Secretive Banking Cartels Enslave Us
by
Ron Paul
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The debt ceiling
debate is providing plenty of opportunity for political theater
in Washington. Proponents of raising the debt ceiling are throwing
around the usual scare tactics and misinformation in order to intimidate
opponents into accepting more debt and taxes. It is important to
distinguish the truth from the propaganda.
First of all,
politicians need to understand that without real change default
is inevitable. In fact, default happens every day through monetary
policy tricks. Every time the Federal Reserve engages in more quantitative
easing and devalues the dollar, it is defaulting on the American
people by eroding their purchasing power and inflating their savings
away. The dollar has lost nearly 50% of its value against gold since
2008. The Fed claims inflation is 2% or less over the past few years;
however economists who compile alternate data show a 9% inflation
rate if calculated more traditionally. Alarmingly, the administration
is talking about changing the methodology of the CPI calculation
yet again to hide the damage of the government's policies. Changing
the CPI will also enable the government to avoid giving seniors
a COLA (cost of living adjustment) on their social security checks,
and raise taxes via the hidden means of "bracket creep."
This is a default. Just because it is a default on the people and
not the banks and foreign holders of our debt does not mean it doesn't
count.
Politicians
also need to acknowledge that our debt is unsustainable. For decades
our government has been spending and promising far more than it
collects in taxes. But the problem is not that the people are not
taxed enough. The government has managed to run up $61.6 trillion
in unfunded liabilities, which works out to $528,000 per household.
A tax policy that would aim to extract even half that amount of
money from American families would be unimaginably draconian, and
not unlike attempting to squeeze blood from a turnip. This is, unequivocally,
a spending problem brought about by a dramatically inflated view
of the proper role of government in a free society.
Perhaps the
most abhorrent bit of chicanery has been the threat that if a deal
is not reached to increase the debt by August 2nd, social security
checks may not go out. In reality, the Chief Actuary of Social Security
confirmed last week that current Social Security tax receipts are
more than enough to cover current outlays. The only reason those
checks would not go out would be if the administration decided to
spend those designated funds elsewhere. It is very telling that
the administration would rather frighten seniors dependent on social
security checks than alarm their big banking friends, who have already
received $5.3 trillion in bailouts, stimulus and quantitative easing.
This instance of trying to blackmail Congress into tax increases
by threatening social security demonstrates how scary it is to be
completely dependent on government promises and why many young people
today would jump at the chance to opt out of Social Security altogether.
We are headed
for rough economic times either way, but the longer we put it off,
the greater the pain will be when the system implodes. We need to
stop adding more programs and entitlements to the problem. We need
to stop expensive bombing campaigns against people on the other
side of the globe and bring our troops home. We need to stop allowing
secretive banking cartels to endlessly enslave us through monetary
policy trickery. And we need to drastically rethink government's
role in our lives so we can get it out of the way and get back to
work.
See
the Ron Paul File
July
20, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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