@potus #Biden needs to just IGNORE THE #DebtCeiling AND let the Treasure just continue to raise money to pay our debts (incurred by the GOP.)
If it goes to the #SCotUS, even THIS SC can't deny the #14thAmendment. #MeetThePress
@MugsysRapSheet @potus you@do realize that Roe v Wade which was just overturned was an argument largely based on the 14th amendment, yes? This #SCOTUS can ignore anything that doesn’t suit them.
@MugsysRapSheet @potus of note, this likely the most famous 3A court decision I can think of which ironically wasn’t about privacy but about housing the national guard, making it very similar to its originally written and understood context despite our modern interpretations of the 3A.
Wow, you two are both pretty far off in crazyville, but fortunately it really doesn't matter since the Treasury will be bringing in enough revenue to service its debts, so the president merely needs to follow the law and pay them out of what they Treasury is bringing in.
It has nothing to do with abortion or SCOTUS. That is getting really off point.
The Treasury will have the money to pay the debts, so it has to, and it is just ridiculous that we are putting up with a president threatening not to.
@volkris @MugsysRapSheet @potus oh well I guess there’s nothing to worry about then. All sorted.
It should be all sorted, but no, we have a president threatening not to pay, and that's causing quite a lot of trouble.
This should be a matter of certainty. We should be able to rely on those payments, as per the 14th, but no, there is now uncertainty as to whether the president will follow through on his threats unless he gets his way.
@volkris @MugsysRapSheet @potus I’m not sure how it’s Biden’s fault when the congress is just as much at fault. In my mind that makes it a 50/50 problem, with the deciding point going to “I won’t pay the bills we already accumulated unless we do something else.”
So, yeah, I guess I don’t get your argument.
Well the case of that is understanding that the federal government doesn't incur debts all on a single day.
Every single day throughout the year the federal government buys things, and bills are created by that buying process that happens on a daily basis.
There has been a lot of misinformation based on the idea that the federal government creates bills all at once, but that's just not how it works.
So these bills have not yet been accumulated. It's not a question of I won't pay the bills we have already accumulated, because those bills don't actually exist yet.
Unfortunately the administration is trying to accumulate power based on that claim, and we really need to call them out on it being just plain false.
@volkris @MugsysRapSheet @potus I’m not confused by or about that, didn’t mention it, it doesn’t play a factor in my argument here, or in much of the debate, and I’m not sure why you’re bringing it up.
The US operates at a yearly deficit and has incurred debt. Whether it’s $31 million or $31 trillion (it’s the latter) there comes a point at which outgoing committed funds reach the amount of liquidity we possess.
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@volkris @MugsysRapSheet @potus We have the ability to borrow more, to service the debt we’ve already accumulated. If the House gets its way, we will have to agree to an unrelated set of terms (future spending) to service our existing debt (“bills”) which we’ve already accumulated.
If you’re using your credit card too much it’s an important step to consider that usage; it’s insanely stupid to not pay your mortgage to teach yourself that lesson.
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Keep in mind that according to the Treasury it has enough money to service its debt. That's what they say in their monthly statements. They don't need to borrow more in order to service their debt, again by their own words.
So this has absolutely nothing to do with servicing existing debts, since according to the Treasury they have enough money to service their existing debts.
I just want to restate that: Biden's own Treasury reports that it has enough money to service the existing debts.
Yes, politicians are being misleading about this subject. They are lying to us. As politicians do when they seek more power.
Anyway, yeah we absolutely have to call these people out on what they are doing. If Biden wants more power to borrow money against the US population then he needs to work with Congress to get it.
@volkris source please?
For example, check out page four, I believe, to see how much more the Treasury has coming in compared to how much it needs to spend servicing its debts.
https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/files/reports-statements/mts/mts0423.pdf
If you check out the graph on page 4 of the document that I shared with you it shows that the Treasury brings in more than enough money to service it's debts every month.
Farther down in the report it puts numbers to it, quantifying this fact, that again to restate, the treasury brings in enough money every month two service it's debts.
Regardless of what the political talking points may be.