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GOP maxing out nation's credit limit

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Tuesday, Mar 21, 2006 - 12:11:08 am CST

Imagine if credit card companies let customers raise their credit limits any time they maxed out. No way that’s going to happen.

But that’s the system Washington uses. Last week, Congress raised the limit on the national debt to almost $9 trillion.

The original idea of requiring Congress to raise the debt limit was that it would attract negative public attention. But hikes in the debt limit happen so frequently these days that last week’s action didn’t create much of a ripple. The hike in the debt limit was the fourth in five years.

As every credit cardholder eventually learns, sooner or later the debt must be paid.

Consider these factoids.

n The current debt of $8.27 trillion is equivalent to about $27,000 per U.S. resident.

n Interest paid on the debt is the fifth largest item in the the federal budget. The amount of the so-called “debt tax” last year is equivalent to $1,190 per American.

n About 45 percent of that debt is owed to foreigners. The interest American taxpayers pay on the debt is transferred out of the country into foreign pockets.

n The speed at which the national debt is accumulating is accelerating rapidly. It took the United States until 1989 to reach its first $3 trillion in debt. It hit $6 trillion in 1997.

Republicans in Congress continue to act as though the nation’s financial problems are someone else’s fault. Earlier this month, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist said, “Bureaucrats in Washington (will have) to tighten their belts,” the Washington Post reported.

Aw, man. How long can get they away with that old trick?

The Republicans have been in charge of both houses of Congress and the presidency for the past five years.

Complacency runs so deep in the country that representatives of some of the nation’s top think tanks, including the Heritage Foundation and the Brookings Institution, are participating in a national Fiscal Wake-up Tour to stir debate.

An appearance is slated for 9 a.m. April 4 in the Scott Conference Center at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. The tour was organized by the Concord Coalition, a bipartisan organization co-chaired by former Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey.

One of those scheduled to speak is David Walker, U.S. comptroller general. In the past, Walker has told audiences that the nation’s financial condition is “even worse than advertised.”

It’s time Americans started heeding those warnings. After all those years of promised fiscal restraint, the Republicans in charge in Washington have proven only that they can’t live within their credit limit. Their promises are as empty as the nation’s treasury.


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DJ wrote on March 21, 2006 8:30 am:
" Ah - the compassionate conservatives strike again. I guess they are too worried about issues like the 'sanctity' of divorce, errrr....I mean marriage, bridges to no where, and tax cuts we can't afford. And of course, instead of demanding change, the lemming-like Republicans in Nebraska will blindly vote for their own party with no thought to who is actually the best candidate. What we need are more independents..... "

Jim wrote on March 21, 2006 1:36 pm:
" Here we are at 'war' and no sacrifices are asked of the American people. There should have been tax hikes instead of tax cuts for the wealthy. Nebraska GOP candiates for governor and senator are still beating the drum to eliminate the 'death tax'. There is no 'death tax' (dead people don't pay taxes), there is an 'estate' tax paid by those who inherit estates worth more than $1.5 million. How about selling war bonds so the government is borrowing money from this war from Americans instead of the Chinese? How about $1/gallon fuel tax to pay for this war that is, make no mistake about it, because of oil. "

Charlie S. wrote on March 21, 2006 2:01 pm:
" Uncontrolled debt, out of contol war & loss of liberties...but everything is okay because gays can't marry! Are we (the heart of "Red State" conservatism) finally waking up? Or will God not forgive us if we balance the budget, stop invading foreign countries and killing their people until they accept our God & democracy and then keep "Big Brother" out of our lives? Our Lincoln paper is finally waking up! "

Hjalmer wrote on March 22, 2006 6:25 am:
" Some conservatives are waking up to the fact that the Bush years have nothing to do with traditional conservatism. In addition to fiscal restraint, traditional conservatism has demanded GOOD, efficient government. The response and preparation for hurricane Katrina dispels any notion that GOOD government was ever a goal of the Republican majority. "