|  |         A Weakness for Irresponsible
Expediencies                                                                                                                            
   Earth Manifesto
Insights                                                                                                               Dr. Tiffany
B. Twain                                                                                                                
October 2005 This
essay concerns understandings relating to fiscal responsibility and social
fairness and intelligent policy-making.  Consider these ideas from the frame of reference of our children.  It is at their expense, after all, that we
are indulging in undisciplined deficit spending, and perpetuating
Ponzi-scheme-like swindles and Buy-Now-and-Pay-Later policies and shortsighted
policies disguised with Trust-Us-We-Are-Doing-the-Right-Thing reassurances.  Let
us be honest with ourselves and with each other.  We have milked the deficit spending cow for just about all that it
is worth.  We must soon begin to be more
fiscally responsible, and bring tax revenues and spending into balance.  On a personal level, almost every family
understands their own finances:  they
work, make money, and spend almost all of what they earn, with distinct
limitations on their ability to run up credit card debt.  Yet
we let our federal government spend far more than it takes in.  We allow this shortsighted expediency, as if
we can "have our cake and eat it too."  It is a fact that, even if the principal amounts we borrow are
never paid back, the interest expense on borrowed money totals 100% of the
amount borrowed every 14 years, at 5% interest.  This means that our children and all future taxpayers will pay
over and over again for our weak-willed failure to balance the budget.  It would be one thing if debt were incurred
for good purposes, like short-term stimulus to get the economy out of
recession.  But it is foolish to
habitually create debt to finance tax breaks for rich people and operations for
military adventurism and undisciplined expansions of "entitlements".  It
is a great irony that the party of political "conservatism" has been
so corrupted as to now represent the opposite of prudent and rational
decision-making in this regard.  It is
amazing that the party that once represented discipline, integrity, and responsibility
has now become the party of profligate spending, enormous national debt, rapid
natural resource depletion, wild gambling with ecological well-being, and
extreme risk-taking in the service of greedy Special Interests and war and
reconstruction profiteers.  Bizarre! It
is transparently a deception to argue that deficit spending is prudent fiscal
policy over the long term.  To the
extent that deficit spending finances tax breaks for the wealthiest people
today, it is effectively a wealth redistribution scheme from all taxpayers in
the future to a privileged few today.  This
is unfair to all who are not benefiting from the borrowing, like the poor, the
working class, most of the middle class, and everyone in future generations.  WE
MUST BEGIN TO PAY AS WE GO!  Our
National Debt has increased more than 800% since Ronald Reagan took office.  We have been mortgaging the future to achieve
the unconscionable partisan goal of benefiting a privileged and power-abusing
elite!  If
we adopt the fair and sensible policy of paying as we go, then this simple
requirement will bring the budgetary dilemmas that we face into much clearer
focus.  We can have as many new tax
breaks as we like -- as long as we find enough acceptable ways to reduce
spending to provide funding for them.  We
can give as many subsidies to businesses as Congress can enact -- as long as we
find ways to pay for them.  We can have
all the pork-barrel spending projects that our representatives can cram into
legislation -- as long as we, rather than future generations, really have to
pay for them.  We can buy as many
weapons and build up our military to as gargantuan a monster as our leaders
frighten us into supporting -- as long as we find enough people willing to pay
for it.  We can enact as many
entitlements as we can afford, and help disaster victims as generously as we
like, as long as taxpayers are willing to pay the costs.  Once
all taxpayers are required to pay in full for government initiatives, citizens are
likely to have significantly less enthusiasm for such things as bureaucratic
waste, corporate welfare, tax breaks for rich people, pork barrel spending, new
entitlements, and aggressive militarism.  For instance, instead of hiding the true costs of wars whose
primary economic purpose is to control oil resources in the Middle East, the
decision to support such aggressive wars would be clearer if gasoline taxes
were required to cover the cost of war.  The cost of the occupation of Iraq would cost about $.60 more per
gallon.  How eagerly would patriotic
Americans be for Neoconservative doctrines of preemptive warfare once the
direct correlation was established between the cost of war and the price of
gasoline?  Let
us also be clear about Social Security.  This is not a true retirement plan.  It is a wealth transfer program.  The federal government taxes workers today, and immediately gives
these funds to older workers who have already retired, most of whom will get
more money paid out to them than they ever contributed.  The retirees get a generous raise every year
-- 4.1% in 2005.  And no matter how much
wealth a Social Security recipient has, they get money from this system.  As a result, the system is trending towards
eventual bankruptcy.  Not only are all
current excesses of Social Security tax revenue immediately spent by
commingling the funds with general tax revenues, but borrow-and-spend
politicians then borrow hundreds of billions more through deficit spending.  We blithely spend Social Security retirement
funds collected via payroll taxes.  It
is astounding that the unfunded liability related to this disingenuous gambit
has already grown to around $12 trillion dollars!  Privatize
Social Security?  Politicians now
propose borrowing thousands of billions of dollars more to make it appear that
every cent is not already being squandered.  And this borrowed money would then be put at risk in a volatile
stock market, creating a bubble whose eventual bursting will devastate those
who are expecting Social Security to actually be a secure system!  This is fraudulent misrepresentation!  T borrow money creates liabilities and
additional interest expense, not assets!  We
can create wealth and prosperity best, say the radical Neoconservatives, by
spending more than we take from taxpayers and borrowing the difference from
future generations.  Yes, we borrow
money from those very same saps whose natural inheritance we are so confidently
wasting and depleting, while at the same time we are harming the environment.  Any honest accountant can tell you that this
does not add up.  The debits and credits
do not make sense.  It is, in fact,
quite like the old swindle called the Ponzi scheme.  Those already retired collect money from current workers, and
today's workers in turn rely on future taxpayers.  As more people retire, the ratio of retirees to current workers
increases, and this money transfer scam will eventually really hit the wall,
just as the original Ponzi scheme did in 1920.  This will occur when reassurances and trust eventually prove
inadequate to mask the true fiscal foolishness and unsustainability of the
scheme.  We
are gambling with America's general welfare and national security!  Politicians, and conservatives especially,
have made great capital out of the deceptively irresponsible expediency of
deficit spending.  They show no sign of
becoming more honest, or more responsible, or more accountable.  This is partly due to their clever and
insidiously deceptive plan:  by creating
enormous and growing debt, they automatically crowd out social program
spending, which they revile as being rewarding to undisciplined, lazy, immoral
people, i.e., the poor, the disadvantaged, the mentally ill, the handicapped,
and others who often have not been given many opportunities in life.  They
are quite right in one thing:  the
portion of the annual budget that is devoted to ‘interest expense’ keeps
increasing, and this limits the amount of funds available for other government
spending.  In conjunction with the
increase in interest expense and in military spending, less and less money will
be available to address social problems and natural disasters.  This will make social problems worse and
class conflicts and age-related conflicts more severe, as available funding
diminishes and the injustice of Special Privilege politics grows.  America's problems will get worse,
communities will be more neglected, education will be more under funded,
infrastructure will further deteriorate, class strife will increase, and
assaults on public lands and the environment will intensify.   It
is daunting to see the dramatic growth in the size and dominating influence of
the federal government in the last 50 years.  Let us not be complacent and gullible any longer.  Our leaders are misleading us.  Let us demand more honest fiscal responsibility,
balanced budgets, greater social fairness, and more certain commitments to the
ecological integrity of our home planet.  We must make sure that our politicians are held accountable!  Truly,      Tiffany Twain |