Democrat
Debt limit battle heating up
The fight over whether or not raise the debt ceiling for the federal government is underway. Jeff Glor reports.
Duration : 0:0:57
Debt limit battle heating up
The fight over whether or not raise the debt ceiling for the federal government is underway. Jeff Glor reports.
Duration : 0:0:57
Peter Schiff explains how the new college loan plan will back fire
Peter breaks down the economic inanity of Obama’s new college tuition program passed in March of 2010. Once again the government cure is worse than the disease. Please donate to Peter’s Senate campaign at www.Schiff4Senate.com
Duration : 0:7:21
National Debt/Deficit Road Trip
Eleven Trillion Dollar Drive
By Jason Goldtrap
JasonGoldtrap.com
03.23.09
I will be on the Fox Business Network, Thursday, June 18 at 4pm EST.
Comments with profanity will not be posted
Hi. My name is Jason Goldtrap. I love America. Let’s pretend I have the Trans Am from the movie Smokey and the Bandit, that’d be cool. I want to visit every state capital in the lower 48, from Maine to Washington. I have chosen a route whereby I can drive from one capital to another. I am travelling at a constant rate of 60 miles and hour, no bathroom breaks, no naps, no lunch at Cracker Barrel, no souvenir shopping, I am just driving and driving and driving. The roads are clear, the weather is perfect, let’s roll.
My journey begins in Augusta, Maine. I drive to Montpelier, Vermont then to Concord, New Hampshire down to Boston for some clam chowder back southwest to Providence and across Hartford. I then go up to Albany south to Trenton and Harrisburg then down to Dover. I skip across Chesapeake Bay to Annapolis, see the sights in DC before heading down to Richmond, continuing my journey to Raleigh, Columbia, Tallahassee, and a surprisingly traffic free Atlanta. Next I hit Montgomery and Jackson down to Baton Rouge, up to Little Rock east towards Nashville, Frankfort, Charleston, Columbus and Lansing. I win the Indianapolis 500! Then west to Springfield, up to Madison, I say hello to Garrison Kellior in St. Paul, then down to Des Moines and Jefferson City. In Austin I mess with Texas before heading up to Ooooooooklahoma City where the wind comes sweeping down the plains. Up to Topeka, Lincoln, Pierre and Bismarck and Cheyenne. I catch a Broncos game before I press the pedal to the metal to make it to Santa Fe, Phoenix, Sacramento, Carson City, Salt Lake City north to Helena west to Boise, north to Salem and finally, I arrive in Olympia, Washington where there’s a parade in my honor with Bigfoot serving as the grand marshal. All total I’ve driven 13,105 miles in 218 hours, roughly 9 days.
But wait, there’s more. I feel so good that I put the car in reverse and drive back to Augusta which would make it a 26,210 miles round trip in 436 hours, roughly 18 days. Boy am I tired!
And now I’m gonna get crazy! I’m going to place one dollar bills on the road, line them end to end during my entire journey. Zoom. Ok, its 18 days later and I’m back. I have just placed on the road 276,777,600 dollars! Wow! That’s a lot of money! Or, is it?
I forgot to tell you that my Trans Am is also a time machine, using a misapplied principle of Einstein. The more I drive time itself begins going backwards! The hours pass by swiftly, then the days and months become a blur. The Earth starts spinning around the sun and I am now driving my car in a different millennia!
According to the US National Debt Clock we owe approximately $11,100,000,000,000. On my drives, what would it take to equal that staggering amount? Well, going on round trips from Augusta to Olympia, dropping one dollar bills from my Trans Am and going back in time I will have made a total of 40,104 round trips which comes to about 721,872 days or 1,978 years which would make it about 31 AD when I could have heard in person Christ say “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”
So, how do we fix this mess? Beats me. I’m unemployed right now so I’m not the one to give financial advice. Is there a way to pay off these bills? I hate to say this but probably not. This message is intended for future generations. This is my way of saying “Sorry we gave you such an insurmountable debt and, take my advice, don’t spend what you don’t have.” -The End-
Jason Goldtrap is not a politician, lawyer, activist or anything else. I’m just a regular guy. I am an author from Central Florida. My novels can be viewed online at www.JasonGoldtrap.com. My novel “Teen Girl From Mars” is a optimistic, romantic, funny story about a sixteen-year-old girl living on Mars in the year 2191. My story is clean, values oriented, funny, adventurous and heartwarming. JasonGoldtrap.com for more info.
Duration : 0:2:50
Ron Paul : The US Government’s Debt Can Never Be Repaid!
YES WE CAN! REAL HOPE FOR AMERICA!
http://campaignforliberty.com/
Duration : 0:5:13
Hate your Credit Card Bills? MAXED OUT – NOW ON DVD
Maxed Out takes viewers on a journey deep inside the American style of debt, where things seem fine as long as the minimum monthly payment arrives on time. With coverage that spans from small American towns all the way to the White House, the film shows how the modern financial industry really works, explains the true definition of “preferred customer” and tells us why the poor are getting poorer while the rich keep getting richer. Hilarious, shocking and incisive, Maxed Out paints a picture of a national nightmare which is all too real for most of us. Great for college students.
Duration : 0:2:15
Pete Stark Blows Up Over National Debt
Watch Congressman Pete Stark blow up when Jan Helfeld asks him why Stark believes, “the more we owe, the wealthier we are.”
Duration : 0:4:39
Kucinich: the Federal Reserve is paying banks NOT to make loans to struggling Americans!
Tuesday, 21 July 2009
U.S. Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio, 10th District) questions Neil M. Barofsky, the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP), testifying before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, about interest payments made to banks that keep their TARP funds and other government (taxpayer) bailout money with the Federal Reserve, instead of making loans to struggling Americans (the original intent of the TARP, remember?) The Fed makes generous interest payments to the banks for “parking” their “excess reserves” at the Fed.
And guess who will end up paying for this “interest” given to the banks, and everything else? That’s right, you and me, John and Jane Q. Suckers!! The dumb, fat sheep!
By the way, Neil M. Barofsky is a good guy here — don’t beat up on him. He’s in immediate danger of losing his job (if not his life) becauses he’s revealing too many of the Temple’s dark secrets. Barofsky deserves our full support.
You can download Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP) reports,testimonies and audits at sigtarp.gov. The July 20th, 2009 report, “SIGTARP Survey Demonstrates That Banks Can Provide Meaningful Information On Their Use Of TARP Funds,” is esecially interesting and can be downloaded at
http://sigtarp.gov/reports/audit/2009/SIGTARP_Survey_Demonstrates_That_Banks_Can_Provide_Meaningfu_%20Information_On_Their_Use_Of_TARP_Funds.pdf
Duration : 0:5:48
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