But it’s a very fancy one that has a healthy sprinkle of truth in it.
We are $30 trillion in debt.
But we have assets far in excess of $30 trillion that are working to generate profit.
On this massive financial tree we have hundreds of thousands of people siphoning the profit away for their own desires.
The big number is used to make the average person honestly believe that America has an inescapable debt that can never be paid off, and therefore it justifies any shitty financial decision that we make regarding our own citizens.
However, because we have those assets, if we wanted to, we could simply stop paying the national debt and exchange those assets for the outstanding balance and have money left over.
If we did that, it would likely cause a global financial collapse because so many other countries are in on the GRIFT that if the GRIFT were taken away, it would destabilize the economy of the entire planet.
The news glosses over that because it’s far better to have a terrified and spiritually impoverished country rather than a bunch of sensible money-savers who focus more on long-term, sustainable, non-disruptible wealth accumulation.
But the national debt is kind of like the outstanding mortgage on a rental property where your tenants are paying off the mortgage for you.
On paper, it may look like you are millions of dollars in debt, but you run that out over 30 years, and not only will that debt pay for itself, but you will also have the original assets that paid for those debts in the first place.
We’ve always told ourselves this, which is why it’s a problem
Think of it more like a home equity loan. We’re living beyond our means so taking a loan out in the value of our house to pay for it. As we want more stuff, we just take out more of the home equity loan to pay for it. I have $10 but want to buy eggs, so I spend an additional $2 from the home equity loan
We live in the biggest house on the street so people are claiming we can live way beyond our means, unlimited. But there’s always a limit.
But the limit is whenever the bank says it’s too much and we don’t know ahead of time what that is
our loan relative to house value is bigger than some who were foreclosed on
our payments to those loan is one of our biggest expenses, making it more difficult to afford anything else.
Is that too much? Not yet, but it’s stupid to keep pushing the limit just to make a few billionaires richer
… and we benefit from being the worlds reserve currency, or we used to. It would be really stupid for a government to mess with that by being isolationist, blanket tariffs and other trade barriers ——- back to the analogy is that our home value is propped up by fantastic landscaping. But we’re letting it goto seed and parking some rusted out cars in the yard, while still claiming we have the best yard in town
It’s more like a business loan. Actually, that’s exactly what it is, is a business loan.
The influx of money has allowed more things to happen that will generate profit through economic activity to pay off the business loan.
The big number bad thing is pushed to make everyone think that America is in financial trouble and therefore makes it easier for them to swallow that they are living in some form of poverty.
That $30 trillion is the value of the economic powerhouse that is America.
It’s made to look bad when it is actually good, as long as it is moderately reasonably managed.
The thing is, is we will never pay off the debt.
Paying off this debt would be bad for America.
Even if we did pay it off for some reason, we would immediately begin to accrue more debt because that debt is the cash value of the money influx that we are using to do amazing things, the same way a landlord would not just pay off their rental properties, but would instead, if they found themselves with a paid off rental property, remorgage it, and use the cash value of that remorgaging to purchase another rental property.
And it is also useful as a lie to control the population and to make them think that America has financial problems and therefore to tolerate a little bit more misery in their own lives when it’s completely unnecessary for people to be financially miserable.
That misery only serves to increase the happiness of the people who are aware of the fact that it is a lie and have used the lie to benefit themselves.
Yep, those “cuts” only serve to funnel more money into the hands of the already rich.
America has so much money in the form of financial goods and services at its beck and call that everybody could be “moderately” wealthy and it wouldn’t even be a big issue.
People with armchair economics degrees will tell you that if everybody had $10,000 in their back pocket at all times, that a hamburger would cost $100. But that’s just not the case.
Any company that tried to make $100 hamburgers the default (more accurately, anybody that tried to make hamburgers that cost 13.5 hours of minimum wage labor the default) would find themselves unable to sell hamburgers.
Not to mention that it is very possible through regulatory means to cap the price of goods and services with a reasonable method. We have computers. We have programs. We have some limited form of neural networks and artificial intelligence that could be used to dynamically price things so that they are affordable for everybody.
Every single obstacle that people love to throw at the average person to explain to them why they have to continue living in Squalor has a very simple solution that merely requires compassionate and capable leaders to implement them.
And we don’t do these things because the way we are doing things is the way we’ve always done things and people resist change.
The national debt is a lie.
But it’s a very fancy one that has a healthy sprinkle of truth in it.
We are $30 trillion in debt.
But we have assets far in excess of $30 trillion that are working to generate profit.
On this massive financial tree we have hundreds of thousands of people siphoning the profit away for their own desires.
The big number is used to make the average person honestly believe that America has an inescapable debt that can never be paid off, and therefore it justifies any shitty financial decision that we make regarding our own citizens.
However, because we have those assets, if we wanted to, we could simply stop paying the national debt and exchange those assets for the outstanding balance and have money left over.
If we did that, it would likely cause a global financial collapse because so many other countries are in on the GRIFT that if the GRIFT were taken away, it would destabilize the economy of the entire planet.
The news glosses over that because it’s far better to have a terrified and spiritually impoverished country rather than a bunch of sensible money-savers who focus more on long-term, sustainable, non-disruptible wealth accumulation.
But the national debt is kind of like the outstanding mortgage on a rental property where your tenants are paying off the mortgage for you.
On paper, it may look like you are millions of dollars in debt, but you run that out over 30 years, and not only will that debt pay for itself, but you will also have the original assets that paid for those debts in the first place.
We’ve always told ourselves this, which is why it’s a problem
Think of it more like a home equity loan. We’re living beyond our means so taking a loan out in the value of our house to pay for it. As we want more stuff, we just take out more of the home equity loan to pay for it. I have $10 but want to buy eggs, so I spend an additional $2 from the home equity loan
We live in the biggest house on the street so people are claiming we can live way beyond our means, unlimited. But there’s always a limit.
But the limit is whenever the bank says it’s too much and we don’t know ahead of time what that is
Is that too much? Not yet, but it’s stupid to keep pushing the limit just to make a few billionaires richer
… and we benefit from being the worlds reserve currency, or we used to. It would be really stupid for a government to mess with that by being isolationist, blanket tariffs and other trade barriers ——- back to the analogy is that our home value is propped up by fantastic landscaping. But we’re letting it goto seed and parking some rusted out cars in the yard, while still claiming we have the best yard in town
It is nothing like a home equity loan.
It’s more like a business loan. Actually, that’s exactly what it is, is a business loan.
The influx of money has allowed more things to happen that will generate profit through economic activity to pay off the business loan.
The big number bad thing is pushed to make everyone think that America is in financial trouble and therefore makes it easier for them to swallow that they are living in some form of poverty.
That $30 trillion is the value of the economic powerhouse that is America.
It’s made to look bad when it is actually good, as long as it is moderately reasonably managed.
The thing is, is we will never pay off the debt.
Paying off this debt would be bad for America.
Even if we did pay it off for some reason, we would immediately begin to accrue more debt because that debt is the cash value of the money influx that we are using to do amazing things, the same way a landlord would not just pay off their rental properties, but would instead, if they found themselves with a paid off rental property, remorgage it, and use the cash value of that remorgaging to purchase another rental property.
And it is also useful as a lie to control the population and to make them think that America has financial problems and therefore to tolerate a little bit more misery in their own lives when it’s completely unnecessary for people to be financially miserable.
That misery only serves to increase the happiness of the people who are aware of the fact that it is a lie and have used the lie to benefit themselves.
Ergo, making cuts “to reduce the national debt” is a lie and purely serves to punish those who are poor.
Yep, those “cuts” only serve to funnel more money into the hands of the already rich.
America has so much money in the form of financial goods and services at its beck and call that everybody could be “moderately” wealthy and it wouldn’t even be a big issue.
People with armchair economics degrees will tell you that if everybody had $10,000 in their back pocket at all times, that a hamburger would cost $100. But that’s just not the case.
Any company that tried to make $100 hamburgers the default (more accurately, anybody that tried to make hamburgers that cost 13.5 hours of minimum wage labor the default) would find themselves unable to sell hamburgers.
Not to mention that it is very possible through regulatory means to cap the price of goods and services with a reasonable method. We have computers. We have programs. We have some limited form of neural networks and artificial intelligence that could be used to dynamically price things so that they are affordable for everybody.
Every single obstacle that people love to throw at the average person to explain to them why they have to continue living in Squalor has a very simple solution that merely requires compassionate and capable leaders to implement them.
And we don’t do these things because the way we are doing things is the way we’ve always done things and people resist change.