US Debt Clock Live

13 pointsposted 6 hours ago
by ourmandave

18 Comments

slg

6 hours ago

I feel like the well has been poisoned regarding national debt talk. There is simply no point in having a conversation about the debt without discussing how revenue should be raised and/or expenses lowered. That means someone focusing purely on the debt being bad is likely doing it because they know their specific proposals for addressing it won't be popular.

someguydave

2 hours ago

Raising taxes is really not part of the solution because increasing tax rate rates will likely not yield more tax collection. The real problem is immense spending on seniors to live a free life

slg

2 hours ago

>increasing tax rate rates will likely not yield more tax collection

What's so special about our current tax rates that you're making this claim? Because if you believe that higher tax rates don't yield more tax collected, why not argue for tax rates to approach 0%? So either you're couching your real and unpopular opinion like I described in my first comment or you're claiming that our tax rates are optimized for tax collected.

SirFatty

3 hours ago

yes, and we can't tax our way out of this situation.

drcongo

4 hours ago

"popular" is why this mess has happened.

slg

2 hours ago

Should we just do away with democracy?

kemotep

5 hours ago

If I could wave a magic wand and get the policies I want, I would abolish essentially all taxes except a Land Value Tax. At an average of $10,000 per acre and a roughly 1.4 Billion acres of private property that we could “reasonably” collect on, that is $14 Trillion in Revenue per year. Split between the Federal, State, and Local governments proportionally, leaving around ~$8 trillion for the Feds. If we could keep the Federal budget under $7 trillion, then $1 trillion per year could service the debt.

It would take nearly 40 years to pay it off at that rate. But if we save for 49, a Jubilee of Jubilee years, we could essentially wipe out all debt in this country.

Real pie in the sky fantasy stuff to think people could follow an “eat your vegetables” tax and budget plan for 40+ years and also accept what is ostensibly a massive property tax hike, the least popular tax ever.

pupppet

5 hours ago

Does anyone look at this debt and believe it will ever get paid off? It seems more realistic that everyone's waiting for some doomsday WW3 scenario where we just say ehh let's reset everyone back to zero.

selivanovp

4 hours ago

I don't think people in Washington are waiting. They're pushing for WW3 full steam ahead.

daft_pink

3 hours ago

I used to deeply care about this, but I find that generally the party not in power always complains about this and then immediately stops complaining once they are in power, so I have trouble taking it seriously.

For Example: Republicans when Obama was in Office, Democrats when Trump is in Office, Republicans when Biden is in Office

It’s been like 2 decades of both parties complaining and then doing nothing about it once they gained power.

slg

2 hours ago

Scroll down to the Debt By President section and switch over from chronological list to By % Increase. Of the last 11 completed presidential terms, 6 of the 7 biggest increases have been Republican and the 4 smallest increases have all been Democrats. "Both sides are the same" claims simply have no basis in reality when it comes to the national debt.

functionmouse

6 hours ago

VOTE

largbae

6 hours ago

I like to believe that will help. Which party is proposing actions that will lower the debt?

selivanovp

4 hours ago

None of them. You may only chose which slogan gonna be painted on the bombs to drop around the world.

user

5 hours ago

[deleted]

josefritzishere

3 hours ago

We have a debt-base currency. Borrowing creates money but the opposite is also true: when someone repays a loan, money is actually destroyed. So it's not surprising that over 80% of total government debt is privately owned, mostly by the super rich. The top 1% benefit enormously from government debt. (but also pensions and insurance companies)