them. That is projected to be $1.8 trillion in 10 years. Instead we are spending another couple hundred billion on other adventures in the middle east and we are not even sure who the people we are putting in power will turn out to be. A couple of hundred billion or things other than the Iraq/Afg wars? Huh? Where are you getting that number? We are spent over $600m in a week in Libya and that is only one week in one little war. Who knows how all of this will shake out and what other wars we will end up in that area? Syria?, Yemen?, maybe even an undesired outcome in Egypt? The genie is out of the bottle over there, we have our fingerprints all over it and if it all implodes we bought it. It was more than 1/2 that as best I can see. We're not flying missions. The top 5 hits on google (news stories) peg it at $600-608B What are you looking at? You're claiming that it's currently costing us $600M? I'm assuming the last was a typo. You know it's not costing us that much, although it may have for one week. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 21:44:03 -0700, sent the
following message On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 22:10:10 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 18:44:47 -0700, wrote: There are a reported 150 suspected (mostly low level) terrorists in Afghanistan and we have 150,000 people looking for them. That is projected to be $1.8 trillion in 10 years. Instead we are spending another couple hundred billion on other adventures in the middle east and we are not even sure who the people we are putting in power will turn out to be. A couple of hundred billion or things other than the Iraq/Afg wars? Huh? Where are you getting that number? We are spent over $600m in a week in Libya and that is only one week in one little war. Who knows how all of this will shake out and what other wars we will end up in that area? Syria?, Yemen?, maybe even an undesired outcome in Egypt? The genie is out of the bottle over there, we have our fingerprints all over it and if it all implodes we bought it. It was more than 1/2 that as best I can see. We're not flying missions. The top 5 hits on google (news stories) peg it at $600-608B What are you looking at? You're claiming that it's currently costing us $600M? I'm assuming the last was a typo. You know it's not costing us that much, although it may have for one week. You aare as dense as the wood on Mr Krause's new deck. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 26 Apr 2011 01:22:09 -0400, wrote:
On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 21:44:03 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 22:10:10 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 18:44:47 -0700, wrote: There are a reported 150 suspected (mostly low level) terrorists in Afghanistan and we have 150,000 people looking for them. That is projected to be $1.8 trillion in 10 years. Instead we are spending another couple hundred billion on other adventures in the middle east and we are not even sure who the people we are putting in power will turn out to be. A couple of hundred billion or things other than the Iraq/Afg wars? Huh? Where are you getting that number? We are spent over $600m in a week in Libya and that is only one week in one little war. Who knows how all of this will shake out and what other wars we will end up in that area? Syria?, Yemen?, maybe even an undesired outcome in Egypt? The genie is out of the bottle over there, we have our fingerprints all over it and if it all implodes we bought it. It was more than 1/2 that as best I can see. We're not flying missions. The top 5 hits on google (news stories) peg it at $600-608B What are you looking at? You're claiming that it's currently costing us $600M? I'm assuming the last was a typo. You know it's not costing us that much, although it may have for one week. That was what it cost with the AC130s and A10s. God only knows what the predators and global hawks cost. A lot of that cost is hidden in black CIA budgets but even the open parts are in the US bases where they are controlled. Uh huh... why not count the toll calls from the White House to the Admiral on scene in the Med? |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 13:22:41 -0700, wrote: The Ryan proposal calls for $165B cuts in Medicare ... basically eliminating it. That is less than half of what they spend but I see your point. I doubt anyone is really taking his idea seriously but I applaud the bravery to even open the dialog. We do need to find a way to get a handle on costs. Ryan isn't brave, he's stupid and isolated in his little ideological cocoon He wants to kill Medicare. His next step would be SS. He had no idea how his "plan" would **** the GOP. Don't mistake stupid sincerity for bravery. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 19:21:54 -0500, Boating All Out
wrote: In article , says... On Mon, 25 Apr 2011 13:22:41 -0700, wrote: The Ryan proposal calls for $165B cuts in Medicare ... basically eliminating it. That is less than half of what they spend but I see your point. I doubt anyone is really taking his idea seriously but I applaud the bravery to even open the dialog. We do need to find a way to get a handle on costs. Ryan isn't brave, he's stupid and isolated in his little ideological cocoon He wants to kill Medicare. His next step would be SS. He had no idea how his "plan" would **** the GOP. Don't mistake stupid sincerity for bravery. if he were brave he'd propose doubling capital gains taxes and subjecting them to social security taxes |
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