And the winner of the nonsense contest: VERONIQUE DE RUGY

I’m going to assume that Veronique de Rugy is intelligent. I make that assumption as a courtesy because her writing doesn’t show it. As is usual with Libertarians, she ignores the formula for Gross Domestic Product:

GDP = Federal Spending + NonFederal Spending + Net Exports

She insists that in some magical way cutting Federal Spending will grow GDP. I wonder where or if she learned algebra. Do you enjoy claims having no facts to back them up? If so, you’ll love the excerpts from this article:
Veronique de Rugy

The Next President Needs To Cut Spending At a minimum, the national debt should be smaller than the size of the economy. A committed president just might be able to deliver. VERONIQUE DE RUGY | 6.29.2023 1:35 PM

Why should the national debt be smaller than the size of the economy? What are the data? Let’s clear up a few terms. First, she means “federal” rather than “national” debt, which would include all the debt in the nation — personal borrowing, business borrowing, and state/local government borrowing. Second, it isn’t debt. The government didn’t borrow it. It’s deposits into T-security accounts, the contents of which never are touched by federal agencies. The dollars, which belong to depositors, are “paid off” by returning them, untouched, to their owners. If the federal government chose to, it could simply pay off the “debt” (hat isn’t debt) tomorrow by returning those untouched dollars. Debt comes from borrowing, and the federal government never borrows. It accepts deposits. Being Monetarily Sovereign, the government has the infinite ability to create U.S. dollars. It never unintentionally can run short of dollars to pay its bills. So worry not that China suddenly will demand the return of its loans (that are not loans). A click of a computer key would debit their T-security accounts and credit their checking account (at the Federal Reserve Bank.) “Debt” paid. Third, what data tells her those deposits should be less than GDP? De Rugy never says. She just claims it’s her feeling, intuition, or something. Having no data is what passes for data in the Libertarianverse. Back to the article:

Election season is getting into gear, and that means politicians of all stripes making promises about what they’ll do for the American people if elected or reelected.

I’d like to hear promises to get government out of the way and allow entrepreneurship and market competition to spur genuine and sustainable economic growth, including in the energy and housing sectors.

Reminder: Economic growth is GDP growth. But given the mathematical formula for GDP, how does cutting Federal Spending increase GDP? It doesn’t. Not only is Federal Spending one of the terms in the equation, but it also spurs increases in the other terms, Nonfederal Spending and Net Exports. When the federal government spends, it becomes a customer of the private sector, which uses the dollars received for growth. In short, Federal Spending increases GDP directly and indirectly.

This may be what America needs most, but I will settle for a promise to ensure that the national debt stays smaller than the size of the economy. A committed president just might be able to deliver.

She may “settle” for such a promise, but why? To the penny, the national (federal) debt is precisely what the federal government wishes it to be, neither more nor less. The government offers as much in T-securities as it wishes, merely as an accounting book-balancing method, not to obtain dollars. No more is offered than that, so no one can deposit more than offered. But what happens when not enough people wish to make deposits? No problem. The Federal Reserve makes the necessary deposits. One branch of the government adds to the “debt” if the “debt” is not large enough to balance the other branch’s books. Does the left-hand “lending” to the right sound like real debt to you?

I never thought I’d be happy with keeping the debt no higher than 100 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). I’m more of a “cut the hell out of all this everything” kind of girl.

Her “cut the hell out of everything” has been tried several times. Here is what it has accomplished:

All U.S. depressions have come on the heels of federal surpluses.

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

President Clinton boasts about his cuts to federal spending. He was lucky. He only caused a recession. Had the cuts lasted longer, he wouldn’t have been so fortunate. And by the way, Ms de Rugy, what does the government do to cure recessions? Right, it increases deficit spending. Have you ever stopped to think why?
When federal “debt” growth (red) declines, we have recessions (gray bars). To cure recessions, the government increases deficit spending. GDP = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports.
Look at the graph and the table above it, and decide what will happen if Ms. de Rugy gets her “cut the hell out of everything” wish.

Compromise is particularly hard to swallow considering that way back in 2007, before the Great Recession and long before all the pandemic spending, the U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio was about 60 percent, and I thought that was too high.

Why did she “think” it was too high? She never says. It’s just her intuition.

However, age has taught me the value of perspective. At the end of 2022, the U.S. national debt stood at 97 percent of GDP.

Ms. de Rugy ignores the fact that during this 60% to 97% ratio increase, the economy grew massively:
In the 2007 – 2023 period that de Rugy complains about, the economy almost doubled!
Even if we allow for inflation and population growth, the economy still grew massively:
From 2007, the REAL (inflation-adjusted) economy grew PER CAPITA by about 20%. That’s a real per-person increase.
Ms. de Rugy continues to ignore facts in favor of her quasi-religious faith that somehow, in some way, reducing federal spending simply must be good. Methinks she is hypnotized by the word “debt,” and confused by the difference between federal finances and personal finances. So between being hypnotized and confused, the poor thing is a mess.

Prior to that, it touched triple digits. In 10 years’ time, the number is expected to grow to 115 percent. The fiscal beast reaches 200 percent in 30 years.

The federal spending that grew the economy now has become a “beast”? Huh?

Even this projection is too optimistic since it assumes undisturbed prosperity, low interest rates, no new programs, no emergencies, and low inflation.

It also assumes that the Department of the Treasury will find buyers, at low interest rates, for $114 trillion in extra debt. Yeah, right.

None of those assumptions has been made. Just look at history. The real GDP has grown through all interest rate levels, new programs, emergencies, and even inflation. And as stated earlier, if the Department of the Treasury can’t “find buyers” for its T-securities, it will raise interest rates, and/or the Federal Reserve will buy them, as it always has. No problem.

Keeping debt no higher than GDP is a better and more realistic objective than the usual Republican sound-bite promise of balancing the budget—not counting entitlement and defense spending—in 10 years.

Balancing the budget is neither more nor less ignorant than Ms. de Rugy’s magic “debt=100%- of-GDP “plan.” Both would lead to depressions. These programs are called “austerity,” which has been the engine of destruction for the euro nations.

This would require the implementer to cut non-excluded appropriations by 15 percent, 20 percent, or 30 percent relatively quickly, a remarkably unrealistic idea considering most government programs are supported by powerful interest groups who fight tooth and nail against any proposed cuts.

Such political promises don’t end up happening.

Yes, thankfully, Ms. de Rugy’s plan is unlikely, though the ignorante in Congress no doubt will continue to promise austerity to those who don’t understand federal financing.

So here we are. I would be impressed if any politicians hitting the campaign trail promise what I’m asking for.

If absolute stupidity impresses you, Ms. de Rugy, you have my sympathy.

The Cato Institute’s Chris Edwards calculated that staying under a 100 percent debt-to-GDP ratio would require a $6 trillion reduction in spending over the coming decade, or about 8 percent of what’s projected.

Raise your hand if you can guess what a $6 trillion reduction in federal spending would cause. If you answered, “The damndest depression we ever had,” you get an A+ for the course.

While politicians will claim this will eviscerate the budget, in reality, it would merely slow the growth rate of federal outlays, which would still rise from $6.4 trillion this year to about $8.6 trillion in 2033.

As Edwards noted to me, “That would be an aggressive cut from an Establishment perspective, but a nice goal for congressional reformers.”

No, it’s a foolish, though typical, Libertarian goal for congressional simpletons.

The politics will be harder than the reductions. Think about the hardship it was for Republicans and Democrats to reach a debt ceiling deal that will, at best, reduce the growth trend of spending by around $2 trillion over ten years.

(That’s assuming the caps placed on spending hold and a spending-addicted Congress doesn’t abuse the emergency loophole built into the plan. I wouldn’t bet my house, or even my garden hose, on that.)

And by the way, Veronique, did I mention that GDP = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports? Oh, I already did? But did you understand what that means? I guess not:

Democrats aren’t interested in fiscal discipline, while Republicans’ understanding of it mostly focuses on big tax cuts paid with public debt.

“Fiscal discipline” is not applying leeches to cure anemia, or withholding food to cure hunger. Fiscal disipline is spending more where it will benefit the people more and spending less where the only benefit comes to the very rich. That’s discipline. The Republican tax cuts for the rich are not paid with “public” debt. (By “public debt,” she means “federal debt,” not state/local government debt, which unlike federal “debt” is real debt. But the explanation undoubtedly would be too much for her to comprehend.) Anyway, federal “debt” pays for nothing. It’s just a book-balancing device. The government could stop collecting taxes and continue spending forever if it wished. The sole purposes of federal taxes are:
  1. To control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and by giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to encourage.
  2. To increase demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring taxes be paid in dollars.
  3. To make the public believe dollars are scarce to the government, which if true, would make benefits unaffordable. This is to discourage the public from asking for benefits.

The literature on austerity reveals that the most effective way to reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio without affecting the economy too much or for longis to adopt fiscal adjustment packages that consist mostly of spending cuts.

Packages based on entitlement reforms are more politically challenging but also yield much better results. Considering that Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security are the drivers of debt growth, reforming these programs must play a significant role.

She admits austerity affects the economy, but she doesn’t want to do it “too much or for too long.” She just wants to injurethe economy a little and for a short time — or something. Veronique, the literature on austerity reveals it always, always, always causes economic hardship. Whether you do it with spending cuts or tax increases, the result always is terrible. Ask the Euro nations how it has worked for them. Compare their economic growth with that of the U.S. When Veronique tells you about “reforming” Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security, understand that “reforming” is the liar’s word for cutting these benefits. The liars simply are too dishonest to say what they mean.

There are other ways, too. The Committee for a Responsible Budget, for instance, has a plan to stabilize the debt by cutting $7 trillion—including interest savings—over ten years.

Sixty percent of the reduction comes from the spending side, including entitlement reform, while the rest comes from revenue increases (including closing special interest tax breaks). Others will have more plans. It’s not my preferred path, but it’s a path.

The CRFB is a notorious organization supported by the rich to widen the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest. It has been spouting the same austerity nonsense since Hector was a pup (For you younguns, that’s a long time ago.)

Setting a debt level that doesn’t exceed GDP is a realistic and doable goal. That’s precisely what we should want from someone seeking to be our president.

It may be doable but foolish, precisely what we never should want from someone seeking to be our President. By the way, Veronique, where are the data showing that austerity grows the economy, that the Debt/GDP ratio is too high, or that Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security should be “reformed.” Oh, you have none? None at all? Then kindly STFU. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Has your health insurer refused to cover a procedure or pharmaceutical? Time for Medicare for All?

ProPublica is an excellent source of accurate information about the government and its failings. (One might say it is the diametric opposite of FoxNews/QAnon/Tucker Carlson/Marjorie Greene/Donald Trump/MAGA, et al.). Here are excerpts from an article about private healthcare insurance. Follow the link below for the full text.

ProPublica Health Care How Often Do Health Insurers Say No to Patients? No One Knows. Insurers’ denial rates — a critical measure of how reliably they pay for customers’ care — remain mostly secret to the public. Federal and state regulators have done little to change that. by Robin Fields June 28, 5 a.m. EDT

It’s one of the most crucial questions people have when deciding which health plan to choose: If my doctor orders a test or treatment, will my insurer refuse to pay for it?Denial of Insurance Claims

After all, an insurance company that routinely rejects recommended care could damage your health and finances.

The question becomes more pressing as many working Americans see their premiums rise as their benefits shrink.

Yet, how often insurance companies say no is a closely held secret.

There’s nowhere that a consumer or an employer can look up all insurers’ denial rates — let alone whether a particular company is likely to decline to pay for procedures or drugs that its plans appear to cover.

In collaboration with The Capitol Forum, ProPublica has been examining the hidden world of insurance denials.

A previous story detailed how one of the nation’s largest insurers flagged expensive claims for special scrutiny; a second story showed how a different top insurer used a computer program to bulk-deny claims for some common procedures with little or no review.

Cigna, one of the country’s largest insurers, has built a system that allows its doctors to instantly reject a claim on medical grounds without opening the patient file, leaving people with unexpected bills, according to corporate documents and interviews with former Cigna officials.

Over a period of two months last year, Cigna doctors denied over 300,000 requests for payments using this method, spending an average of 1.2 seconds on each case.

The insurance industry’s profit motive supersedes the mission to help people pay their medical bills.

In 2010, federal regulators were granted broad authority through the Affordable Care Act to require that insurers provide information on their denials. This data could have meant a sea change in transparency for consumers.

But more than a decade later, the federal government has collected only a fraction of what it’s entitled to. And what information it has released, experts say, is so crude, inconsistent, and confusing that it’s essentially meaningless.

Why? Because healthcare insurers fund massive bribes (aka “election contributions”) to politicians at all levels of government. They want the information to be hidden.

The national group for state insurance commissioners gathers a more detailed, reliable trove of information. ProPublica requested the data from every state’s insurance department, but none provided it.

Two states collect their information on denials and make it public, but their data covers only a tiny subset of health plans serving a small number of people.

The main trade groups for health insurance companies, AHIP (formerly known as America’s Health Insurance Plans) and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, say the industry supports transparency and complies with government disclosure requirements.

Yet the groups have often argued against expanding this reporting, saying the burdens it would impose on insurance companies outweigh consumers’ benefits.

You just read excuse #1. “It costs too much.” Then when #1 doesn’t work, they do the Trumpian dance and come up with excuse #2::

“Denial rates are not directly comparable from one health plan to another and could lead consumers to make inaccurate conclusions on the robustness of the health plan,” Kelly Parsons, director of media relations for the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, said in an email.

And then they follow up with #3, #4, and #5. Most claims are paid; there are errors, and doctors provide incomplete information.

The trade groups stress that a substantial majority of patient claims are approved and that there can be good reasons — including errors and incomplete information from doctors — for some to be denied.

Not to be content, we are treated to five more excuses, #6 (no context), #7 (doesn’t indicate quality), #8 (doesn’t say why), and #9 (doesn’t tell what happened after) and #10 (what the patient or doctor should do).

“More abstract data about percentages of claims that are approved or denied have no context and are not a reliable indicator of quality — it doesn’t address why a claim was or was not approved, what happened after the claim was not approved the first time, or how a patient or their doctor can help ensure a claim will be approved,”

AHIP spokesperson Kristine Grow said in a written response to questions from ProPublica. “Americans deserve information and data relevant to their health and circumstances.”

I’ll leave the pious generalities to remind you that the insurance industry is one of the most data-driven industries on earth. Insurance companies employ well-paid actuaries who spend their lives determining such things as:
  1. The likelihood of a claim
  2. The cost variables of each claim
  3. The coverages have proved to be and are likely to be the most expensive, and their cost?
  4. The claims that have been and should be denied, based on such factors as immediate cost, long-term cost, likely results of lawsuits and their costs, details that affect costs, subrogation probabilities, etc., etc. etc?
In short, insurance companies already have all the data at their fingertips, but they don’t want you to know them.

The limited government data suggests that insurers deny between 10% and 20% of the claims they receive. Aggregate numbers, however, shed no light on how denial rates may vary from plan to plan or across types of medical services.

Some advocates say insurers have a good reason to dodge transparency.

Refusing payment for medical care and drugs has become a staple of their business model, in part because they know customers appeal less than 1% of denials, said Wendell Potter, who oversaw Cigna’s communications team for more than a decade before leaving the industry in 2008 to become a consumer advocate.

“That’s money left on the table that the insurers keep,” he said.

The insurers do what they know they can get away with. That is what keeps PI (personal injury) attorneys in the business. If you watch TV, you might have noticed the hundreds of ads by lawyers who tell you that if they don’t collect, you pay nothing for their services. How can they all do that? How can they give away millions of dollars worth of services and still pocket millions of dollars for themselves? They know insurance companies too often deny claims that never should be denied. The insurance companies know it, too. When lawyers enter the picture, they feel confident they will collect. The insurance company knows it will lose. So they settle. It’s a multi-billion dollar game. But aren’t those billions of dollars in settlements costly? Yes, but less expensive than paying the claims that should have been borne in the first place.

At least one insurer disputes this. In an email, Potter’s former employer, Cigna, said that his “unsubstantiated opinions” don’t reflect the company’s business model.

In a separate written statement, Cigna said it passes on the money it saves “by lowering the cost of health care services and reducing wasteful spending” to the employers who hire it to administer their plans or insure their workers.

Blah, blah, blah. More double-talk. The undeniable fact remains that denying claims while paying their attorneys, paying claimants’ attorneys, paying settlements, and even paying penalties is still more profitable than paying rightful claims. They know it because their well-paid actuaries tell them.

The few morsels insurers have served up on denials stand in stark contrast to the avalanche of information they’ve divulged in recent years on other fronts, often in response to government mandates.

Starting last year, for example, insurers began disclosing the prices they’ve negotiated to pay medical providers for most services.

Experts say it’ll take similar mandates to make insurers cough up information on denials, partly because they fear plans with low denial rates would be a magnet for people already ailing.

Insurance companies want to cover you if you never need them. If you need them, they don’t want you.

“Health plans would never do that voluntarily, would give you what their claim denial rates are, because they don’t want to attract sicker people,” said Mila Kofman, who leads the District of Columbia’s Affordable Care Act exchange and previously served as Maine’s superintendent of insurance.

They are in the business to make a profit, not to help people. Compare the profit motivation of an insurance company with the motivation of, for example, Medicare, the sole purpose of which is to aid sick people. It’s an attitudinal thing. To Medicare, you are a patient. To an insurance company, you are a customer. To Medicare, you have medical problems. To insurance companies, you have costly claims.

About 85% of people with insurance who responded to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey said they want regulators to compel insurers to disclose how often they deny claims.

In September 2009, amid a roiling national debate over health care, the California Nurses Association made a startling announcement: Three of the state’s six largest health insurers had each denied 30% or more of the claims submitted to them in the first half of the year.

Think about that astounding 30% denial rate. Can you imagine so many erroneous claims?

California insurers instantly said the figures were misleading, inflated by claims submitted in error or for patients ineligible for coverage.

But wait! The insurance companies complained the reporting would be too burdensome, which means they didn’t yet have the information. They would need to gather it. But if they still need to gather the information, how do they know the figures are misleading?

The Affordable Care Act was a game changer when it came to policing insurers and pushing them to be more transparent.

The law aimed at insurers’ practice of excluding people with preexisting conditions, the most flagrant type of denial, and required companies offering plans on the marketplaces created under the law to disclose their prices and detail their benefits.

A less-noticed section of the law demanded transparency from a much broader group of insurers about how many claims they turned down, and it put the Department of Health and Human Services in charge of making this information public.

The disclosure requirements apply to health plans sold on the new marketplaces and employer plans that cover most Americans.

The law’s proponents in the Obama administration said they envisioned a flow of accurate, timely information that would empower consumers and help regulators spot problematic insurers or practices.

That’s not what happened.

The federal government didn’t start publishing data until 2017 and thus far has only demanded numbers for plans on the federal marketplace known as Healthcare.gov. About 12 million people get coverage from such plans — less than 10% of those with private insurance.

Federal regulators say they eventually intend to compel health plans outside the Obamacare exchanges to release details about denials but have made no move.

Within the limited universe of Healthcare.gov, Kaiser Family Foundation’s analyses show that insurers, on average, deny almost 1 in 5 claims and that some reject more than 1 in 3 each year.

But there are red flags suggesting insurers may not report their figures consistently. Companies’ denial rates vary more than expected, ranging from as low as 2% to as high as almost 50%.

Plans’ denial rates often fluctuate dramatically from year to year. A gold-level plan from Oscar Insurance Company of Florida rejected 66% of payment requests in 2020, then turned down just 7% in 2021.

That insurer’s parent company, Oscar Health, was co-founded by Joshua Kushner, the younger brother of former President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

That doesn’t sound suspicious at all. Nor does the fact that Jared received $2 BILLION unexplained dollars from the Saudis, but that’s another story.

An Oscar Health spokesperson said in an email that the 2020 results weren’t a fair reflection of the company’s business “for a variety of reasons” but wouldn’t say why.

A reasonable guess would be that the “variety of reasons” features, “We made up the numbers, and when they didn’t look good, we made up new numbers.”

“We closely monitor our overall denial rates, and they have remained comfortably below 20% over the last few years, including the 2020-2021 time period,” the spokesperson wrote.

It’s not clear what is “comfortable”about a 20% denial rate. When you buy insurance, do you feel good about “only” 20% of your claims being denied?

The federal government provides numbers on insurers’ denials of claims for services from what the industry calls “in-network” medical providers, those with contracts with the insurer.

But it doesn’t include claims for care outside those networks. Patients often shoulder more costs for out-of-network services, ramping up the import of these denials.

In recent years, doctors and patients have complained bitterly that insurers require them to get approval in advance for an increasing array of services, causing delays and, in some instances, harm.

Medicare doesn’t require prior approval, but private insurance does. Why? Because prior approval provides an additional venue for denial of claims, and almost never is litigated.

The government, however, hasn’t compelled insurers to reveal how many requests for prior authorization they get or what percent they deny.

These and other specifics — particularly about which procedures and treatments insurers reject most — would be necessary to turn the government’s data into a viable tool to help consumers choose health plans, said Eric Ellsworth, the director of the health data strategy at Consumers’ Checkbook, which designs such tools.

The U.S. Department of Labor regulates over 2 million health plans, including many in which employers pay directly for workers’ health care coverage rather than buying it from insurance companies.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, roughly two-thirds of American workers with insurance depend on such plans.

In short, employers of 2/3 of American workers are finding the insurance industry so profitable (and so crooked) they have decided to dip into that trough themselves. And how many employees are willing to risk suing their own employer for denying a claim?

In July 2016, an arm of the Labor Department proposed rules requiring these plans to reveal a laundry list of never-before-disclosed information, including how many claims they turned down.

In addition, the agency said it was considering whether to demand the dollar amount of the denied care cost, as well as a breakdown of why plans turned down claims or denied behavioral health services.

The disclosures were necessary to “remedy the current failure to collect data about a large sector of the health plan market,” as well as to satisfy mandates in the Affordable Care Act and provide critical information for agency oversight, a Labor Department factsheet said.

Trade groups for employers, including retailers and the construction industry, immediately pushed back.

Of course, they did. The companies have a captive audience –people held captive not only by their jobs but by ignorance of the facts — so the employers fight like hell to keep things as they are.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said complying with the proposal would take an amount of work not justified by “the limited gains in transparency and enforcement ability.”

How do they know what will be “the limited gains in transparency and enforecement ability”? They know because they know how much the insurance companies have been cheating  customers.

The powerful business group made it sound like having to make the disclosures could spark insurance Armageddon: Employers might cut back benefits or “eliminate health and welfare benefits.”

Fact: Those so-called “benefits” are not benefits at all. They are paid for by the employees in that they are deducted from employees’ salaries. How? The companies determine the cost of those “benefits” when determining what to pay people. The employer knows that if he pays someone a $50,000 salary, his actual cost must include his share of FICA, healthcare insurance, retirement, and all other so-called “benefits.”  That $50,000 salary comes to more than $60,000. When hiring for a $50,000 salary, the employer has to ask himself, “Is this guy worth more than $60,000?

Trade groups for health insurance companies, which often act as administrators for employers that pay directly for workers’ health care, joined with business groups to blast the proposal.

The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association called the mandated disclosures “burdensome and expensive.” AHIP questioned whether the Labor Department had the legal authority to collect the data and urged the agency to withdraw the idea “in its entirety.”

“Burdensome and expensive,” not because they don’t already have the data. They have them but they don’t want anyone to know them.

The proposal also drew opposition from another, less expected quarter: unions. Under some collective bargaining agreements, unions co-sponsor members’ health plans and would have also been on the hook for the new reporting requirements.

The AFL-CIO argued the requirements created a higher disclosure standard for plans overseen by the Labor Department.

To be fair and avoid confusion, the group said, the Labor Department should put its rules on ice until federal health regulators adopted equivalent ones for plans this proposal didn’t cover.

That’s the “It’s unfair to tell us to do the right thing if the other guys don’t do the right thing.” See, it’s all about “fairness.” And then, when regulators “adopt equivalent plans, we’ll offer another excuse. We have an endless supply of excuses.”

By the time the Labor Department stopped accepting feedback, Donald Trump had been elected president.

One trade association for large employers pointed out that the Affordable Care Act, which partly drove the new rules, was “a law that the incoming Administration and the incoming leadership of the 115th Congress have vowed to repeal, delay, dismantle, and otherwise not enforce.

The law survived the Trump administration, but the Labor Department’s transparency push didn’t. The agency withdrew its proposal in September 2019

A Labor Department spokesperson said the Biden administration has yet to make a plan to revive it.

By this time, you’re beginning to see a pattern. Those whose income relies on claims denial — insurance companies, politicians, unions, and employers — all fight against revealing the data to the public. The profit motive does not burden the Affordable Care Act and Medicare. Although Medicare does deny some claims, most of that is because of involvement with an unproven drug or procedure. And much of the rest has to do with the false belief that FICA finances claim payments. But FICA pays for nothing. All Medicare payments are financed by new dollar creation. Every dollar you pay into FICA is destroyed upon receipt by the federal government. (For an explanation of that startling fact, click here.)

Ultimately, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, a group for the top elected or appointed state insurance regulators, has assembled the most robust details about insurance denials.

The association’s data encompasses more plans than the federal information, is more consistent, and captures more specifics, including numbers of out-of-network denials, information about prior authorizations, and denial rates for pharmacy claims. All states except New York and North Dakota participate.

Yet, consumers need access. The commissioners’ association only publishes national aggregate statistics, keeping the rest of its cache secret.

When ProPublica requested detailed data from each state’s insurance department, none would hand it over.

When even the government won’t disclose data like out-of-network denials, denial rates for pharmacy claims and other non-personal infomation, you know, for certain, that the data are hidden for a nefarious reason. You can be positive there is something to hide that should not be hidden.

More than 30 states said insurers had submitted the information under the authority commissioners are granted to examine insurers’ conduct. And under their states’ codes, they said, examination materials must be kept confidential.

The commissioners association said state insurance regulators use the information to compare companies, flag outliers, and track trends.

Regulators can make that comparison, but you are not allowed to. What do the regulators do with the information? Apparently, nothing.

Birny Birnbaum, a longtime insurance watchdog who serves on the group’s panel of consumer representatives, said the association’s approach reflects how state insurance regulators have been captured by the insurance industry’s demands for secrecy.

“Many seem to view their roles as protectors of industry information, as opposed to enforcers of public information laws,” Birnbaum said in an email.

That is why the insurance industry is so lavish with its bribes.

Connecticut and Vermont compile their own figures and make them publicly accessible. Connecticut began reporting information on denials first, adding these numbers to its annual insurer report card in 2011.

Vermont demands more details, requiring insurers that cover more than 2,000 Vermonters to publicly release prior authorization and prescription drug information that is similar to what the state insurance commissioners collect.

Perhaps most usefully, insurers have to separate claims denied because of administrative problems — many of which will be resubmitted and paid — from denials that have “member impact.” These involve services rejected on medical grounds or because they are contractually excluded.

Mike Fisher, Vermont’s state health care advocate, said there’s little indication consumers or employers are using the state’s information, but he still thinks the prospect of public scrutiny may have affected insurers’ practices.

The most recent data shows Vermont plans had denial rates between 7.7% and 10.26%, considerably lower than the average for plans on Healthcare.gov.

“I suspect that’s not a coincidence,” Fisher said. “Shining a light on things helps.”

SUMMARY The insurance industry bribes the politicians not to reveal statistics on claim denial. The reason” Claim denial is an integral part of the insurance industry business model. Too many denials must come not for medical reasons or for reasons the insurance industry wants you to know. They happen for profit reasons. A comprehensive Medicare plan for every man, woman, and child in America is a threat to the insurance industry. They wrongly claim that somehow, privately funded insurance is better than federally funded insurance. There is no functional reason why America needs privately-owned, for-profit insurance companies that collect medical dollars but provide no medical services. It is a costly scam. The insurance companies, in essence, tell you, “Give me your healthcare dollars. We’ll give some of them to doctors, nurses, and hospitals and keep as much as we can for ourselves.” What’s the purpose of having middlemen take some of your hard-earned medical dollars? It would be far better for the federal government to tell you, “You don’t have to give us anything. We’ll create the dollars and pay them to the doctors, nurses, and hospitals. It won’t cost you a cent. You and your doctors will make the medical decisions. We’ll just pay for them.” That is the way medicine should and could operate. When Bernie Sanders offered his Medicare for All plan, even his “weak tea” version of coverage was denounced as unaffordable and socialism. It is neither. The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, can afford anything that requires dollars, and has no need to collect taxes to pay for it. The federal government pays for everything by creating new dollars, ad hoc. And forget about that ignorant “socialism” claim:

Socialism social and economic doctrine that calls for public rather than private ownership or control of property and natural resources.

Merely paying for things, which all governments do, is not socialism. America needs a comprehensive, no deductible, leaning-over-backwards-to- be-generous form of Medicare for every man, woman, and child in America. No public purpose is served by private insurance companies, who not only extract dollars from the public for no common good, but require government supervision to (failingly) prevent fraud on the public. Further, they enrich the lawyers who must sue them. None of this benefits the public and all of it costs the public. A federally funded, comprehensive, no-dedictible Medicare for every man, woman, and child in America, would cost nothing, suffer from much less criminality, and in fact add growth dollars to the economy. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Your cost for federal debt ignorance

Ignorance is expensive. Used car dealers prove that to customers every day.
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Caitlin Owens
Unfortunately, so do writers like Caitlin Owens, who is described as “a health care reporter for Axios. She covers health care politics, policy, and business,” but seemingly doesn’t understand federal finances. Quick intro: Unlike state/local governments, the U.S. federal government is Monetarily Sovereign. It has the infinite ability to create its sovereign currency, the U.S.  dollar. It never, unintentionally, can run short of dollars. Federal taxes do not fund federal spending. Bills are paid by creating new dollars, ad hoc. Even if the federal government collected zero taxes, it could continue to pay its bills, forever. Keep that in mind as you read what Owens wrote:

The next president’s $4 trillion problem Caitlin Owens / 6.26.2023

Whoever wins the White House next year will quickly face a series of legislative deadlines with impossible price tags:

$3.6 trillion in tax cuts and $350 billion in Affordable Care Act subsidies are expiring. That’s after another debt-limit cliff.

Passing legislation that could be north of $4 trillion is “ridiculous when you already have debt that’s headed to record levels,” said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director at the CFRB.

The so-called “federal debt” is not debt, and it is not a financial problem. It is the total of deposits into Treasury Security accounts, which are easily paid off every day. The  government simply returns the dollars in those accounts to the account owners. No problem at all. No tax dollars are needed or involved.

Why it matters: The deadlines could force political horse-trading of epic proportions. Alternatively, gridlock or alarm over the nation’s debt may lead to Americans seeing higher taxes and fewer benefits.

There is  no reason for alarm. There is no reason for higher taxes. There is no reason for fewer benefits. This all is a con to make you think federal benefits to you are unaffordable.

The big picture: The 2024 election could very well be a rematch between the same two presidents who signed each measure into law.

Republicans’ 2017 tax law, and the enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies that Democrats first passed in 2021, are signature policy accomplishments for each party. They’re also both extremely polarizing and became law under party-line votes.

In the past, the coinciding expiration dates may have been fodder for a grand bargain in which both sides etched out wins — and still could be.

But the recent debt-limit fight showed that these days, even a crisis can barely force Democrats and Republicans to agree.

Between the lines: Most Democrats would happily extend the ACA subsidies. But allowing taxes to rise may be a tough political sell — especially since the party increasingly represents wealthier parts of the country.

The above paragraphs show that Ms. Owens believes federal taxes are necessary to fund federal spending. They aren’t. The federal government could, if it wished, pay a $10 trillion or a $100 trillion bill tomorrow merely by pressing a computer key.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan: “There is nothing to prevent the federal government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody.”

Former Federal Reserve 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.”

The debt-limit fight, mentioned by Ms. Owens, was a charade for the benefit of the public. The sole purpose of a debt limit is to convince the populace not to ask for federal benefits. Behind the scenes, the very rich, who control Washington, want the Gap between the rich and the rest to widen. The wider the Gap, the richer are the rich. (It’s called Gap Psychology) — the desire of the rich to become richer by widening the income/wealth/power Gap below them.) Federal benefits narrow the Gap, and the rich don’t want that.

Reality check: Budget hawks warn that the nation’s finances are on a disastrous path. Letting at least some of these policies expire — or finding a way to pay for extensions — would be the responsible course of action.

Reality check: The extensions could be paid for merely by passing a law that pays for the extension. That is how all federal debts are financed. Congress and the President simply pass laws.

Political horse-trading could increase the cost of a deal — if the limit on the state and local tax deduction is eliminated, for instance.

Increasing the deal’s cost would benefit America by pumping growth dollars into the economy. Gross Domestic Product = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports. Mathematically, the more the federal government spends, the more GDP grows.

Even one-party control of Congress and the White House wouldn’t necessarily make the process headache-free.

    • The nation’s debt level will only rise over the next two years, forcing Republicans to choose between raising taxes and dropping another $3.6 trillion onto the balance sheetaccording to an analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
    • “I think there will be a faction of the Republican party who would not want to go into a debate, even with significant tax cuts, if it would blow a hole” in the deficit,” Campbell said.
Again, Ms. Owens repeats the false trope that federal finances are like personal finances, where the “balance sheet” should be minimized. She gets this from that fountain of lies, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), an organization devoted to convincing you the federal government should spend less and tax the not-rich folks more. It’s called “austerity,” a formula for economic disaster. Ask any Euro nation how that has gone.

And while most Democrats would happily extend the ACA subsidies, and nearly all of them have criticized the Trump tax cuts as handouts to the wealthy, allowing taxes to rise may be a tough political sell — especially as the party increasingly represents wealthier parts of the country.

Raising federal taxes should be a hard sell because it’s unnecessary. The sole purposes of federal taxes are:
  1. To control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and by giving tax breaks to what the government hopes to encourage
  2. To create demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring dollars to be used for tax payments
Federal taxes do not fund federal spending.
    • “It could potentially be a really good deal for Democrats if they were to agree to extend the tax cuts and extend the ACA subsidies. Then they don’t get blamed for raising people’s taxes, and they get the subsidies,” former House Budget Committee Chairman John Yarmuth, a Democrat, told Axios.
It also would be a good deal for the economy because both steps would leave more growth dollars in the economy.

Yes, but: Budget hawks warn that the nation’s finances are on a disastrous path, and letting at least some of these policies expire or finding a way to pay for extensions would be the responsible course of action.

That is a bunch of BS. America’s finances are not on a disastrous path. Increased federal spending is absolutely necessary for economic growth. Here’s what happens when the federal government cuts spending to run a surplus.

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

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

There are also scenarios where political horse-trading could even increase the cost of a deal— like if the limit on the state and local tax deduction is eliminated or if Democrats successfully demand more of their preferred policies to more closely match the cost of extending the tax cuts.

Increasing “the cost of the deal” would add growth dollars to the economy. Remember that GDP = Federal  Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports formula. Increase federal spending and mathematically, you increase GDP because two terms in the formula (Federal Spending and Nonfederal Spending) will increase.

What we’re watching: One of the simplest ways to bring down the price tag of any of this would be to just pass temporary extensions.

There is no reason to bring down the price tag. None at all.
“I can’t imagine that any Congress is going to pass a bill that costs $4 trillion,” Yarmuth said. “My guess is if they did something, it would be a much shorter duration.”
But limiting the price tag by extending the measures for only a couple of years is “a horrible way to do tax policy,” Goldwein said.
“There are other ways to have a deal that would be fairer to both sides that don’t involve sticking the bill to our grandkids,” he added.
And so, the article ends with the oft-stated but totally BS notion that federal spending would be paid for by “our grandkids.” Anyone making that claim is demonstrating ignorance of federal finances or being intentionally deceptive. Federal spending is paid for by federal new money creation. The federal debt is paid for by returning T-security account deposits. Federal taxes pay for nothing. They are destroyed upon receipt. IN SUMMARY The nations finances are on a “disastrous path” only if one believes federal finances are like personal finances, which they are not. Federal taxes don’t fund federal spending; they remove growth dollars from the economy. So tax cuts are inherently good for the economy and for you. Unfortunately, the Trump tax  cuts mostly were gifts to the rich; they widened the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest. The Affordable Care acts (ironically called “Obamacare,” though Obama did virtually nothing to enable its passage), has benefitted millions of Americans. The rich hate it because it narrows the Gap  between the rich and the rest. Ignorance of federal financing is costly to those who currently benefit, or would benefit, from more federal spending, namely everyone in America, and most of the world’s population. Ms. Owens would serve her readers better if she learned the facts of Monetary Sovereignty and the diferences between federal financing and personal  financing. Her misstatements, and the mistatements of those who agree with her, cost you money. They widen the Gap between the very rich and the rest. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The Republican solution to student debt

Here is the Republican solution to student debt, as brought to you by the Libertarian Reason.com

Can Republicans Fix Student Debt? Unlike Democrats, Senate and House Republicans have released proposals that would actually tackle the root causes of increasing student loan debt. Emma Camp | 6.16.2023

As a long-awaited Supreme Court decision on President Joe Biden’s massive student loan forgiveness plan looms, Senate Republicans have unveiled a plan of their own to address the nation’s climbing student loan debt burden.

However, instead of promising blanket forgiveness, the Senate Republicans’ plan aims to reform how student loans are given out in the first place—seeking to direct students toward high-quality programs and limit access to schools that provide a poor return on students’ investment.

As you will see later in this “plan,” the Republicans believe the only purpose of attending college is to make more money. They measure “return on students’ investment” solely by the salaries students will receive after graduation.

The plan is composed of five separate bills. Three of the bills focus on ensuring that prospective borrowers are aware of the financial tradeoffs of taking out student loans and the financial outcomes for alumni of specific institutions.

The last two tackle the federal student loan system itself, cutting down the number of repayment plans and limiting the circumstances in which federal student loans can be given out.

The first bill in the package focuses on increasing transparency from colleges.

The bill seeks to require colleges and universities to provide a wide range of data on student outcomes and enrollment trends to the National Center for Education Statistics, which would create a database of this information aimed at helping prospective students make informed educational decisions.

Transparency is a good thing.

“Student outcomes” might have to do with graduation rates, dropout rates, advanced degrees, and employment after graduation. But they wouldn’t measure what students learn.

And most importantly, it doesn’t address the student loan indebtedness problem.

Can anyone tell me why a nation whose competitiveness relies on its young people to being educated wants to “limit the circumstances in which federal student loans can be given out?”

90+ Uncle Sam Money Illustrations, Royalty-Free Vector Graphics & Clip Art  - iStock | Taxes, Government spending, Uncle sam i want you If the Republicans ran a company, would they want to limit the circumstances in which the company could profit?

It’s absolutely nuts, especially since the U.S. federal government has infinite dollars.

The proposal’s second bill would require colleges and universities to use a standardized financial aid offer form to maximize transparency around the true cost of attending a given institution.

The third bill in the proposal has similar aims, requiring that students applying for federal student loans receive information detailing sample payments for their loans, as well as how long they would expect to be paying off their student loans and what income they can expect to make after graduating from a given school.

These two “solutions” are reasonable in that they provide borrowing information. But they still fall far short of solving the student loan indebtedness problem.

They merely say, “Here’s what it will cost you, and if you can’t afford it, don’t go to college or take out a loan.”

But the purpose of the student loan program is to enable more children to attend college, not to winnow down the number that can afford it.

The fourth bill cuts down on the number of repayment plans available to borrowers.

The bill would consolidate the host of current repayment options down to two—a standard 10-year repayment plan and a Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE) repayment plan with minor changes.

The REPAYE plan is an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, which currently allows borrowers to pay a monthly amount fixed to their income, achieving forgiveness after at least 20 years of payments.

Importantly, the fourth bill also cuts off access to federal student loans for students attending programs that do not result in median earnings higher than those of adults who only have a high school diploma—or a bachelor’s degree, in the case of a graduate program.

To Republican minds, the purpose of attending college is to make more money. Otherwise, it supposedly is a waste of time and money.

The right-wing mentality says that the arts — music, dance, painting, theater, writing, sculpture, etc., — should be measured by how much money you can make from them.

History and philosophy also should be measured by the money you can make, not by their contributions to human culture. Mathematics, too. And teaching. And physics.

To the right-wingers, if your education doesn’t pay you more money, the government shouldn’t help you, no matter how valuable to America it might be. WHY?

Most importantly, the Republicans assume college has no social benefits. But, the 18 through 24 age period is a maturation time, a time to go from childhood to adulthood.

College provides the non-financial benefits of learning about the world along with other young people of like age.

Again, the Republicans measure everything by dollars, while falsely claiming the government doesn’t have enough dollars.

The final bill in the package would eliminate Graduate PLUS Loans—a type of federal student loan whose borrowing cap was removed in 2006.

The removal of this cap has been directly connected to a rapid increase in graduate school tuition, as—unlike for undergraduate programs—graduate students were able to borrow an unlimited amount from the federal government, incentivizing universities to jack up prices.

The function of the student loan program is to help more students afford college. So, of course, colleges have more room to “jack up” prices with more students able to pay. That is a fundamental result of affordability.

The government must pump more growth dollars into the economy when colleges increase prices. That benefits the economy.

Capping loans merely means that fewer students will be able to afford advanced degrees. How does that benefit America?  It doesn’t. It simply reduces the number of highly educated Americans and widens the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

Notably, House Republicans have also introduced their own legislation aiming to reform federal student loans.

Their proposal would provide “targeted” student debt relief to those who have consistently made payments but have seen their debt increase anyway.

The GOP (aka, “the party of the rich”) wants to give “targeted” relief to those who were able to afford debt payments, conveniently leaving out those who were financially weaker and unable to make payments.

The proposal would also reform existing income-driven repayment plans and mandate considerable warnings for borrowers before student loan payments resume in October.

“Colleges and universities using the availability of federal loans to increase their tuitions have left too many students drowning in debt without a path for success,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy (R–La.) in a Wednesday statement.

No, Sen. Cassidy, the government has left students drowning in debt by lending them money that should have been given.

Grades K-12 have been government supported for centuries. Grades 13+ also should be government-funded, not just at community schools, but top schools, too.

The more kids who decide to go for advanced degrees, the better off America will be.

“Unlike President Biden’s student loan schemes, this plan addresses the root causes of the student debt crisis. It puts downward pressure on tuition and empowers students to make the educational decisions that put them on track to academically and financially succeed.”

No, it cleverly disempowers poorer students and widens the education gap between the rich and the rest. It does nothing about the “root causes of the student debt crisis.”

The Republicans’ plans offer a constructive solution to the problems that plague the federal student loan system. Rather than focusing on short-term solutions—like Biden’s $400 billion student loan forgiveness boondoggle—Republicans’ plans target the sloppy government policies which directly cause rising student debt.

In particular, the Senate’s attempt to eliminate Graduate PLUS Loans and both plans’ proposals to reform income-driven repayment plans take direct aim at some of the most fiscally irresponsible federal student loan policies.

To Republicans, “fiscally irresponsible” means money going to the poor and middle classes. Notably, it does not mean the tax loopholes given to the rich.

While both bills face an unlikely path toward actually becoming law, they provide a clear template for what a sensible response to the student loan crisis looks like—and policies that are actually likely to lower the cost of college, not raise it.

Except, the bills ignore the fundamental purpose of education in America: To improve America.

The original Colonists understood that. Sadly, today’s inferior crop of politicians is so taken with what’s in it for them that they completely ignore the question, “What’s in it for America.”

THE ROOT CAUSES OF THE STUDENT DEBT CRISIS

Educating young people benefits America. That is why the American colonies mandated free education for our children.

And that came when reading, writing, and arithmetic were much less important to our agrarian society than they are today.

Yet, taxpayers willingly bore the cost of education.

Today, primary education and especially advanced education are far more critical. The world has advanced, and to remain competitive, America must rely on its educated young people.

There are three root causes of the student debt crisis:

  1. Attending college is expensive. Many families find tuition, food and lodging, books, and materials unaffordable.
  2. Not having a job is expensive. Many children can’t afford college because their families need them to stay home and work full-time. Even with a free ride that includes everything in point #1, some kids can’t afford not to work full time.
  3. The federal government, which has infinite dollars, lends rather than giving money to the students.

The latter point is an extension of the false belief that our Monetarily Sovereign government’s finances are like personal finances.

The ignorant idea that the federal government spends too much contradicts the simple formula: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports.

GDP is the measure of our economy, so by formula, increased Federal Spending grows our economy, and decreased Federal Spending shrinks our economy. Simple algebra.

Thus, the Federal Government never should lend to Americans; it only should give to Americans.

The student debt crisis results from requiring students to borrow from the government rather than receiving dollars with no payback requirement.

The government neither needs nor even uses the dollars that are paid back. The solution to the student debt crisis is straightforward. Just as local governments fund local schools, the federal government should fund colleges and universities.

In fact, the federal government can do it more easily than can local governments because the federal government uniquely is Monetarily Sovereign; it cannot run short of dollars.

The federal government even should pay students a salary for attending college, so the students’ college attendance does not penalize the student’s family monetarily.

It is beyond stupid for the U.S. government to take dollars from students when America’s competitive position depends on our young people being educated, and the government has infinite money to pay for their education.

Of course, a government that refuses to recognize Monetary Sovereignty and the formula GDP = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports is already beyond stupid, so the extra stupidity is to be expected.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY