We’re bankrupt when we wanna be

If you have been reading about federal finances lately, you rightly might assume that the federal government either is, or is about to be bankrupt. The message depends on three facts:

  1. The speaker or writer does not want to spend money on a particular project and/or
  2. The speaker or writer is ignorant about federal finances and/or
  3. The speaker or writer assumes you are ignorant or don’t care.

In many case, all of the above.

Uncle Sam is holding a huge horn of plenty that is spewing dollar bills, intricate details, HDR, beautifully shot, hyper...
My dirty little secret is, I don’t need your tax dollars. I always have been able to create all the dollars I need.

The simple fact is that is it functionally impossible for the U.S. federal government to run short of money, become insolvent and/or be unable to pay any debt, no matter how large, even without collecting a single penny in taxes.

Being Monetarily Sovereign, the government has the unlimited ability to create U.S. dollars simply by:

  1. Voting, then
  2. Touching computer keys, then
  3. Spending.

Those three easy steps require no income from any source — not from taxes, fines, tariffs or even the laughably sad “Gifts to Reduce the Public Debt” program (Yes, that’s a real thing.)

Why does the federal government collect taxes?

–To control the economy by taxing what it wants to discourage and by giving tax breaks to what it wants to reward and
–To assure demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring that taxes be paid in dollars.

State and local taxes fund state and local spending, but federal taxes do not fund federal spending.

Here is what the government thinks about funding the military:

Drones, missiles, battleships: What’s in Trump’s $1.5 trillion defense spending ask
By Anna Mulrine Grobe Staff writer, April 29, 2026, 5:00 a.m. ET

The Trump administration is hoping to spend $1.5 trillion on defense next year. That’s roughly 42% more than the United States, by far the world’s most expensive military, spends now.

That’s also getting close to 5% of U.S. gross domestic product. The last time the defense budget was significantly higher as a percentage of gross domestic product was during the Reagan administration’s Cold War military buildup in the mid-1980s, when it reached nearly 7%, or during the Vietnam War, when it was more than 9%.

While the huge budget increase plan aims to make good on President Donald Trump’s campaign pledge to rebuild America’s military, it also represents a big shift in national spending priorities.

It’s a pace that potentially diverts billions of dollars from education, healthcare, and other initiatives while adding roughly $5.8 trillion to the national debt over the next decade.

If the government wished, it could spend an additional trillion or ten trillion on the military, while not “diverting” any money from education, healthcare, etc. and not collecting any taxes at all.

It simply could, as we mentioned, vote, touch computer keys, and spend. That is how Monetarily Sovereign nations always function.

However, the current government wants to cut benefits to the people, because cutting those benefits widens the income/wealth/power gap between the rich and the rest. 

The wealthiest 2% already get all the healthcare they want and have no need for social benefits.

It’s the remaining 98% who depend on Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and other types of financial assistance. Not receiving these benefits makes them relatively poorer, which makes the rich richer.

In the proposed U.S. military budget for the fiscal year 2027, the Army and Navy would each see their budgets grow by a quarter, while the Air Force would get a 34% boost. The Defense Department’s newest branch of service, the Space Force, stands to see its budget more than doubled to about $71 billion.

Even think tanks that describe themselves as hawkish, such as the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, called the administration’s proposed U.S. military budget for the fiscal year 2027 “extraordinary.”

With a bigger budget than the next nine countries combined, the U.S. already has the most expensive armed forces in the world. In terms of sheer active personnel numbers, America ranks third behind China and India, according to the Peterson Foundation.

Worth noting: The cost of the conflict with Iran is not factored into the current defense request. That will take more money – an additional $1 trillion, by some estimates.

But America’s current war is clearly influencing both public and private investments, in everything from more drones (and defenses against them) to more missiles and Navy ships.

Private investment in the military and defense sectors has surged recently, namely in defense tech and startups. In the first quarter of this year, defense startups backed by venture capital raised $468 million, a 180% increase from the same period in 2025.

There is no shortage of funds for the military, which is important to America’s security, while health, food, housing, education, etc. are not important — at least from the right-wing perspective.

This brings us to the needless and endless efforts to prevent the non-existent threat of federal insolvency:

Social Security benefit cuts are coming — and President Trump shoulders some of the blame
Story by Rich Duprey

Markets and policy headlines have offered up a familiar pattern lately: long-term risks get discussed loudly, then quietly kicked a few years down the road. Social Security is the clearest example of that dynamic. The system still pays full benefits today, but the math underneath it is shifting in a way that investors — and retirees — can’t ignore forever.

So here’s the real question behind today’s headline: benefit cuts are coming, and could be as soon as six years away, yet it’s just as much political shorthand for a much slower-moving problem.

But let’s unpack what the data actually says.

Social Security trust funds face depletion in the early 2030s (around 2033), after which payroll taxes would only cover approximately 77% of scheduled benefits, requiring Congress to choose between raising the payroll tax to ~15%, reducing benefits by 20-25%, raising the wage cap, or increasing retirement age.

The author promulgates the disinformation that the federal government must raise taxes and/or cut benefits. Neither is necessary.

The third –the real— option is for the federal government simply to create the dollars to fund these programs. 

But that would shrink the income, wealth, and power gap between the rich and everyone else—the last thing any Republican administration wants to see happen.

The delayed policy response to Social Security’s structural funding gap—where fewer workers per retiree (2.7 in 2025 dropping to 2.3 by 2035) cannot sustain current benefit levels—creates market risk through reduced consumer spending, as retirees account for roughly 19% of total U.S. consumption.

The mistaken belief is that the FICA payroll tax directly funds Social Security. It doesn’t. This idea was introduced by President Roosevelt as a way to discourage Congress from cutting Social Security, using a psychological “I-paid-for-it, so-I-deserve-it” approach.

He even threw in a so-called “trust fund” that was nothing more than an accounting entry, not a genuine trust fund. The idea was to make Social Security look like a private sector insurance annuity.

Unfortunately, it hasn’t worked out, as benefits are being reduced under the “You didn’t pay enough” excuse. It’s like an insurance company saying, “We have to cut your benefits because we didn’t get enough new customers to cover you.” Instead of bolstering Social Security, FICA restricts benefits that the federal government could otherwise provide.

Social Security is not a traditional investment fund. It’s a pay-as-you-go system where today’s workers fund today’s retirees through payroll taxes.

Not exactly. The government still pays for SS benefits, but it limits those payments to what FICA collects, and to compound the lie, it unnecessarily collects taxes on the payments.

Payroll tax rate: 12.4% of wages (split employer/employee); Workers per retiree: ~2.7 in 2025; Projected workers per retiree by 2035: ~2.3. That shrinking ratio is the core pressure point. Fewer workers are supporting more retirees, and that imbalance compounds every year.

You also are supposed to believe that you only pay half of FICA and your employer pays the other half. The truth is that you  pay the whole thing, because your employer includes the cost of FICA when figuring what salaries the company can afford.

Finally, notice that the highest salaried employees pay the lowest percentage of their salaries in FICA, and that the very wealthiest earners’ income is not FICA-taxed at all. The money they receive from capital gains and interest is not subject to FICA.

Surprisingly, the system still runs a surplus on paper for parts of the cycle — but that surplus is shrinking fast. The 2025 Trustees Report estimates the combined trust funds will be depleted in the early 2030s, most commonly cited around 2033 for the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance fund.

As we said earlier, they are fake trust funds, created to deceive. Keep in mind that there is no Military Trust Fund to be “depleted.” That would be unthinkable. But cutting Social Security and Medicare is just fine.

That’s the first misconception to clear up: there is no “benefit cut date.” There is a trust fund exhaustion estimate, after which automatic reductions apply under current law.

The clock is ticking toward a 23% automatic benefit cut. It’s not just a retirement crisis—it’s a looming shock to the entire U.S. consumer market. © 24/7 Wall St.

What “Cuts in Six Years” Actually Means

Trust fund depletion timeline (early 2030s); Political delay window (mid-to-late 2020s); Here’s what happens mechanically, based on SSA rules:

After depletion, payroll taxes continue. But they only cover about 77% of scheduled benefits. The gap becomes an automatic reduction unless Congress acts. That’s another way of saying benefits don’t disappear, but they are statutorily reduced if no new funding is added.

Congress easily could act. For instance, it simply could vote to add a few trillion dollars to the “trust fund.” No new taxes would be needed. Congress continually votes to add dollars to various programs, without changing tax laws.

The Congressional Budget Office (2026 Long-Term Outlook) estimates that closing the financial gap would require one of the following:

Policy Option Estimated Impact: Raise payroll tax rate to ~15% Fully closes gap
Raise wage cap (currently $184,500) :Covers ~60% of shortfall
Reduce benefits across the board: 20%–25% reduction
Gradual retirement age increase: Partial long-term fix

The CBO “forgot” one possibility: Add several trillion dollars to the trust fund: The financial gap disappears.

In short, the “six-year warning” is really about when lawmakers must act to avoid automatic reductions later in the 2030s.

The Trump Factor — and the Tax Policy Wildcard
Now to the politically sensitive part of the headline.

During President Donald Trump’s administration and subsequent policy proposals tied to his fiscal agenda, several tax relief measures aimed at seniors and middle-income workers have been discussed in legislative drafts often referred to by supporters as part of a broader “big, beautiful bill” framework.

One frequently cited feature the temporary tax relief for seniors from 2025–2028, structured as deductions or credits designed to reduce taxable income, contained in Trump’s “One Big, Beautiful Bill.”

Here’s where the Social Security linkage comes in:

Social Security is funded primarily through payroll taxes. Certain tax cuts and exemptions reduce taxable wage or income bases. That can indirectly reduce inflows to the trust fund. According to analysis from the Congressional Budget Office, broad-based senior tax relief measures would reduce federal revenue by tens of billions of dollars over a multi-year window.

The Monetarily Sovereign federal government neither needs nor uses tax income for anything. It creates all the dollars it needs and uses. Who says so? These experts say so.

That doesn’t “raid” Social Security in a direct sense. But it does affect the broader fiscal environment the program depends on.

In plain English: If you reduce revenue elsewhere while Social Security already runs a structural gap, you make the fix slightly harder — not impossible, but tighter.

Of course, there is no need for a Monetarily Sovereign government to suffer from reduced revenue. It creates its own revenue.

Granted, supporters of the policy argue the offset comes from broader growth effects and targeted relief for retirees facing higher living costs. That said, the SSA’s own projections do not assume offsetting growth large enough to materially change the depletion timeline.

Again, this all relies on the false claim that FICA funds Social Security.

So the debate isn’t about intent. It’s about arithmetic.

The Real Market-Relevant Risk: Policy Compression
Investors often miss this point because Social Security isn’t a traded asset — but it still affects macro conditions. Why? Because if lawmakers delay action too long, the eventual fix becomes more abrupt. That usually means:

Faster payroll tax increases; More sudden benefit formula changes; Or larger one-time fiscal adjustments
And those ripple into consumer spending.

According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, households 65+ account for roughly account for roughly 20% of total consumption, meaning any benefit reduction would hit demand directly.

But if the government funds increased benefits, demand would be increased, thereby increasing Gross Domestic Product. The entire economy would benefit.

That’s not theoretical — it feeds into retail, healthcare, and consumer staples earnings.

Key Takeaway
When all is said and done, Social Security is not “collapsing” in six years. It is moving toward a point where lawmakers must choose between higher taxes, lower benefits, or both.

Or, they could choose federal funding, which would grow the economy at no cost to anyone.

Regardless of how headlines frame it, the math doesn’t negotiate.

As my old math instructor used to say, “Figures don’t lie, but liars figure. And there are 535 members of Congress, plus the President, who are lying to you about Social Security and Medicare finances.

The federal government should eliminate FICA and pay for SS and Medicare — for everyone.

 

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;

MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;

https://www.academia.edu/

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A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

One of the funniest legal defenses, ever

This has to be one of the funniest legal defenses ever. It begins with this:

The American People stand with President Trump in demanding an immediate end to the unlawful, radical weaponization of our justice system, and a swift dismissal of all of the Witch Hunts. . . 

Donald Trump is opposed to weaponization of our justice system and he hates witch hunts. Tell that to James Comey, Jerome Powell, Joe Biden, Tim Walz and other Minnesota officials, Letitia James, Adam Schiff, Lisa Cook, former prosecutors, judges, watchdog groups, and some media outlets.

His defense continues:

. . . including the illegal, Democrat-funded travesty of the Carroll Hoaxes. . . 

“Democrat-funded”? As with so many of Trump’s claims, there is no evidence her claims were “Democrat-funded. In any event, funding has nothing to do with the facts of the matter. It’s just part of the Trump “quickly blame the Democrats for anything that goes wrong and take credit for anything that goes well” system.

And the hilarious defense ends:

—the defense of which the Attorney General has determined is legally required to be taken over by the Department of Justice because Carroll based her false claims on the President’s official acts.

In Trump’s fevered brain, attacking a woman is one of his official acts.

Only a Fox-watching MAGA would be numb enough to continue believing Trump. Thankfully, there seem to be fewer putting up with Trump’s criminality and his destruction of American ideals. 

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;

MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;

https://www.academia.edu/

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A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

This article made me laugh and cry at the same time

The following article, by something (or someone) called “Project Nightfall,” is so wrong in so many ways, that I had to admire the author for possibly breaking a record in finding and using scare-words, some of which I have bolded for your amusement:

America’s debt crisis: $39 trillion and rising—a ticking time bomb!
Look at this number. Stare at it. Let it sink in. $39,000,000,000,000. Thirty-nine trillion dollars. That is the staggering, incomprehensible sum the United States now owes.

In March 2026, a line was crossed. The total US national debt officially surpassed the $39 trillion mark for the very first time in recorded history.

Almost every year since the beginning of the United States, we have set a new record in the official “debt” (that isn’t actually debt). It’s what happens when an economy grows.

This wasn’t just another milestone. It was a warning sign flashing in neon. A critical threshold breached, silently, but with immense implications.

Nah, it’s not critical and it’s not a threshold. It just means Gross Domestic Product has grown — a good thing.

And the speed? That is what truly shocks you to your core.

Just five short months ago, this colossal debt stood at $38 trillion. A terrifying figure in itself, but one that already feels like a distant memory.

Two months before that, it was $37 trillion. Do you see the pattern emerging? A relentless, accelerating surge that defies all conventional understanding.

The sheer velocity of this growth is what forces everyone to pause. It makes the most hardened financial expert, and the everyday citizen alike stop and question everything.

Yes, the economy is growing fast. When the so called, misnamed “debt” doesn’t grow fast enough, we have recessions or depressions.

Because this is not merely a big number. It is not just an abstract concept whispered in economic halls. It is a living, breathing, and terrifyingly growing entity.

Wow! All that breathless prose to describe the effects of this equation: Gross Domestic Product = Federal & Non-federal Spending + Net Exports. Yes, the result of that terrifyingly growing entity is a growing GDP.

Today, this monumental debt has already eclipsed the size of the entire US economy. Think about that for a moment. The nation’s liabilities now outweigh its total annual output.

Which means absolutely nothing. The two numbers are not comparable.

What does it mean lance.

Nope. It just means that people are happy to invest in Treasury securities.

And the warnings are dire. Analysts across the globe are sounding the alarm, projecting a future that chills you to the bone.

Only the analysts who have been wrong for 86 years are sounding that alarm.

They warn this debt could skyrocket to approximately 120% of the Gross Domestic Product within the next decade. This is not a certainty, but a terrifying trajectory if nothing changes.

The Debt/GDP ratio tells nothing about the health of a government or the economy — nothing at all.

But here is the most insidious part. The hidden cost that many people never truly see, never truly grasp. The silent drain on the nation’s future. When the debt you owe is larger than everything you produce in a year, it signals a profound shift, a dangerous imbance.

The so-called “debt” is really just the total amount of dollars in T-security accounts. The government settles it simply by returning the dollars to their owners. If it wanted to, it could pay off the entire $39 trillion without collecting a single cent in taxes.

The United States is now spending an astronomical sum every single year just to service this debt. A mind-boggling $900,000,000,000.

Nine hundred billion dollars. Vanishing into thin air, purely as interest payments. This isn’t going towards schools, or infrastructure, or innovation. It’s just the cost of borrowing.

Imagine the impact of that lost capital. What could nearly a trillion dollars annually achieve if it wasn’t swallowed by interest?

There’s no such thing as “lost capital.” Those dollars flow into the economy and contribute to the Gross Domestic Product. Nothing just disappears. If you hold T-bills, T-notes, or T-bonds, you’ve likely received some of those so-called “lost” dollars, which you may have used to pay off debts.

And the pressure is only mounting. New global challenges, new emergencies, new demands on the national purse.

There is no national purse. The federal government created dollars as it needs them.

Consider the soaring defense spending, directly tied to ongoing international conflicts. These urgent pressures mean that colossal interest payment figure could climb even faster.

The more interest the federal government pays, the more growth dollars enter the economy.

This did not erupt overnight. This was not the work of a single policy or a single leader. This has been a slow, methodical build-up.

It has been accumulating across decades. It has been a consequence of decisions made by different administrations, through different political ideologies.

Yes, and for 86+ years, those who don’t understand the differences between federal finance and personal finance have been predicting a disaster that never happens: The government running short of money.

But now, we have arrived at a critical juncture. The accumulation has reached an undeniable tipping point.

And exactly what is that “tipping point”? The author never says, perhaps because it doesn’t exist.

The question is no longer whether this debt truly matters. That debate is over. The evidence is too overwhelming.

The non-existent evidence?

The real question, the urgent question, is when will its full, devastating impact be felt by every single one of us?

Because the leap from $39 trillion to a horrifying $40 trillion is not a distant threat. It may materialize faster than anyone can possibly expect.

At what point does a number, so vast, so seemingly abstract, stop being just a figure on a screen?

At what point does it start to feel terrifyingly, undeniably real?

The number is real, always has been real, and always will be real — but not terrifying to those  who understand the facts of Monetary Sovereignty. 

Those unaware of the facts will keep being scared by people spreading nonsense, aiming to trick others into not demanding things like improved Social Security, better Medicare, the removal of FICA and other pointless taxes, and efforts to close the income, wealth, and power gap between the rich and everyone else.

What the article basically says is: “You’re being taken advantage of for a supposed good reason, so stay quiet while the wealthy keep getting richer and everyone else swallows the lies. Ignore the fact that we’ve been making the same claim for 86 years and have been wrong the entire time. Just trust us.”.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;

MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;

https://www.academia.edu/

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A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Historical BULLSHIT Claims the Federal Debt Is a “Ticking Time Bomb”: From Sept. 26, 1940 to April 20, 2026

This is an update of the many, many previous posts showing the seemingly never-ending warnings about “federal debt” (that isn’t federal and isn’t debt).

The purpose has been to demonstrate how, year after year, so-called experts claim the U.S. is about to enter a catastrophe because federal debt is “too high,” while the experts are proven wrong year after year. The economy continues to grow and is healthier than ever.

I’ve been doing this for over 20 years; the experts have been wrong for over 86 years, and they never seem to learn. While I find it frustrating, I used to try to remain civil and merely recite the facts. But, as I pass my 91sth year, and the road ahead is short, I’ve grown impatient with civility, and I’ve decided to call it like it is: BULLSHIT.

What set me off last year was a BULLSHIT tweet (or whatever “X” calls them), from the richest man in the world, who, despite his great wealth, seems to know nothing about federal finance:

No, Elon, the U.S. federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, cannot go bankrupt. Even if tax collections fell to $0, and spending tripled, the federal government could continue to pay all its bills forever.

Now, a year later, a long, long article titled, “America’s debt crisis: $39 trillion and rising—a ticking time bomb!” got me going, again.

The Big Lie in economics is: “Federal taxes fund federal spending.” Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. The truth is that federal taxes fund nothing. They are destroyed upon receipt by the Treasury.

The purposes of federal taxes are to:

  1. Control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and by giving tax breaks to those the government wishes to reward (mainly the wealthy).
  2. Assure demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring taxes to be paid in dollars.

That’s it. Taxes do not fund federal spending. Period. The federal government does not spend “taxpayers’ money. The government spends dollars that it creates by voting and then pressing computer keys.

Further, you do not owe the federal “debt.” No one does. It isn’t even debt. It merely is the arithmetic difference between federal spending and the taxes it receives. The U.S. federal government pays all its debts on time.

The U.S. federal government is not like state/local governments, not like euro governments, not like businesses, and not like you and me.

It is uniquely Monetarily Sovereign. It cannot, unwillingly, run short of its own sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar. As real experts have said:

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency. There is nothing to prevent the federal government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody. The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always print the money to do that.

Former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. It’s not tax money… We simply use the computer to mark up the size of the account.”

Statement from the St. Louis Fed: “As the sole manufacturer of dollars, whose debt is denominated in dollars, the U.S. government can never become insolvent, i.e., unable to pay its bills. In this sense, the government is not dependent on credit markets to remain operational.

Press Conference: Mario Draghi, President of the Monetarily Sovereign ECB, January 9, 2014. Question: Can the ECB ever run out of money? Mario Draghi: Technically, no. We cannot run out of money.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell stated, “As a central bank, we have the ability to create money digitally.”

Paul Krugman (Nobel Prize–winning economist): “The U.S. government is not like a household. It literally prints money, and it can’t run out.” — Numerous op-eds/blog posts

Hyman Minsky (Economist, key influence on MMT)
“The government can always finance its spending by creating money.”

Eric Tymoigne (Economist) “A sovereign government does not need to collect taxes or issue bonds to finance spending. It finances directly through money creation.”

Those are real experts, not the phonies who shout about ticking time bombs.

Because the U.S. federal government has the infinite ability to create its sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar, it never borrows dollars.

Contrary to popular wisdom, T-bills, T-notes, and T-bonds do not represent borrowing. They are deposits, the purpose of which is to provide a safe place to store unused dollars and to help the Fed control interest rates.

The government never touches those dollars, which remain the property of the depositors. Not only can our Monetarily Sovereign government not run short of dollars, but federal deficits are necessary to grow the economy, as evidenced by the formula: Gross Domestic Product = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports.

The formula shows that economic growth requires federal deficit spending growth.

The record highs of federal debt (red) parallel those of Gross Domestic Product (blue).

The next graph shows that reduced deficit growth (red) is associated with recessions (vertical gray bars), and increased deficit growth cures recessions. 

When we don’t have sufficient federal deficits, we have depressions and recessions:

U.S. depressions tend to come on the heels of federal surpluses.

        1. 1804-1812: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 48%. Depression began 1807.
        2. 1817-1821: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 29%. Depression began 1819.
        3. 1823-1836: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 99%. Depression began 1837.
        4. 1852-1857: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 59%. Depression began 1857.
        5. 1867-1873: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 27%. Depression began 1873.
        6. 1880-1893: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 57%. Depression began 1893.
        7. 1920-1930: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 36%. Depression began 1929.
        8. 1997-2001: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 15%. Recession began 2001.

Periodically, we publish yet another shrieking claim that the U.S. federal debt is “unsustainable” and a “ticking time bomb.”

This lie has been told to you every year (really, almost every day) since 1940, and that bomb has never exploded, nor will it.

Rather than repeat the entire list of the thousands of lies to which you have been subject, I will list samples here as a reference and add periodically, at the end, new “federal debt is a ticking time bomb BULLSHIT claims as I encounter them.

Read these and see that even respected economists replace facts with BULLSHIT:

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September 26, 1940, New York Times: The federal budget was a “ticking time-bomb which can eventually destroy the American system,” said Robert M. Hanes, president of the American Bankers Association. BULLSHIT

(Yes, the record of bad predictions goes all the way back to 1940. It probably goes back longer, but I don’t have the examples.)

September 26, 1940, New York Times: The federal budget was a “ticking time-bomb which can eventually destroy the American system,” said Robert M. Hanes, president of the American Bankers Association.

By 1960, the debt was “threatening the country’s fiscal future,” said Secretary of Commerce Frederick H. Mueller. (“The enormous cost of various Federal programs is a time-bomb threatening the country’s fiscal future, Secretary of Commerce Frederick H. Mueller warned here yesterday.”)BULLSHIT

By 1983: “The debt probably will explode in the third quarter of 1984,” said Fred Napolitano, former National Association of Home Builders president.BULLSHIT

In 1984: AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland said. “It’s a time bomb ticking away.”BULLSHIT

In 1985: “The federal deficit is a ticking time bomb, and it’s about to blow up,” U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell. (Remember him?)BULLSHIT

Later in 1985: Los Angeles Times: “We labeled the deficit a ‘ticking time bomb that threatens to permanently undermine the strength and vitality of the American economy.”BULLSHIT

In 1987: Richmond Times-Dispatch – Richmond, VA: “100TH CONGRESS FACING U.S. DEFICIT’ TIME BOMB‘”BULLSHIT

Later in 1987: The Dallas Morning News: “A fiscal time bomb is slowly ticking that, if not defused, could explode into a financial crisis within the next few years for the federal government.”BULLSHIT

In 1989: FORTUNE Magazine: “A TIME BOMB FOR U.S. TAXPAYERSBULLSHIT

In 1992: The Pantagraph – Bloomington, Illinois: “I have seen where politicians in Washington have expressed little or no concern about this ticking time bomb they have helped to create, that being the enormous federal budget deficit, approaching $4 trillion.BULLSHIT

Later in 1992, Ross Perot said, “Our great nation is sitting right on top of a ticking time bomb. We have a national debt of $4 trillion.”BULLSHIT

In 1995: Kansas City Star: “Concerned citizens. . . regard the national debt as a ticking time bomb poised to explode with devastating consequences at some future date.”BULLSHIT

In 2003: Porter Stansberry, for the Daily Reckoning: “Generation debt is a ticking time bomb . . . with about ten years left on the clock.”BULLSHIT

In 2004: Bradenton Herald: “A NATION AT RISK: TWIN DEFICIT A TICKING TIME BOMBBULLSHIT

In 2005: Providence Journal: “Some lawmakers see the Medicare drug benefit for what it is: a ticking time bomb.” BULLSHIT

In 2006: NewsMax.com, “We have to worry about the deficit . . . when we combine it with the trade deficit, we have a real ticking time bomb in our economy,” said Mrs. Clinton. BULLSHIT

In 2007: USA Today: “Like a ticking time bomb, the national debt is an explosion waiting to happen.BULLSHIT

In 2010: Heritage Foundation: “Why the National Debt is a Ticking Time Bomb. Interest rates on government bonds are virtually guaranteed to jump over the next few years. BULLSHIT

In 2010: Reason Alert: “. . . the time bomb that’s ticking under the federal budget like a Guy Fawkes’ powder keg.” BULLSHITBullshit Meter - Funny Sticker – Stickerheads Stickers

In 2011: Washington Post, Lori Montgomery:”. . . defuse the biggest budgetary time bombs that are set to explode.” BULLSHIT

June 19, 2013: Chamber of Commerce: Safety net spending is a ‘time bomb’, by Jim Tankersley: The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is worried that not enough Americans are worried about social safety net spending. The nation’s largest business lobbying group launched a renewed effort Wednesday to reduce projected federal spending on safety-net programs, labeling them a “ticking time bomb” that, left unchanged, “will bankrupt this nation.” BULLSHIT

On June 15, 2014: CBN News: “The United States of Debt: A Ticking Time BombBULLSHIT

On June 18, 2015: The ticking economic time bomb that presidential candidates are ignoring: Fortune Magazine, Shawn Tully, BULLSHIT

On February 10, 2016, The Daily Bell: “Obama’s $4.1 Trillion Budget Is Latest Sign of America’s Looming Collapse” BULLSHIT

On January 23, 2017: Trump’s ‘Debt Bomb‘: Deficit May Grow, Defense Budget May Not, By Sydney J. Freedberg, Jr. BULLSHIT

On January 27, 2017: America’s “debt bomb is going to explode.” That’s according to financial strategist Peter Schiff. Schiff said that while low interest rates had helped keep a lid on U.S. debt, it couldn’t be contained for much longer. Interest rates and inflation are rising, creditors will demand higher premiums, and the country is headed “off the edge of a cliff.” BULLSHIT

On April 28, 2017: Debt in the U.S. Fuel for Growth or Ticking Time Bomb?, American Institute for Economic Research, by Max Gulker, PhD – Senior Research Fellow, Theodore Cangeros BULLSHIT

February 16, 2018 America’s Debt Bomb By Andrew Soergel, Senior Reporter: Conservatives and deficit hawks are hurling criticism at Washington for deepening America’s debt hole. BULLSHIT

April 18, 2018 By Alan Greenspan and John R. Kasich: “Time is running short, and America’s debt time bomb continues to tick.” BULLSHIT

January 10, 2019, Unfunded Govt. Liabilities — Our Ticking Time Bomb. By Myra Adams, Tick, tick, tick goes the time bomb of national doom. BULLSHIT

January 18, 2019; 2019 Is Gold’s Year To Shine (And The Ticking U.S. Debt Time-Bomb) By Gavin Wendt BULLSHIT

April 10, 2019, The National Debt: America’s Ticking Time Bomb. TIL Journal. Entire nations can go bankrupt. One prominent example was the *nation of Greece which was threatened with insolvency a decade ago. Greece survived the economic crisis because the European Union and the IMF bailed the nation out. BULLSHIT

July 11, 2019: National debt is a ‘ticking time bomb: Sen. Mike Lee BULLSHIT

SEP 12, 2019, Our national ticking time bomb, By BILL YEARGIN SPECIAL TO THE SUN SENTINEL | At some point, investors will become concerned about lending to a debt-riddled U.S., which will result in having to offer higher interest rates to attract the money. Even with rates low today, interest expense is the federal government’s third-highest expenditure, following the elderly and military. The U.S. already borrows all the money it uses to pay its interest expense, sort of like a Ponzi scheme. Lack of investor confidence will only make this problem worse. BULLSHIT

JANUARY 06, 2020, National debt is a time bomb, BY MARK MANSPERGER, Tri City Herald | The increase in the U.S. deficit last year was about $1.1 trillion, bringing our total national debt to more than $23 trillion! This fiscal year, the deficit is forecasted to be even higher, and when the economy eventually slows down, our annual deficits could be pushing $2 trillion a year! This is financial madness. There’s not going to be a drastic cut in federal expenditures — that is, until we go broke — nor are we going to “grow our way” out of this predicament. Therefore, to gain control of this looming debt, we’re going to have to raise taxes. BULLSHIT

February 14, 2020, OMG! It’s February 14, 2020, and the national debt is still a ticking time bomb! The national debt: A ticking time bomb? America is “headed toward a crisis,” said Tiana Lowe in Washington Examiner.com. The Treasury Department reported last week that the federal deficit swelled to more than $1 trillion in 2019 for the first time since 2012. Even more alarming was the report from the bipartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) predicting that $1 trillion deficits will continue for the next 10 years, eventually reaching $1.7 trillion in 2030 BULLSHIT

April 26, 2020, ‘Catastrophic’: Why government debt is a ticking time bomb, Stephen Koukoulas, Yahoo Finance [Re. Monetarily Sovereign Australia’s debt.] BULLSHIT

August 29, 2020, LOS ANGELES, California: America’s mountain of debt is a ticking time bomb. The United States not only looks ill, but also dead broke. To offset the pandemic-induced “Great Cessation,” the U.S. Federal Reserve and Congress have marshalled staggering sums of stimulus spending out of fear that the economy would otherwise plunge to 1930s soup kitchen levels. Assuming that America eventually defeats COVID-19 and does not devolve into a Terminator-like dystopia, how will it avoid the approaching fiscal cliff and national bankruptcy? BULLSHIT

April 16, 2021, NATIONAL POLICY: ECONOMY AND TAXES / MARK ALEXANDER / The National Debt Clock: A Ticking Time Bomb: At the moment, our national debt exceeds $28 TRILLION — about 80% held as public debt and the rest as intragovernmental debt. That is $225,000 per taxpayer. Federal annual spending this year is almost $8 trillion, and more than half of that is deficit spending — piling on the national debt. BULLSHIT

June 17, 2022, Time Bomb On National Debt Is Counting Down Faster Thanks To Fed’s Rate Hike, Tim Brown /We are now staring down the barrel of the end of the U.S. economy based on fiat money, printed out of thin air but charged back to the people at ridiculous interest rates. BULLSHIT

Now, the national debt is approaching $31 trillion, which is $12 trillion more than when Donald Trump took office in 2017, and more than half of that debt was tacked on in his final year. Then we’ve had the disastrous year and a half of Joe Biden. Now, the Fed is hiking its rates, and that spells even more trouble for the national debt and the economy at large. BULLSHIT

December 4, 2022 America’s ticking time bomb: $66 trillion in debt that could crash the economy By Stephen Moore, The national debt is $31 trillion when including Social Security’s and Medicare’s unfunded liabilities. Wake up, America. BULLSHIT

That ticking sound you’re hearing is the American debt time bomb that, with each passing day, is getting precariously close to detonating and crashing the US economy. BULLSHIT

January 13, 2023. A ticking time bomb in the U.S. economy is running perilously close to detonation. Long considered a harbinger of bad luck, Friday, January 13 came with a warning for Congress that the country could default on its debt as soon as June. BULLSHIT

February 5, 2023, ‘The world’s largest Ponzi scheme’: Peter Schiff just blasted the US debt ceiling drama. Here are 3 assets he trusts amid major market uncertainty. Story by Bethan Moorcraft, A ticking time bomb in the U.S. economy is running perilously close to detonation. With the U.S. reaching its debt limit of $31.4 trillion on Jan. 19, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen urged lawmakers to increase or suspend the debt ceiling. BULLSHIT

April 22, 2023 The Debt Ceiling Debate Is About More Than Debt, Jim Tankersley, WASHINGTON — Speaker Kevin McCarthy of California has repeatedly said that he and his fellow House Republicans are refusing to raise the nation’s borrowing limit, and risking economic catastrophe, to force a reckoning on America’s $31 trillion national debt. “Without exaggeration, America’s debt is a ticking time bomb that will detonate unless we take serious, responsible action,” he said this week. BULLSHIT

November 3, 2023 The Fuse on America’s Debt Bomb Just Got Shorter, J Antoni Heritage Organization. The Treasury is now on track to borrow almost as much in just six months as it did in the previous 12 months. That’s nearly a doubling of the deficit. Because the federal debt is $33.7 trillion, just a 1 percent increase in yields adds $337 billion to the annual cost of servicing the debt over time. Absent spending reform, eventually no one will be willing to hold the bomb anymore, and the yields on U.S. debt will begin to resemble those in Argentina. BULLSHIT

February 2, 2024 How Florida can help defuse the nation’s debt bomb By professor emeritus of economics at the University of Colorado Boulder and former comptroller general of the United States. Washington’s out-of-control spending, combined with fiscal and monetary policies have resulted in trillion-dollar-plus annual deficits, over $34 trillion in federal debt, over $125 trillion in total federal liabilities and unfunded obligations, and excess inflation. Excessive spending and loose monetary policy increase inflation in the short term, and mounting debt burdens serve to reduce future economic growth and shift the economic burden and consequences of mounting debt burdens to future generations. BULLSHIT

February 8, 2024 Legendary investor Paul Tudor Jones says a ‘debt bomb’ is about to go off in the U.S.: ‘We’re fast-pouring consumption like crazy’. The U.S. economy may seem like it’s firing on all cylinders, but underneath the surface, a “debt bomb” could be on the verge of exploding, according to billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones. The esteemed investor said in an interview with CNBC that he couldn’t deny the economy was strong, but that it was actually “on steroids” due to massive government spending and borrowing. BULLSHIT

Jones is not the only one to call attention to the growing deficit issue in the U.S. On Sunday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell took a rare dive into politics, telling CBS’s 60 Minutes that the national debt was “growing faster than the economy,” and calling for lawmakers to get the federal government “back on a sustainable fiscal path.” Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said she is not yet worried about the increasing national debt as long as the government keeps in check the net payments it makes on its debt relative to GDP. BULLSHIT

Those payments are projected to rise from 2.5% last year to 2.9% next year, according to the Office of Management and Budget, below their level in the early 1990s. Jones told CNBC that the strong economy could postpone the effects of the government’s deficit spending, but only for a little while. “The only question is … when does that manifest itself in markets?” he added. BULLSHIT

“It could be this year, it could be next year. Productivity may mask, and it might be three or four years from now. But clearly, clearly we’re on an unsustainable path.” BULLSHIT

June 21, 2024 My Weekly Column: Our debt crisis is a ticking time bomb by Randy Feenstra: On June 18, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) – the government agency tasked with monitoring our nation’s fiscal health – confirmed my serious concerns with President Biden’s reckless spending agenda. BULLSHIT

His administration’s fiscal policies have not only caused cumulative inflation to skyrocket by over 20% since he took office, but they have also accelerated our accumulation of debt to levels that are beyond unsustainable. Instead of changing course, he recently released his budget for Fiscal Year 2025, which has a $ 7.3 trillion price tag and looks to raise taxes on our families, farmers, and businesses to the tune of $5.5 trillion. BULLSHIT

The CBO estimates that his debt “cancellation” policies will cost taxpayers nearly $400 billion over the next ten years. I strongly oppose these bailouts. Iowans who never attended college, entered the workforce early, or helped put their kids through school should not be forced to pick up the tab for President Biden’s costly and unfair executive orders. BULLSHIT

July 22, 2024 Federal debt is the ticking bomb in your wallet By E.J. Antoni a public finance economist and the Richard F. Aster fellow at the Heritage Foundation, and a senior fellow at Unleash. The federal government is already running $2 trillion annual deficits, driving up interest on the debt exponentially. The time bomb of federal finance has already started ticking down. BULLSHIT

October 10, 2024, U.S. Debt Bomb is ticking louder by Nick Beams, World Socialist Website. The immediate economic question is: when will the rise in US government debt give rise to a crisis for the US dollar, a major meltdown in the market for debt, the Treasury bond market, or some other area of the financial system? Government debt is now heading towards $36 trillion and increasing at a pace that is regarded as “unsustainable” by Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, along with many others. BULLSHIT

May 30, 2025 DEFICIT DANGER. BOJ governor warns US debt time bomb outweighs trade war risks. By Dashan Hendricks. BANK of Jamaica (BOJ) governor Richard Byles has issued a stark warning that America’s spiralling budget deficits now present a more severe danger to the global economy than ongoing trade conflicts, as the world’s largest economy grapples with its third credit rating downgrade since 2011. His comments follow Moody’s recent decision to cut the US government’s credit rating from its top-tier Aaa to Aa1, citing concerns over its US$36-trillion debt burden, which now exceeds the nation’s US$30 trillion GDP. BULLSHIT

August 12, 2025 Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) Nancy Mace’s Debt Alarm Tweet was hit with a fact-check after warning on social media that the U.S. national debt had reached $37 trillion, calling it “a bill our kids can’t afford to pay.” The post, shared on Twitter, received over 2 million views and framed the soaring debt as a dire generational crisis. 

(No kids will pay the national debt.) It’s not debt, and it’s paid by returning the dollars already in storage, not by federal taxes.) Yes, Nancy, it’s all: BULLSHIT

March 2026, Project Nightfall America’s debt crisis: $39 trillion and rising—a ticking time bomb! “Look at this number. Stare at it. Let it sink in. $39,000,000,000,000. Thirty-nine trillion dollars. That is the staggering, incomprehensible sum the United States now owes. In March 2026, a line was crossed. The total US national debt officially surpassed the $39 trillion mark for the very first time in recorded history.

Just five short months ago, this colossal debt stood at $38 trillion. A terrifying figure in itself, but one that already feels like a distant memory. Two months before that, it was $37 trillion. Do you see the pattern emerging? A relentless, accelerating surge that defies all conventional understanding.”

And it’s all  BULLSHIT

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The above articles contain the same old BULLSHIT (“unsustainable,” “cost taxpayers,” “our kids will pay”) that they’ve been telling us since 1940. To buttress their lies, they make false comparisons to family finances or the finances of other monetarily non-sovereign entities like businesses or euro nations.

They have been wrong, repeatedly wrong, for all those years. If we wait long enough, perhaps something might happen to prove them right, perhaps in a thousand years? Today, this makes “only” 85 years of the debt nuts’ BULLSHIT.

The federal deficit yields economic growth year after year. When deficits are insufficient, we have had recessions, which were cured by increased deficits.

If respected economists keep predicting something terrible is imminent year after year, yet exactly the opposite happens, at what point do they reexamine their beliefs?

At what point does the public say, “Fool me once; shame on you. Fool me repeatedly for 86+ years; shame on me. This is just a steaming pile of BULLSHIT“?

Whew, I feel a little better, now — but just a little.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell; MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell; https://www.academia.edu/

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY