Even Warren Buffett gets MS wrong. Is it so hard to understand?

Because the populace has been pumped with wrong information about Monetary Sovereignty (MS), what should be easily understood is widely misunderstood. Does even the great Warren Buffett not get it? He understands federal finance and strongly favors Social Security, yet does even he not know how that program is financed? We have tried to make the simple even simpler with such posts as:
  1. “Airlines are 3 trillion in debt. The Monetary Sovereignty of Airline Loyalty Programs.”  
  2. “The genius of the board game, Monopoly®”,
  3. “Historical claims the Federal Debt is a “ticking time bomb.” OK, it’s just a week after the last update, but you simply must read the last entry (2/8/2024).”
The Miles and Points Roller Coaster - Trips With Tykes
Airlines are sovereign over their mileage points. They cannot run short of points and can give them any value they choose. They are in “points debt” because they issue more points than they receive back from customers.
At its core, Monetary Sovereignty is dead simple. It merely says:
  1. The U.S. federal government created an arbitrary number of dollars and gave them an arbitrary value by passing laws.
  2. The government retains the power to pass infinite laws, create infinite dollars, and give dollars any values it chooses.
  3. Because of these powers, the government cannot run short of dollars. It pays all its obligations with newly created dollars and does not need tax dollars.
  4. Even if the federal government didn’t collect a penny in taxes, it could continue spending forever. No payment, however large, is a burden on the federal government or on federal taxpayers.
The posts gave examples of Monetary Sovereignty with airline mileage points, Monopoly dollars, and store coupons. In each case, the issuer cannot run short of the points/dollars/coupons because all are numbers on computers typed at the creator’s whim.
Warren Buffett | Biography, Books, Worth, & Facts | Britannica
Warren Buffett
Yet, despite that simplicity, even great financial brains seem confused:

A shareholder once asked Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger if Social Security is a ‘government-sponsored Ponzi scheme for retirees’ — their answer was received with laughter and applause. Story by Jing Pan

Social Security has long been a subject of intense discussion in America, but investing legend Warren Buffett’s position on the issue is unmistakably clear.

During Buffett’s company, Berkshire Hathaway’s annual shareholders meeting in 2005, an audience member posed a blunt question: “I’m asking for your opinion on Social Security. Shall we call it the government-sponsored Ponzi scheme for retirees?”

Buffett’s answer was wrong.

He explained that, while it was proposed as insurance because that was “the only way [President Franklin] Roosevelt could get it passed,” Social Security is essentially a “transfer payment by the people who are in their productive years to the people who are past their productive years.” 

And Buffett liked that mechanism.

“I think that the obligation for the people who do well in this society is to provide a reasonable level of sustenance for those beyond their productive years,” he said.

No, no, no. Social Security is nothing like “a transfer payment from people in their productive years to people past their productive years.” And while he may imply there is a moral obligation for the productive people to aid those past productive years, that is not how Social Security operates.
No, Target Is Not Giving You A 50% Off Everything Coupon For Liking A Page On Facebook – Consumerist
Target is sovereign over its coupons. It cannot run short of coupons; it makes all the rules re. its coupons, and it runs “coupon deficits” (receives fewer coupons than it issues) and is in “coupon debt” (the total coupons issued is more than the coupons received.)
If it did, two things would be necessary:

1. Social Security would have to be supported by more affluent people, which it is not. Even the FICA tax, which ostensibly supports SS, is collected mostly from medium-to-lower salaried people  — and only from the first $160K of salary.

I wonder whether Mr. Buffett collects any salary at all. If he obtains all his income via stock gains, dividends, interest, and other non-salary sources, he doesn’t pay FICA. No “transfer” there.

2. More importantly, and contrary to popular belief, FICA does not fund Social Security (or Medicare.) All federal spending is funded by newly created dollars.

Tax dollars, which begin, in the M2 money supply measure, suddenly disappear from any money supply measure when they hit the U.S. Treasury. They effectively are destroyed.

Ask yourself , “How much money can the federal government spend in any given year? Given that the government has the infinite ability to create dollars, how many dollars can it spend? Right, it can spend infinite dollars. It never can run short. What is any number added to infinity? Infinity. Those FICA dollars disappear into an infinite dollar hole, never heard from again. The fake Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds, which supposedly receive FICA dollars and spend those dollars on benefits, do no such thing. In fact, they aren’t even trust funds. They are bookkeeping mechanisms that only record inflows and outflows. They aren’t “trust funds” if the federal government can add to them, take from them, or revise them in any way and at any time it chooses? If you go to any federal finance website, you will see how the government implies or even states outright that federal taxes fund federal spending. Yet, clearly, this isn’t true. Even if the federal government collected zero taxes, it could continue spending forever. That is the reality of all large Monetarily Sovereign entities. Consider the European Union, which is sovereign over the euro:

Press Conference: Mario Draghi, President of the ECB, 9 January 2014 Question: I am wondering: can the ECB ever run out of money? Mario Draghi: Technically, no. We cannot run out of money.

United States one-dollar bill - Wikipedia
The federal government is sovereign over its “coupons,” aka dollars. It cannot run short of dollars; it makes all the rules re. its dollars, and it runs “dollar deficits” (receives fewer dollars than it issues) and is in ” debt” (the total dollars issued is more than the dollars received.)
No large Monetarily Sovereign nation can run short of its own sovereign currency — unless it wants to. Why would it want to? To foster the false belief that benefits to the middle- and lower-income groups are unaffordable and unsustainable without benefit cuts or tax increases. That is the basis for the Big Lie: “Social Security and Medicare can’t continue unless we cut your benefits or increase your taxes.” Who benefits from the Big Lie: The rich who run America. They are rich because of a wide financial Gap between them and the rest of us. The wider the Gap, the richer they are. There are two ways the rich widen the Gap:
  1. They increase their net income with tax dodges for which they bribe politicians.
  2. They reduce your net income by falsely claiming that benefits are unaffordable and unsustainable. They bribe the media and politicians to tell that lie.
Although Mr. Buffett seems to try to claim the high ground by “complaining” that his secretary pays a higher tax rate than he does, it’s hard to believe he doesn’t understand the realities of Monetary Sovereignty. Therefore, I believe he intentionally lies about Social Security being a “transfer payment by the people who are in their productive years to the people who are past their productive years.” Sadly, you receive the Big Lie from three groups the rich bribe: Politicians, news media, and educators. And there are the lies coming from the rich, themselves. That Niagara Falls of false information drowns out the truth, which is why the simplicity of Monetary Sovereignty is so difficult for many people to understand. 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

Airlines are 3 trillion in debt. The Monetary Sovereignty of airline loyalty programs.

Frightening headline? It shouldn’t be. Here’s a bit of context:

Airlines don’t disclose how many miles are outstanding or the value used to calculate these liabilities. However, if we assume a valuation of 1 cent per outstanding mile, loyalty program members would have around 3 trillion outstanding miles.

Some economists, politicians, and media talking heads might tell you it means the airlines are seriously in debt. OK, that “3 trillion” is not dollars; it’s miles or points. But there is a point (pun intended) to be made.

Travelers be warned: your air miles may be at risk  by Jenny Surane, Justing Backman, and Bloomberg May 19, 2021, at 6:54 AM EDT

Frequent flyers, consider yourselves warned: Sitting on a pile of unused airline miles could cost you.

Liabilities tied to the five most valuable airline-loyalty programs in the U.S. soared almost 12% to $27.5 billion last year, according to new analysis by LendingTree Inc.’s consumer-finance website ValuePenguin.

Airlines looking to shore up their balance sheets could reduce the value of those rewards or reinstate policies that allow miles or points to expire, the firm warned.

If the airlines wanted to reduce their mileage “debt,” they arbitrarily could reduce the value of their mileage reward points or allow miles to expire. They are mileage-points sovereign. As the issuer of mileage points, the airlines can do anything they wish with those points. They can issue as many as they wish, increase or reduce the value, or void them simply by pressing computer keys. If the Airlines felt generous, they could give you a few million mileage points. Or if they felt stingy, they could “tax” you points by reducing their value. Suddenly, flying to your favorite city would cost you double the number of points you thought. Effectively, that would be a 50% “wealth” tax on your point holdings. Or they could tell you to use all your points by December 31st at which time the points would be worthless. The effect would be like a tax on you. The airlines are to mileage points as the U.S. federal government is to U.S. dollars. By giving out more points than they receive, the airlines run “points deficits”; cumulatively, the airlines have “points debt.” The airlines create points by pressing computer keys. Nothing prevents the airlines from pressing keys, forever. The U.S. government creates dollars by pressing computer keys. nothing stops the U.S. government from pressing keys, forever. Being points sovereign, the airlines never can run short of mileage points. The U.S. government, being Monetarily Sovereign, never can run short of dollars. The airlines never borrow points. The government borrows dollars.

“Especially in a time where airlines have gone through such financial issues, it would be easy to see that they would look at some sort of devaluation of the miles and points as a way to make up a little bit of financial ground,” Matt Schulz, LendingTree’s chief credit analyst, said in an interview.

“I would suspect we might see something like that going forward.”

This demonstrates the total control a Monetarily Sovereign entity has over its currency, whether airline points or dollars. The airlines create all the rules re. points. The government creates all the rules (i.e. laws) regarding dollars.

At the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, Delta, American, and United pledged their loyalty programs as collateral for bonds as the virus and resulting government restrictions sapped travel demand. Such deals could prevent any material changes to the programs, said Joe DeNardi, an analyst with Stifel Financial Corp., who follows airline loyalty programs closely.

United, for its part, doesn’t see currency devaluation as a handy tool to lower that accounting liability, said Michael Covey, managing director of the loyalty program at the airline.

Yes, it’s an accounting liability, but not a real liability because the airlines have total control over its value. They arbitrarily can create points by pushing computer keys, or they could eliminate the points altogether. Goodbye, “points debt.” Does an airline owe someone a billion points? No problem. They can just type 1,000,000,000 into a computer and Voila! Here are the billion points. Does the federal government owe someone a billion dollars? No problem. Just type the number into a computer and the dollars come into existence. Think about that the next time someone tells you that Medicare or Social Security are running short of money.

A decade ago, revenue-based airline programs (rather than mileage-based) were fairly uncommon in the U.S. JetBlue was one of the first U.S. airlines to launch a revenue-based program when it revamped its program in 2009. Southwest followed with a program “enhancement” in 2011.

Then, the big airlines jumped on the bandwagon. Delta transitioned to a revenue-based system in 2015, and American Airlines and United quickly followed suit. Now, almost all major U.S. airlines operate a revenue-based program.

There again is that total control a monetary sovereign has over its currency. The airlines arbitrarily went from awarding mileage points to awarding revenue points.

However, programs differ a bit in how they award miles.

For better or worse, the three biggest U.S. airlines have similar mileage earning systems. General members earn 5 miles per dollar of eligible spending on travel with the airline.

Elite members earn a bonus on this base earning, with all three programs topping out at 11 miles per dollar for top-tier elites.

On Dec. 9, 2021, Delta became the first domestic airline to make basic economy fares ineligible for mileage earning. Basic economy flyers will no longer earn SkyMiles or Elite Qualifying Miles, Dollars, or Segments.

Again, the above demonstrates the total control by a monetary sovereign. Delta simply made the change by fiat. The federal government can, and often has, arbitrarily changed the value of the U.S. dollar. The “Nixon shock” was an arbitrary move by President Nixon to end the convertibility of dollars into gold. Suddenly, the dollar was no longer worth 1/35th of an ounce of gold. If airlines made the same kind of change, suddenly airline points would no longer be worth 1 cent or 1.5 cents each. The “problem” of the “points debt” would disappear.

Selling frequent-flyer points to banks Airlines make money from loyalty programs by selling frequent-flyer points to banks, which then award them to credit card holders as purchase rewards.

The banks pay airlines 1 to 1.5 cents per mile, plus a bonus when new customers sign up for their branded credit card.

By selling their loyalty program frequent flyer miles to banks, credit card companies, car rental firms, hotels, and supermarkets, the airlines have found an almost guaranteed way to make a profit from their tickets.

In effect, most major airlines have a business model which is more like a bank than a transport company.

No, it’s not more like a bank. It’s more like a Monetarily Sovereign nation — Canada, Mexico, the UK, Australia, Japan, China, and yes, the United States — all of whom can create andvprice their currencies at will (unlike monetarily non-sovereign entities like cities, counties, states, euro nations, businesses, you, and me.) This is the airline profitability program:
  1. The airlines create points from thin air. They create as many points as they wish at virtually no cost.
  2. They sell those points to credit card companies for whatever price they can extract from the companies.
  3. They also give points to passengers as a temptation to continue using the airline.
  4. Airlines lose money by moving passengers. All their profits come from loyalty programs, which allow the airlines to print money quite literally, which, is exactly what the U.S. government does with dollars.
  5. Of course, airlines have to offer travel in exchange for points, so that is a cost of the program, but:
  6. Airlines control how many points each flight costs passengers. So, high-demand days cost far more points than other days. This way, the airlines dissuade passengers from using points on those days when they can sell seats for dollars.
  7. Finally, not all points are redeemed. Those not redeemed are free money to the airlines.
This shows you that Monetary Sovereignty is everywhere, though the public is kept in the dark. (See: “The genius of the board game, Monopoly.”) When a retailer issues coupons, they essentially issue money in lieu of a price reduction. The retailer is sovereign over the coupons and can issue as many coupons as he wishes and make them any value he wishes. All outstanding coupons could be counted as retailers’ “debt” – -i.e., the value of outstanding coupons—except customers pay for the coupons when they buy the products. Imagine an airline saying, “We are going to raise the price of a seat from 100 points to 200 points because we are running short of points.” You would think that’s crazy. How could an airline run short its points, points it creates at will, by clicking computer keys? But that is exactly what the federal government says when it claims Medicare and Social Security are short on dollars. You should ask the same question. How can the U.S. federal government run short of its own dollars, dollars it creates at will by clicking computer keys? The reason you don’t ask is simple. No one questions the airlines’ ability to create their points at will, but your information sources tell you the U.S. government can’t create its dollars at will. They tell you the federal debt (that neither is federal nor debt) is “unsustainable.”  They tell you the government should “ive within its means.” They tell you your taxes must be increased and/or your benefits reduced. All these statements are deceptive, based on the hope that you don’t understand Monetary Sovereignty. The lie that the federal government can run short is dollars is told so that the rich can become richer while the rest survive in ignorance. It’s that sort of ignorance someone like Eric Boehm promulgates when he writes an article like this:

The White House Claims Borrowing $16 Trillion Over the Next Decade Is Fiscally Responsible If you can’t even get close to balancing the budget when unemployment is low, tax revenues are near record highs, and the economy is booming, when can you do it?

The article pretends that the federal government is not Monetarily Sovereign, can’t create dollars at will, needs tax dollars to pay its bills, and in some unexplained way actually could run out of U.S. dollars. It’s a monstrous lie, aimed at keeping you down and the rich up by widening the income/wealth Gap between the rich and you. If you ever feel like protesting something, this is what you should protest. The Big Lie in economics that the federal government can’t afford to provide certain benefits and/or that taxpayers fund federal spending. The lie claims the U.S. “debt” is a “ticking time bomb,” to scare you. (It’s a “bomb” that has been “ticking” since 1940, and still no explosion.) 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

Habituation: The secret to not being shocked.

Those who have not fallen into the MAGA sphere shake their heads in wonderment at what his followers choose to ignore.
Donald Trump standing on 5th avenue, with a gun
I won’t lose any voters.
They have become habituated to his behavior to a point where they seemingly will live his famous assertion, “I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose voters.” While that claim was part of a boast about loyalty from his followers, should it be taken literally? Could he really stand in the middle of a busy street in downtown Manhattan and shoot someone, and would his followers continue to support him? If so, does that demonstrate loyalty or habituation? Habituation refers to becoming less likely to notice a stimulus presented repeatedly. It affects our perception of everyday experiences and relationships. Usually, when a politician breaks a promise, his/her followers turn against him. His competitors use the incident as a cudgel to expose him as a liar, yet for Trump, broken promises are just viewed as “Trump being Trump.” Here is a summary from 2020, Trump’s last year in office:

Trump’s 40 Biggest Broken Promises. The president talks a good game—but it’s just talk. BY ROBERT REICH AUGUST 27, 2020 Trump voters. Nearly four years in, here’s an updated list of Trump’s 40 biggest broken promises.

1. He said coronavirus would “go away without a vaccine.” You bought it. But it didn’t. While other countries got the pandemic under control and avoided large numbers of fatalities, the virus has killed more than 170,000 Americans, and that number is still climbing.

2. He said he wouldn’t have time to play golf if elected president, but he has made more than 250 visits to his golf clubs since taking office—a record for any president.

3. He said he would repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with something “beautiful.” It didn’t happen. Instead, seven million Americans have lost their health insurance since he took office, and he has no plan to replace it.

4. He said he’d cut your taxes and that the super-rich like him would pay more. He did the opposite. By 2027, the richest 1 percent will have received 83 percent of the Trump tax cut and the richest 0.1 percent 60 percent. But more than half of all Americans will pay more in taxes.

5. He said corporations would use their tax cuts to invest in American workers. They didn’t. Corporations spent more of their tax savings buying back shares of their own stock than increasing workers’ wages.

6. He said he would boost economic growth by 4 percent annually. Nope. The economy stalled, and unemployment has soared to the highest levels since the Great Depression. Over half of working-age Americans are employed—the worst ratio in 70 years.

7. He said he wouldn’t “cut Social Security like every other Republican, and I’m not going to cut Medicare or Medicaid.” His latest budget includes billions in cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

8. He promised to be “the voice” of American workers. He hasn’t. His administration has stripped workers of their rights, repealed overtime protections, rolled back workplace safety rules, and turned a blind eye to employers who steal their workers’ wages.

9. He promised that the average American family would see a $4,000 pay raise because of his tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. But nothing trickled down. Wages for most Americans have barely kept up with inflation.

10. He promised that anyone who wants a test for COVID will get one. But countless Americans still can’t get a test.

11. He said hydroxychloroquine protects against coronavirus. No way. The FDA revoked its emergency authorization due to the drug’s potentially lethal side effects.

Donald Trump surrounded by swamp creatures
I’ll only hire the best swamp creatures.

12. He promised to eliminate the federal deficit. He has increased the federal deficit by more than 60 percent.

13. He said he would hire “only the best people.” He has fired a record number of his own Cabinet and White House picks, and then called them “whackos,” “dumb as a rock,” and “not mentally qualified.” Six of them have been charged with crimes.

14. He promised to bring down the price of prescription drugs and said drug companies are “getting away with murder.” They still are. Drug prices have soared, and a company that got federal funds to develop a drug to treat coronavirus is charging $3,000 a pop.

15. He promised to revive the struggling coal industry and bring back lost coal mining jobs. The coal industry has continued to lose jobs as clean energy becomes cheaper.

16. He promised to help American workers during the pandemic. However, 80 percent of the tax benefits in the coronavirus stimulus package have gone to millionaires and billionaires. And at least 21 million Americans have lost extra unemployment benefits, with no new stimulus check to fall back on.

17. He said he’d drain the swamp. Instead, he’s brought into his administration more billionaires, CEOs, and Wall Street moguls than in any administration in history, and he’s filled departments and agencies with former lobbyists, lawyers, and consultants crafting new policies for the same industries they used to work for.

18. He promised to protect Americans with pre-existing conditions. His Justice Department is trying to repeal the Affordable Care Act, including protections for people with pre-existing conditions.

19. He said Mexico would pay for his border wall. They laughed at him.

20. He promised to bring peace to the Middle East. Instead, tensions increased, and his so-called “peace plan” was dead on arrival.

21. He promised to lock up Hillary Clinton for using a private email server. He didn’t. Funny enough, Trump uses his personal cellphone for official business, and several members of his own administration, including Jared Kushner and Ivanka, have used private email in the White House.

22. He promised to use his business experience to whip the federal government into shape. He hasn’t. His White House is in permanent chaos. He caused the longest government shutdown in our nation’s history when he didn’t get funding for his wall.

23. He promised to end DACA. The Supreme Court ruled that his plan to deport 700,000 young immigrants was unconstitutional, and DACA still stands.

24. He promised “six weeks of paid maternity leave to any mother with a newborn child whose employer does not provide the benefit.” He hasn’t delivered.

25. He promised to end Kim Jong Un’s nuclear program. Kim is expanding North Korea’s nuclear program.

26. He said he would distance himself from his businesses while in office. He continues to make money from his properties and maintain his grip on his real estate empire.

27. He said he’d force companies to keep jobs in America and that there would be consequences for companies that shipped jobs abroad. Since he took office, companies like GE, Carrier, Ford, and Harley-Davidson have continued to outsource thousands of jobs while receiving massive tax breaks. And offshoring by federal contractors has increased.

28. He promised to end the opioid crisis. Americans are now more likely to die from an opioid overdose than a car accident.

29. He said he’d release his tax returns. It’s been nearly four years. He hasn’t released his tax returns.

30. He promised to tear up the Iran nuclear deal and renegotiate a better one. Negotiations have gone nowhere, and he brought us to the brink of war.

31. He promised to enact term limits for all members of Congress, but he has not even tried to do so.

32. He promised that China would pay for tariffs on imported goods. His trade war has cost U.S. consumers $34 billion a year, eliminated 300,000 American jobs, and cost American taxpayers $22 billion in subsidies for farmers hurt by the tariffs.

33. He promised to “push colleges to cut the skyrocketing cost of tuition.” Instead, he’s made it easier for for-profit colleges to defraud students, and tuition is still rising.

34. He promised to protect American steel jobs. The steel industry continues to lose jobs.

35. He promised his tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations would pay for themselves. His tax cuts will add $2 trillion to the federal deficit.

36. After withdrawing from the Paris Climate Accord, he said he’d negotiate a better deal on the environment. He hasn’t attempted to negotiate any deal.

37. He promised that the many women who accused him of sexual misconduct “will be sued after the election is over.” He hasn’t sued them, presumably because he doesn’t want the truth to come out.

38. He promised to bring back all troops from Afghanistan. He now says: “We’ll always have somebody there.”

39. He pledged to put America first. Instead, he’s deferred to dictators and authoritarians at America’s expense and ostracized our allies—who now laugh at us behind our back.

40. He promised to be the voice of the common people. He’s made his rich friends richer, increased the political power of big corporations and the wealthy, and harmed working Americans. 

That is a load of broken promises. Broken promises are a form of lying, something to which Trump followers have become habituated. By Jan, 2021, Trump’s false or misleading claims totaled 30,573 over 4 years. He lied about the weather on the day he was inaugurated and he just kept lying. He lied about the Veterans Choice program, the size of the trade deficit with China, the severity of COVID, the path of Hurricane Dorian, and a supposed compliment from the “Head of the Boy Scouts.” He claimed windmill noise causes cancer. He repeatedly said his new healthcare plan was coming in two weeks (It never came). He lied that he had been named “Michigan’s Man of the Year.” He claimed Rep. Ilhan Omar supported terrorists. He repeatedly claims large, blue-collar men came to him shedding tears of gratitude and calling him, “Sir.” He lied about Stormy Daniels, child-parent separation at the border, and saving pre-existing health conditions. And he still lies that he won the election, despite 60+ lawsuits and recounts that determined otherwise. It isn’t “just” his broken promises and lies to which his followers presumably are habituated. It’s his criminality, all of which he denies:

Classified Documents Case:

–Trump was indicted for mishandling top-secret documents at his Florida estate. The charges include repeatedly enlisting aides and lawyers to hide records demanded by investigators. –A superseding indictment added charges related to surveillance footage deletion after FBI and Justice Department investigators visited Mar-a-Lago in June 2022. –In total, Trump faces 40 felony charges in this case, with the most serious carrying a penalty of up to 20 years in prison.

Election Interference:

–In Washington, Trump faces felony charges for attempting to overturn the 2020 election results, leading to the Capitol riot on January 6, 2021. –This case involves 13 felony counts related to election interference in Georgia.

Hush Money Payments:

–In New York, Trump faces 34 felony counts connected to hush money payments to a porn star. –Trump also faces additional charges in Florida and the District of Columbia, bringing the total to 91 felony counts across all cases.

Trump University (Trump U.):

–Trump University was a for-profit education company founded by Donald Trump in 2004. It offered real estate courses and claimed to provide students with the knowledge and tools to succeed in real estate investing. –However, Trump University faced numerous lawsuits and allegations of fraud. Former students accused it of deceptive practices, false advertising, and failing to deliver on promises. –In 2016, Trump agreed to settle three lawsuits related to Trump University for $25 million.

Trump Foundation:

–The Trump Foundation was a private charitable organization established by Donald Trump in 1987. –In 2018, the New York Attorney General’s office filed a lawsuit against the Trump Foundation, alleging that it engaged in illegal conduct, including self-dealing, misuse of funds, and coordination with Trump’s presidential campaign. As part of a settlement, the Trump Foundation agreed to pay $2 million, dissolve, and distribute its remaining assets to legitimate charitable organizations.

So many cases, so many crimes. But in every case, Trump’s descriptions of the judges, prosecutors, and witnesses include: “Totally biased,” “crooked,” “partisan,” “hostile,” “deranged” “a lunatic,” and “corrupt,” and the case is “rigged, a “witch hunt” and part of a Democratic scheme to get him. No normal person would accept all forty of the broken promises, all 91 felony counts, plus the criminality of Trump U. and Trump Foundation with a yawn and a ho-hum, or worse yet, make excuses for them. No normal person would agree that every single one of the dozens of judges and prosecutors (including those in his 60+ failed attempts to prove the election was tainted) is “totally biased,” “crooked,” etc. Maybe one judge is “corrupt.” Possibly even two. But dozens? All? Who would believe such idiocy? Could every case against him, every thought with which he disagrees, be a “hoax”? He says so. Perhaps it isn’t just habituation. Could it also be:

Hedonic Adaptation:

Hedonic adaptation describes how humans quickly readjust to an emotional baseline. We become insensitive to new stimuli, requiring more intense experiences to evoke emotions.

Think of it as a “hedonic treadmill”: We keep running, but our happiness level stays relatively constant. This phenomenon impacts our ability to appreciate novelty over time.

Donald Trump's Mug Shot Released in Historic First for a U.S. President
I am perpetually angry. I hate everything you hate. I will protect you from “them.”

In summary, our adaptability allows us to embrace new circumstances, but it also means we may underestimate the impact of change.

Understanding these tendencies can help us navigate life’s transitions more effectively.

In Trump’s case, the hedonic adaptation may involve people who are unhappy and bitter about how the world has treated them. Trump taps into this bitterness by expressing it with his own hatred. Trump promises the unhappy, bitter people vengeance, retribution, and retaliation. What scant satisfaction his ravings provide quickly wears off — That is the hedonic adaptation — so the people need to crave more and more. And Trump keeps providing. Not only does Trump express hatred for all the judges who rule against him and all the prosecutors who take his case, but he has indicated hatred for: Immigrants, Mexicans, Muslims, people from “shithole” countries, gays, liberals, the poor (“takers”), blacks, browns, Chinese, journalists (who don’t support him), the well-educated, climatologists, NATO, NAFTA, labor unions, and Obamacare. The list of his hatreds is long. It also includes Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Megyn Kelly, John McCain, James Comey, Nancy Pelosi, Robert Mueller, Greta Thunberg, Jimmy Kimmel, Rosie O’Donnell, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Meryl Streep, Jeff Bezos, Meghan Markle, Colin Kaepernick, and Elizabeth Warren, to name just a few. The only people, Trump claims to love and admire, aside from Ivanka, are brutal dictators like Kim Jong Un, Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and Ferdinand Marcos — and yes, even Hitler! SUMMARY Hatred, fear, and brutality all typify the angry emotions of the MAGA crowd. Trump has made them angry, given them victimhood, and then portrayed himself as both a victim and as their protector. They are willing to forgive Trump anything, no matter how antisocial and psychotic, so long as it is expressed as anger and hatred for “them, ” i.e. those people who plot against “us.” The “deep state” and “the swamp” are favorite targets because these vague pejoratives are non-specific while being all-inclusive. Every bitter heart resents “the deep state” and “the swamp,” and though each person’s deep state and swamp may be different, they all can agree on the hatred. Thus, Trump is a unifying force in hatred, an internal contradiction in which MAGAs lose themselves. The man they cling to as a cure for their discontent, actually stirs their discontent. The more their world revolves around him, the more fear and hatred he stokes in them, and the more they believe they need him. In every sense, Donald Trump is heroin to the dispossessed. His hate filled promises provide his people with brief elation and hope. When the promises are not kept, the elation fades, but the hope remains, as does the anger, hatred, and discontent. So the addicts return for more. No facts, no logic can cure MAGAs. Like drug addictions, Trump addiction is forever. It only can be managed, and only if the victim wants relief. One wonders whether the management requires “the 9 Step Journey.” 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

You’ll be the smartest one in the room when you answer these few questions about the economy.

Not one person in a thousand can answer these questions correctly, but almost everyone thinks they know the answers. How many can you get right? Question #1: Can the U.S. government (or the governments of Canada, Mexico, Australia, China, and the UK, etc.) run short of their own sovereign currency? Answer: No. The U.S. government (like the abovementioned governments) is Monetarily Sovereign. It is sovereign over the dollar. It can create, destroy, and/or give dollars any value it chooses. In the 1780s, it created the first U.S. dollars from thin air. It arbitrarily created as many dollars as it wished and gave those dollars the value it chose. Since then, the U.S. government has created many trillions of dollars from thin air, and changed the value of those dollars several times, at will. Even if the U.S. government were presented with an invoice for $100 trillion or $1,000 trillion today, it could instantly pay that invoice in full by creating dollars. The government can create infinite dollars at the touch of a computer key.

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.”

Question: #2. Can France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, etc., which use euros, run short of euros to pay their bills? Answer: Yes. These nations are monetarily non-sovereign. They do not control a sovereign currency. They use the euro, which is the sovereign currency controlled by the European Union, not by any individual nation.
The sad truth about taxpayer-funded projects - Aquaculture North America
Every tax dollar you send to the federal government is destroyed upon receipt. None are spent on anything.
In this regard the euro nations resemble American states, counties, and cities, which use the dollar, controlled by the U.S. government. Question #3, Do federal taxes — income tax, payroll tax, luxury tax, etc. help pay for federal spending? Answer: No. U.S. tax dollars are destroyed the instant they are received by the U.S. Treasury. When you send your tax payment to the IRS, the money comes from the M2 money supply measure. (M2 includes cash, checking deposits, and other deposits readily convertible to cash, such as CDs.) When your payment is received by the Treasury, those dollars cease to exist in any money supply measure. They are effectively destroyed. All federal spending is paid for by newly created dollars ad hoc. Why? Having the infinite ability to create dollars, the federal government does not use any income. It makes new dollars by paying bills. This is the process:

A. To pay a bill, the federal government sends instructions, not dollars, to the creditor’s bank, instructing the bank to increase the balance in the creditor’s checking account. These instructions can be a check (“Pay to the order of) or a wire.

B. When the bank does as instructed, new dollars are added to the M2 money supply measure.

C. To balance its books, the bank then clears the transaction through the Federal Reserve. In essence, one federal agency approves another agency’s check.

D. Because the federal government can issue infinite laws and instructions, it can never run short of dollars.

Every time you see or hear someone talking about federal taxpayers paying for something, know they are wrong. Federal taxpayers pay for nothing. Absolutely nothing. Think about that when you send the federal government your check. This contrasts with state and local taxpayers whose dollars are used by their state and local governments — perhaps not always used well, but at least used — compared to federal tax dollars, which are destroyed. Question #4. Since the federal government neither uses nor needs tax dollars to pay its bills, why does it collect taxes? Answer: While monetarily non-sovereign entities—state/local governments, businesses, euro nations—must have income to pay their bills, the U.S. federal government needs and uses no income. So rather than supplying spending money to the federal government, the purpose of federal taxes is:

a. To help the government control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to reward.

b. To assure demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring taxes to be paid in dollars.

c. To help the rich by providing tax breaks allowing the rich to pay a lower tax percentage of their income than do middle-income Americans.

Question #5. Will Social Security and Medicare, which collect FICA taxes, soon run short of dollars? Answer: FICA dollars, like all other federal tax dollars, are destroyed upon receipt by misnamed “trust funds.”

To quote from the Peter G. Peterson Foundation web site: A federal trust fund is an accounting mechanism the federal government uses to track earmarked receipts (money designated for a specific purpose or program) and corresponding expenditures.

The largest and best-known trust funds finance Social Security, portions of Medicarehighways and mass transit, and pensions for government employees.

Federal trust funds bear little resemblance to private-sector counterparts; therefore, the name can be misleading.

A “trust fund” implies a secure source of funding. However, a federal trust fund is simply an accounting mechanism that tracks inflows and outflows for specific programs.

In private-sector trust funds, receipts are deposited, and assets are held and invested by trustees on behalf of the stated beneficiaries.

In federal trust funds, the federal government does not set aside the receipts or invest them in private assets.

Instead, the receipts are recorded as accounting credits in the trust funds. The federal government owns the accounts and can, by changing the law, unilaterally alter the purposes of the accounts and raise or lower collections and expenditures.

In short, a federal “trust fund” is just a record-keeping device that can publish whatever numbers the federal government wishes. It does not contain dollars, just arbitrary numbers, like all other federal bookkeeping. The federal government can change the numbers in the Social Security and Medicare “trust funds” at will. The claims that these funds are running short of dollars are false, designed to deceive, Question #6: Since the Social Security and Medicare trust funds are not real trust funds and do not contain dollars, what is their purpose:
Franklin D. Roosevelt | The White House
“With those [payroll] taxes in there, no damn politician can ever scrap my social security program.” But cut it down . . .
Answer: Mostly psychological. They are bookkeeping devices for informational purposes. President Roosevelt, the founder of Social Security, is reported to have insisted on collecting payroll taxes because it would give recipientsa legal, moral, and political right to collect their pensions and their unemployment benefits. With those [payroll] taxes in there, no damn politician can ever scrap my social security program.” Roosevelt was wrong. The existence of FICA and trust funds set a false limit on what could be paid out. Hardly a day passes without someone claiming that the Social Security and Medicare trust funds are running out of money, so taxes would need to be raised or benefits reduced. It is false. The federal government never needs to cut benefits, never needs to raise taxes, and never needs to tax at all. It already has infinite dollars. FICA does not fund anything. Like all federal tax dollars, FICA dollars are destroyed upon receipt. Because the government has infinite dollars, no federal agencies — Social Security, Medicare et al, — can run out of money unless Congress and the President want it. Question #7. If FICA and all other federal taxes do not fund anything and, in fact, limit benefits, why continue to collect them? Answer: The reason is devious. The very rich control American thought by bribing thought leaders. They bribe politicians via campaign contributions and promises of lucrative employment. They bribe the media writers via advertising dollars and media ownership. They bribe the economists via university endowments and jobs in “think tanks.” The purpose of the bribes is to make the rich richer. “Rich” is a comparative term. A man with a thousand dollars is rich if everyone else has only a hundred, but that same man is poor if everyone else has ten thousand. Thus, the ways to become richer are to obtain more for oneself or force everyone else to have less. At the behest of the rich, the media, politicians, and economists convince the voters that they need to pay more taxes and/or receive lower Social Security and Medicare benefits. The thought leaders make the rich richer by making the people agree to become poorer. Question 8. Is the federal debt a burden on the federal government? Answer. No. The so-called “federal debt” isn’t even a debt, and it isn’t federal. It’s the total of deposits into Treasury Security accounts, the contents of which are wholly owned by the depositors, not by the federal government. The federal government never touches those dollars except to return them, with low interest, to the owners, i.e., the depositors, upon maturity. The government merely holds the dollars in safekeeping, much like banks hold the contents of safe deposit boxes. They, too, are not a burden on the holder. Question 9. Do federal taxpayers owe the federal debt?  Answer: Again, no one owes the misnamed federal “debt.” No taxpayer dollar is used to pay off the federal “debt.” The so-called “debt” is paid off by returning existing dollars to their owners, the depositors in Treasury Security accounts. Question 10. Is the federal debt too high? Answer. No. In addition to being total deposits into T-security accounts, the federal debt is the difference between federal taxes collected and federal spending, i.e., the total of federal deficit spending. Federal deficit spending adds growth dollars to the economy. When federal deficit spending declines, we have recessions, which are cured by increased deficit spending.
Recessions (gray bars) occur when federal “debt” (red line) declines. Recessions are cured by increases in federal “debt.”
Even worse for the economy are federal surpluses when federal taxes exceed federal spending. By definition, a large economy has a larger money supply than a small economy. Therefore, a growing economy requires an increasing supply of money. QED But federal surpluses remove dollars from the economy, so federal surpluses tend to cause recessions and depressions.

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.

Question 11: Is the Federal Debt/GDP ratio too high? Answer: No, it is irrelevant. Quoting that ratio makes two false assumptions: That “federal debt” actually is a debt of the federal government (It isn’t. See Question 10) and that, in some mysterious way, GDP funds federal “debt” repayment (It doesn’t.) The oft-quoted Federal Debt/GDP ratio is the ultimate apples/zebras comparison. Totally meaningless. Here are a few things the Federal Debt/GDP ratio does not indicate with regard to a Monetarily Sovereign nation:

A. It does not indicate the federal government’s ability to pay its obligations.

B. It does not indicate the likelihood of inflation, recession, depression, or stagflation.

C. It does not indicate the current or future health of an economy

Here are the ten nations with the highest and the lowest Debt/GDP ratios.
For a Monetarily Sovereign nation, having a high or a low Federal Debt/GDP tells you nothing about the past, present, or future unless you would rather own Burundi bonds than U.S. bonds. Question 12. Does the U.S. government borrow U.S. dollars? Answer: No. As a Monetarily Sovereign government, the U.S. government has the infinite ability to create dollars from thin air. It does not need to borrow dollars. U.S. Treasury bonds, notes, and bills do not represent borrowing. They merely confirm deposits into Treasury accounts. The words “bond,” “note,” “bill,” and “debt” have one set of meanings when applied to monetarily non-sovereign entities like cities, counties, states, businesses, you and me. The words have totally different meanings when applied to our Monetarily Sovereign government. For example, a Treasury “bond” is just evidence of a deposit into a T-security account, not a loan to the federal government. Question 13. If the U.S. government does not borrow dollars, what is the purpose of Treasury Securities? Answer: To provide dollar users with a safe, interest-paying place to store unused dollars. This helps stabilize and ensure demand for the U.S. dollar. They also help the Fed control interest rates. Some people worry about China owning T-securities and the possibility of them not “lending to us” anymore. The U.S. does not need to accept deposits from China or anyone. Even if the entire world suddenly stopped investing in T-securities, the U.S. could continue spending and paying its obligations as always. Question 14. Does “excessive” federal spending cause inflation? Answer: No. Prices rise when demand exceeds supply. So, the false theory is that by increasing the money supply, federal spending causes everyone to demand too much. But the reality is quite different. Inflation is a general increase in prices. Federal spending may cause specific increases in the demand for certain products, but seldom can cause a general increase in demand or a decrease in supply. Instead, all inflations are caused by shortages of products that have a widespread effect on prices — most notably, oil and food. Even during wartime, when federal spending increases, inflation is caused by shortages of crucial goods and services, especially oil, food, and labor. If federal deficit spending doesn’t cause inflation, what does?
Inflation (blue) and oil prices (red) move together. The cost of oil is reflected in almost every product and service.
In the past 60+ years, oil supplies have been the most reliable predictor of inflation. When oil is scarce, oil prices and inflation rise. When oil is plentiful, oil prices and inflation fall. Increased federal spending to decrease oil scarcity (increasing total supply or rewarding alternative energy sources) cures inflation. Question 14. Does raising interest rates prevent and cure inflations? Answer: No. Despite what various Federal Reserve chairmen, the media, politicians, and economists have said, raising interest rates is a misguided way to fight inflation. It’s like applying leeches to cure anemia. When interest rates rise, the price of everything bought on time rises. This includes homes, cars, large appliances, land, and other property. For example, a $500,000, 30-year, 3% mortgage costs, in total, $632,409. The same 30-year mortgage raised to 6% costs $899,325. Does that sound like inflation-fighting? Increased interest rates not only affect consumers directly but businesses, most of which borrow to finance their purchases. Those inflated costs are passed on to consumers. The Fed chairmen speak of “cooling” an “overheated” economy. What they really mean, but are reluctant to say, is that they want to cut economic growth to prevent inflation. In short, they want to come as close to a recession as possible without technically causing one. They ignore the fact that recession is not the opposite of inflation as witnessed by “stagflation,” the simultaneous plagues of economic stagnation and inflation. The most recent recession and inflation were caused by COVID-related shortages of oil, food, steel, lumber, computer chips, shipping, labor, etc. The cure for those shortages was not to cut economic growth or raise interest rates but to reduce the shortages via federal spending to obtain and make available the scarce items. The massive federal spending of the last three years helped cure the shortages and thus helped cure inflation. The interest rate increases exacerbated the inflation by raising the prices of everything.
This graph shows that inflation parallels interest rates. One could argue about which caused which –high interest rates caused inflation or inflation caused the Fed to raise interest rates — but consider the Fed’s fundamental reason for increasing interest rates: To raise prices, thereby “cooling” the economy, in the hopes that will bring prices down. In short, the Fed raises prices to lower prices. It makes no sense, but that is the sad fact.
Question 15. Why does the Fed raise rates to fight inflation if that doesn’t work? Answer: If your only tool is a hammer, you will view every problem as a nail. The Fed’s primary, most accessible tool is interest rates, which it can raise or lower by fiat. Congress mistakenly has given the Fed the assignment to prevent/cure inflations, so the Fed uses the tool it has. But it is Congress that has the obligation to prevent and cure inflation. It has the financial power to obtain and distribute whatever scarce items are causing inflation. Most inflations are caused by oil shortages, so Congress and the President can spend to facilitate drilling, refining, and distribution, and/or to give consumers and businesses tax credits for gas and oil purchases. Those steps would reduce inflation. Another example: Eliminate the FICA tax. That would reduce business costs directly and also allow businesses to pay lower wages without cutting employees’ income. Eliminating FICA would cut inflation. Question 16. Does providing federal benefits make people lazy? Answer: Social Security and Medicare are the biggest benefits of the federal government. Before 1965, there was no Medicare, and before 1935, there was no Social Security. Now we have both. Have Social Security and Medicare made people lazy? The “lazy” notion seems only to be applied to the poor, especially by conservatives. The rich receive substantial tax breaks (officially known as “tax expenditures”) and have, on average, less strenuous jobs than the poor, but somehow those are felt to be “earned.” While SNAP (food stamps) and other poverty aids often are sneered at, tax expenditures for the rich don’t receive the same negative treatment: Here are eight of the most expensive tax breaks for individuals and corporations; together, they accounted for more than two-thirds of the total annual cost of tax expenditures in 2023:

*Exclusion of pension contributions and earnings and individual retirement arrangements ($369 billion). Contributions to pension or retirement plans — such as to 401(k)s and IRAs — are not taxed as income when received but taxed in the future when the employee withdraws the funds.

*Exclusions and reductions on dividends and long-term capital gains ($311 billion). Income from capital gains (the profit from the sale of a property or investment) and qualified dividends (generally from shares in domestic corporations that have been held for a specified period) are taxed at a lower rate than other forms of income. Defenders argue that such preferential rates encourage investment and risk-taking that spur economic growth, but critics note that they disproportionately benefit the wealthy and promote tax avoidance.

*Exclusion of employer contributions for medical insurance and care ($202 billion). Employers’ premiums for their employees’ healthcare are exempt from federal income and payroll taxes. While this tax break benefits a wide swath of Americans by reducing the after-tax cost of health insurance, it is worth more to taxpayers in higher tax brackets than those in lower brackets.

*Child Tax Credit ($122 billion). This tax credit is designed to make raising children more affordable by easing the financial burden faced by families. A portion of the credit is refundable, which means that if the total value of the credit is more than a family’s total tax liability, the Internal Revenue Service returns part of the difference as a tax refund. Research has shown that the child tax credit has a significant impact on low-income families.

*Subsidies for insurance purchased through health benefit exchanges ($80 billion). U.S. corporate shareholders are eligible for a credit for foreign income taxes paid.

*Earned Income Tax Credit ($71 billion). This tax credit is primarily available to low-income working parents, and the credit is refundable. Research shows that the Earned Income Tax Credit encourages people to work and that recipients use the credit to cover essential costs.

*Exclusion of capital gains at death ($58 billion). Unrealized capital gains on assets held at the owner’s death are not subject to income tax.

*20-percent deduction for qualified business income ($56 billion). This tax credit deduction allows eligible self-employed and small-business owners to deduct up to 20 percent of their qualified business income on their taxes.

No one wants to be poor. Most people – rich and poor – want to earn more money than they have. Very few people are satisfied to linger in poverty if they can work. For the 2023 tax year, the maximum Earned Income Tax Credit amounts were:

Number of children     Maximum earned income tax credit 0                                            $ 600 1                                             $3,995 2                                            $6,604 3 or more                             $7,430

If you had 3 or more children, would a payment of $7,430 be enough to discourage you from working the next twelve months? Far too many claim that this paltry sum is enough to discourage work. Question 17. Is there a benefit to federal frugality? Or asked another way, does wasteful federal spending cost taxpayers money?  Answer: It depends. We have seen that federal taxes do not fund federal spending. So, all federal spending, even wasteful spending, is free to taxpayers and by adding dollars to the economy, stimulates economic growth.
Crime rate among kids in North Wales higher than Liverpool, new figures reveal - North Wales Live
Crime is expensive for everyone, while federal spending to reduce the causes of crime costs nothing.
But the reality is that many people, not just the rich, deplore spending that benefits the poor. There is resentment that some of “us” work hard for money while “they” receive money for not working. Not as widely understood is the fact that supporting the poor benefits all of us, even we who are wealthy. Obviously, giving money to the poor makes them better customers, so businesses owned by the middle and the rich profit. But beyond that, there is the question of crime. Poverty is the mother of crime. —Marcus Aurelius (121-180AD), Emperor of the Roman Empire. Crime exerts a massive cost on everyone.

In a 2002 study by World Bank economists Pablo Fajnzylber, Daniel Lederman, and Norman Loayza, it was found out that crime rates and inequality are positively correlated within countries and also between countries.

The correlation is a causation – inequality induces crime rates.

This finding is parallel with the theory on crime by American economist Gary Becker, who pronounces that an increase in income inequality has a big and robust effect of increasing crime rates.

Not only that, but a country’s economic growth (GDP rate) has significant impact in lessening incidence of crimes.

Since reduction in income inequality gap and a richer economy has an alleviating effect on poverty level, it implies that poverty alleviation has a crime-reducing effect.

Intuitively, it makes sense. So-called “bad neighborhoods” have lower incomes and more crime, at least more street crime.

Criminality has many causes; an important one is cultural factors and the effect of grievances. Some groups tend to have more criminality, regardless of income.

Yet one thing is clear, violent criminality goes down for all groups when financial inequality is reduced. 

Movement up the social ladder to the middle class is associated with sharp declines in violent crime. When a poor man has a grievance, he may reach for a gun. A richer man calls his lawyer.

If you fear crime — who doesn’t — helping to lift the poor is as important as funding the police. The former approach addresses the causes of crime, while the other focuses on punishment.

Federal spending on benefits for the poor and middle classes, costs taxpayers nothing. The federal government creates the dollars from thin air.

But the spending itself grows the economy and the aid to the poor reduces crime, and benefits all potential victims.

IN SUMMARY

Unlike local governments, businesses, euro nations, you and me, the federal government is Monetarily Sovereign. Its agencies (like Medicare, Social Security, the White House, Congress, SCOTUS, et al), cannot run short of dollars, unless that is what Congress and the President want.

The federal government has infinite dollars. Even if all federal tax collections ended, the federal government could continue spending forever.

Federal tax dollars fund nothing They are destroyed upon receipt.

Federal deficit spending costs federal taxpayers nothing and does not cause inflation but has many benefits to the populace.

It can reduce crime, hunger, homelessness, and inequality, while improving healthcare, education, scientific advances, and the overall wellbeing of the populace.

Far from being a problem, federal deficits and so-called “debt” are necessary for economic growth. GDP=Federal + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports.

Raising interest rates raises prices. Price increases are not a method for reducing inflation, which is a general increase in prices.

You now know more about America’s finances than most of your friends, relatives, media writers, politicians, and even economists. When it comes to government finances, you now might be the smartest one in the room. Save this post as your reference. 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