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Opinion Editorials, August 2011 |
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Forget Compromise: The Debt Ceiling Is Unconstitutional By Ellen Brown Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 1, 2011
Taxes aren’t collected until after the annual budget is passed, so Congress can’t know in advance whether or how much additional borrowing will be required. Inevitably, there will be some years that the budget pushes the debt over the limit, requiring new legislation. And inevitably, now that this tactic has been discovered, there will be a costly battle over the increase, wasting congressional time, destabilizing markets, and rattling faith in the American financial and political systems. There will be continual blackmail, arm-twisting and concessions. The situation is untenable and cries out for a definitive resolution. Fortunately, there is one. A bevy of legal scholars are recommending that the issue be eliminated altogether by playing the Constitutional trump card. The Fourteenth Amendment provides at Section 4: The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. Where statute and the Constitution collide, the Constitution prevails. Whether the government should pay the bills it has already incurred is not a matter of negotiation. It is a Constitutional mandate. And those are the bills we are talking about here, as President Obama stressed in his remarks on the issue last Friday. He said: Raising the debt ceiling simply gives our country the ability to pay the bills that Congress has already racked up. I want to emphasize that. The debt ceiling does not determine how much more money we can spend, it simply authorizes us to pay the bills we already have racked up. It gives the United States of America the ability to keep its word. Ignoring the debt ceiling on Constitutional grounds would not, as Michelle Bachmann declares, make President Obama a “dictator.” It would simply mean he is complying with his Constitutional mandate to pay the government’s bills on time and in full. Social Security Is Not Welfare. It Is a Debt Due and Owing. The President could have a clean resolution of the issue, but he is not jumping at the opportunity. Rather, he appears to be ready to throw Granny under the bus by slashing Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, all in the name of “compromise.” The Fourteenth Amendment says debts already incurred shall not be
questioned, “including debts incurred for payment of pensions.” That
includes Social Security, which is an “entitlement” in the true sense of the
word: we’re entitled to it because we’ve already paid for it. In fact,
the Social Security Act was originally sold to Congress and the nation in
1935 not as a government benefit, but as a retirement savings program.
Earlier this year, the Urban Institute published a
study evaluating the program in this way, concluding that the average
worker who retires today will withdraw from Social Security just about the
same amount he put in over the years, with a modest 2% real interest rate
(after inflation). Paul's plan: Get the Fed and the Treasury to rip up that debt. It's fake debt anyway. And the Fed is legally allowed to return the debt to the Treasury to be destroyed. A trillion and a half dollars is currently about what spending is expected to exceed tax revenue in 2011. The biggest drawback to the plan, says Gandel, is just that it “looks
bad.” It looks as if the government is paying off its debts by
printing money. But that is what government-issued money is: a note
acknowledging a debt due and owed from the public, good for an equivalent
value from the public, traded in the marketplace. A U.S. Note or
Greenback and a Federal Reserve Note or dollar bill are both forms of
promissory notes. The government can as easily issue a dollar bill as
a dollar note or a dollar bond, as Thomas Edison pointed out in the 1920s.
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