Follow

The narrative that most have bought into is so backwards from how the federal government is actually designed, and so what’s actually happening here.

And the reality is much more interesting and dramatic.

Fundamentally, this is a president requesting more power, power to borrow. Alright, what does he want to use to convince the Congress to expand his power like that? Well, his rhetoric has been to offer nothing: he demands that power without proposing anything in exchange for it, not even checks on how he’s to use the power.

But to give his position SOME oomph he’s been on a tear in the public, threatening to order the US Treasury, his executive branch department mind, to default on US debt, which would be unconstitutional and, IMO, impeachable.

Meanwhile, House Republicans have voted to give him expanded power to borrow, and they’re the only group who have done so, and yet THEY’RE the problem? The only ones that have responded to the president’s request?

Oh, and let’s not forget that this president signed the legislation to put the US in this position in the first place, almost like he set the stage for this power grab.

It’s quite the dramatic story, that most people seem to be missing.

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.