Which American political party is this, and is it what you want for America?

Here are some definitions. Which American political party do they describe?Rick Steves - When Fascism Feels Normal…It's Too Late As... | Facebook

1. Fascism is a political ideology characterized by authoritarian ultranationalism, centralized control, suppression of opposition, and often a dictatorial leader.

It emphasizes bigotry, extreme militaristic nationalism, contempt for electoral democracy and political/cultural liberalism.

2. White supremacy is an ideology based on the belief that white people are superior to those of all other races and should, therefore, dominate society.The K.K.K. in Vermont, 1924 — Vermont Historical Society

This belief system underpins various forms of racial discrimination and segregation.

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as “shithole” nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can’t have more immigrants from Norway.

3. Christian nationalism is a cultural framework that idealizes and advocates a fusion of Christianity with American civic life.

It is an ideology that emphasizes the idea that the United States was founded as a Christian nation and should continue to uphold Christian values in its laws and society.

Christian nationalists may believe that being a Christian is an important part of being a true American and that the government should recognize the U.S. as a Christian nation.

The movement can include various subgroups and ideas, such as the New Apostolic Reformation, which seeks a transformation of the U.S. into a Christian nation through what they see as a spiritual battle.Opinion | Whose Version of Christian Nationalism Will Win in 2024? - The New York Times

The term “white Christian nationalism” is sometimes used to describe a worldview that combines elements of white supremacy with Christian identity, often with a focus on political power and cultural dominance. See: In their own words: How Americans describe ‘Christian nationalism’
Google Trends data shows a significant rise in searches for the term following the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.  Searches for the term peaked in July 2022 after Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., declared in an interview that “We need to be the party of nationalism, and I’m a Christian, and I say it proudly, we should be Christian nationalists.” The survey asked 2,540 respondents who have heard at least “a little” about Christian nationalism: “In your own words, what does the phrase ‘Christian nationalism’ mean to you?”
Many describe “Christian nationalism” in terms of Christian dominance in society, while others associate the concept with racism, authoritarianism, bigotry and exclusion. A smaller portion of Americans describe it as the positive influence of faith and morals in society.
In a related news story:
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry is defending the state’s mandate to display the Ten Commandments inGovernor Jeff Landry signs education bills | Watch classrooms, explaining that the United States was founded upon “Judeo-Christian” principles.
There is nothing more religious than the 10 Commandments, and as is the case with all things religious, there are disagreements, interpretations, and claims of righteousness. Which 10 Commandments will Gov. Landry post, and what about religions that don’t believe in the 10 Commandments? There are multiple versions of the Ten Commandments, some of which are in fierce contention. Among the most notable is the “graven image” commandment. For centuries, arguments have raged about whether worshipping images of Jesus, Mary, and various saints violates this commandment.
Not all religions subscribe to the 10 Commandments as they are presented in the Bible. For instance, Islam does not accept the Bible’s absolute authority, including the Ten Commandments, because it believes that the text has been corrupted over time. Hinduism has “the Yamas,” which serve a similar purpose to the Ten Commandments but are different in content and scope. Are they, who follow these religions. less American? Then, there is the Talmud, which lists 613 commandments. Which should be shown as the ten? The U.S. Constitution addresses religion in the very First Amendment, which contains two clauses related to religion:

The Establishment Clause: This clause prohibits the federal government from creating an official church or favoring one religion over another.

It states, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion…”

The Free Exercise Clause: This clause protects individuals’ rights to practice their religion as they please, without interference from the government. It says, “…or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

The purpose of these clauses is to prevent the government from sinking into a theocracy, the problems of which are:

Lack of Religious Freedom: The state endorses one religion, often leading to the suppression of other religious practices and beliefs

Potential for Intolerance: Theocratic societies may be intolerant towards immigrants, different cultures, or ethnic groups, especially those who do not share the state religion

Risk to Personal Freedoms: Disagreeing with the government can be seen as disagreeing with the divine authority itself, placing personal religious ideas or freedoms at risk.

Centralized Power: Theocracies often have centralized structures of power, which can limit debate and dissent in policy-making.

Societal Compliance: Compliance is often achieved through religious means, which can include the threat of spiritual consequences for non-compliance.

Theocracies quickly evolve into dictatorships, which are especially difficult to change because the leader claims to speak for God. After reading the above, you can answer the title question for yourself: Which American political party is this, and is it what you want for America?
Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell; MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/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 day America will end.

The America you know and love is gone. The “spacious skies and amber waves of grain” still are here. The “broad stripes and bright stars” still wave. “The mountains, the prairies, the oceans white with foam,” all still there.See the source image But they are just window dressing. The traditional America, the America that welcomed the tired, the poor, the masses yearning to breathe free, the America where someone could rise from the depths of poverty and reach for the stars — the democracy America — that America is gone, replaced by a right-wing, bigoted, hate-mongering, fascist America. Perhaps, it all was an illusion. Perhaps that kind, generous, one-for-all, -and-all-for-one never really existed. Perhaps we only dreamed it. But what a beautiful dream. We did have it for a moment, back in the early 1940s, when Hitler, Mussolini, and Hirohito were reviled dictators, and we clung together to fight against such monsters and for “Liberty for All.” But after the monsters were defeated, their shadow lurked in the background, and now a new monster has returned, sporting the same old hate-based clothing, waving our flag but telling the same old anti-democracy, “me-first, me-only” lies.
black and white photo of one police officer in helmet, face contorted, surrounded and confronted by enormous crowd, with one person brandishing an American flag
The new “democracy” of mob rule and hatred, flags a-waving.
They always were there, of course, the haters and bigots, the Ku Klux Klan, the anti-semites, the communists, the torch-bearing marchers for Naziism, but they never were the real America. They were mocked as some alien thing, foreign to our welcoming heritage. Surely, the disgrace of the slavery-funded South would be seen as an aberration to our “all-men-are-created-equal” ethos. Surely the spirit of America will not die, crushed in the hands of a lying, ignorant, bigoted tyrant. That could not happen here. Surely. And yet . . . Infowars, Fox News, QAnon, Alex Jones, conspiracy theories, Donald Trump all seem to indicate that slavery and bigotry are not aberrations, but are fundamental, at least to a large segment of the American population. Perhaps that is the reason for the panicked, right-wing response to teaching about racism in America. The right would have you believe that merely teaching the facts of racism is accusatory, and designed to make our children feel guilty. As usual with the right, it’s a lie, and also as usual, the facts are distorted or denied (as are facts about election honesty, global warming, police bigotry, vaccination, Muslims, gays, Mexicans, immigrants, the poor, and Trump himself.) If you get your information via Tucker Carlson and Fox, you are sadly misinformed. Freedom, democracy, and fairness are not to be taken for granted. They are fragile features, even of America, that must be protected with both hands.
TRUMP’S NEXT COUP HAS ALREADY BEGUN January 6 was practice. Donald Trump’s GOP is much better positioned to subvert the next election. By Barton Gellman DECEMBER 6, 2021 Technically, the next attempt to overthrow a national election may not qualify as a coup. It will rely on subversion more than violence, although each will have its place. If the plot succeeds, the ballots cast by American voters will not decide the presidency in 2024. Thousands of votes will be thrown away, or millions, to produce the required effect. The prospect of this democratic collapse is not remote. People with the motive to make it happen are manufacturing the means. Given the opportunity, they are acting already. “The democratic emergency is already here,” Richard L. Hasen, a professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, told me. “We face a serious risk that American democracy as we know it will come to an end in 2024,” he said. For more than a year now, Republican operatives have been building an apparatus of election theft. Elected officials in Arizona, Texas, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, and other states have studied Donald Trump’s crusade to overturn the 2020 election. Some of them have rewritten statutes to seize partisan control of decisions about which ballots to count and which to discard, which results to certify and which to reject. They are driving out or stripping power from election officials who refused to go along with the plot last November, aiming to replace them with exponents of the Big Lie. They would allow state legislators to override the choice of the voters. Trump and his party have convinced a dauntingly large number of Americans that the essential workings of democracy are corrupt, that made-up claims of fraud are true, that only cheating can thwart their victory at the polls, that tyranny has usurped their government, and that violence is a legitimate response. Donald Trump will win the Republican nomination for president in 2024. The party is in his thrall. No opponent can break it and few will try. Neither will a setback outside politics—indictment, say, or a disastrous turn in business—prevent Trump from running. If anything, it will redouble his will to power. Virtually no one a year ago, predicted that Trump could compel the whole party’s genuflection to the Big Lie and the recasting of insurgents as martyrs. Trump has reconquered his party by setting its base on fire through black clouds of his smoke. His deepest source of strength is the bitter grievance of Republican voters that they lost the White House, and are losing their country, to alien forces with no legitimate claim to power.
To Trumpers, everyone not white, not born here, not Christian, and most importantly, not a Trump toady, is an enemy. Jews, Muslims, blacks, browns, immigrants, and of course, those who seek truth, commit political and social suicide when supporting Trump and his minions. The GOP, and especially the Trump GOP markedly favors the rich over the not-rich. That is why the GOP so strongly opposes benefits such as Medicare, Medicaid, Obamacare, Social Security, and other anti-poverty initiatives, while favoring massive spending increases for the military/industrial complex plus increased taxes on the middle classes.
Blasphemy In Christianity, Islam, Judaism | ♥ The Tale Of My Heart ♥
If you criticize Donald Trump, you will be excommunicated from the GOP. Just ask Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger.
Not only is the right-wing anti-democracy, but it is anti-science while being pro-religion. The three ideologies — anti-democracy, anti-science, and pro-religion — have combined through the ages to produce theocracies, the most repressive dictatorships in world history. In a theocracy, the leader pretends to speak the “word of God.” Thus he/she never can be wrong, never even can be criticized, never can be unelected, and even simple lack of support can be considered blasphemous. That that is the world Donald Trump and his right-wing Foxlings wish for us, now with the probable support of his right-wing Supreme Court.
The US Supreme Court on Wednesday took up a case that asks whether schools that make the bible an essential teaching tool and reject gay and transgender studentscan receive government funding. The nine-judge court featuring six conservatives were considering a school aid program in the northeast state of Maine and will render a decision in the spring of next year. Parents can choose public or private schools, in Maine or another state, and even schools affiliated with religion, so long as the teaching there is not “sectarian.” Two evangelical Christian families have sued to be able to use the education subsidy money to send their kids to religious schools. In denying them a spot in the program, local authorities argue that one of these private schools “teaches children that the husband is the leader of the household” and encourages kids to recognize “God as Creator of the world.” The other makes use of the bible in all academic subjects. Both of them mix religious and academic teaching and do not accept LGBTQ students or employees.
Religious schools would legally be allowed to exercise bigotry against LGBTQ people, and anyone else, while using public money.
Both sides in the argument invoke the 1st Amendment to the US Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion but forbids any law “respecting an establishment of religion.” The parents who sued — they are backed by a dozen or so Republican senators, 20-odd conservative-ruled states and many religious institutions — insist on the freedom of religion clause to say they have the right to choose a school that reflects their values and say they are suffering discrimination because of their religious views. The state of Maine says in turn that the clause on establishing a religion bars the use of government money to finance a religion.
It already may be too late to prevent the right-wing from establishing a Trumpian theocracy in America. But for those of you who would welcome that form of government, and who believe it will protect you from criminal, “alien” hoards, I only can advise: Be careful what you wish for. A dictatorship is a hole into which it is far too easy to slip and quite difficult to escape,  but a theocratic dictatorship is nearly impossible to cure. And when that happens, the America you think you love, will be gone. SUMMARY There can be little question about the fact that Donald Trump wishes to set up a dictatorship with him as dictator, and that under his leadership, the GOP is doing everything it can to eliminate or negate the votes of those who do not support Trump or the GOP.
Trump Ratchets Political Theater With Telephone Plea, D.C. March Plans - Variety
All votes, not for me, are stolen. So, they must be stopped.
While it is one thing for a political party to try to win votes on the basis of merit, it is another thing entirely, for a party to try to prevent people from voting or to prevent their votes from counting. The former is the natural democratic competition among ideologies, while the latter is the road to authoritarianism and tyranny. Further, there is no doubt that many in Trump’s base, perhaps the majority, would welcome a theocracy in which Christianity (of course) not only would become the ruling religion of America, but that Christian religious leaders would become our unelected monarchs. It has happened all over the world; America is not immune. Lest you believe it is unlikely here, answer this: Did you predict that armed traitors would attack Congress, trying to intimidate Congress into ignoring or reversing our election, while waving Trump, rebel, and American flags, and that the Republican party would excuse the attackers and support their leader? What’s next that you haven’t predicted? 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.

The most important problems in economics involve:
  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:
  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 
The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Is a neutral Supreme Court possible?

Twitter: @rodgermitchell; Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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Sorry, but this article will be a bit of”ring-round the rosie,” because it asks a complicated question with many answers .

Some arguments never will end, simply because we can find no conclusive right or wrong. At best (or worst), some arguments devolve into a social consensus, where they linger a while, after which they rises anew.

Consider abortion. On one side are those whose focus is on the fetus’s rights, it’s life, and its happiness. On the other side are those whose focus is on the mother’s rights, her life, and her happiness.

Some consider abortion to be fetus murder, and they have some logic on their side. Others consider forcibly preventing abortion to be a form of emotional, financial and even physical murder of the mother.  They have a certain logic on their side.

For the past few years, we’ve seen news about the largest beleaguered “minority” in America: Evangelical Christians (reportedly about 25% of the adult U.S. population).

To Evangelicals, Veto a Raw Deal.
Florida Sun Sentinel, 4/1/16; by Jenny Jarvie
Ga. religious conservatives see governor’s axing of “religious liberty” bill as betrayal.

To much of corporate America, the bill amounted to legalized discrimination against gay people, by allowing them to be denied certain services and protections.

Bank of America, AT&T and hundreds of other companies had taken out full page ads to protest the bill.

The governor said he could see no compelling reason for the bill. It would have assured that a pastor could not be forced to perform a same-sex wedding and that non-profit, faith-based organizations could legally refuse to rent property for events they found objectionable.

It also would have given such groups the right to fire or not hire people whose practices they opposed on religious grounds.

There’s growing sense that we’re a majority whose rights and freedoms are being trampled upon,” said Mike Stone, senior pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Blackshear, GA.

I empathize with the evangelicals.  I do see the logic on their side. I am Jewish, and if someone wanted me to rent an auditorium to Nazis, I’d object. Strenuously.

Because I tend to be pro-choice, I also would object to renting that auditorium to Donald Trump.

In  Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., the Supreme Court extended the protections of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) to Hobby Lobby, Mardel, and Conestoga Wood Specialties, three closely held corporations, and held that the contraception mandate of the Affordable Care Act substantially burdened their religious exercise.

The sincerity of their religious beliefs was never disputed. As such, they had no difficulty meeting RFRA’s requirement that their asserted beliefs be both sincere and religious in nature. 

In the wake of the decision, however, critics have expressed concern that future courts will be powerless to block insincere RFRA claims brought by wholly secular corporations seeking to evade generally applicable laws.

In her powerful dissent, Justice Ginsburg proclaimed an “overriding interest” in “keeping the courts ‘out of the business of evaluating’ . . . the sincerity with which an asserted religious belief is held.”

Fortunately, courts historically have demonstrated that they are able to ferret out insincere religious claims. There is a long tradition of courts competently scrutinizing asserted religious beliefs for sincerity without delving into their validity or verity.

And I suggest this is all beside the point.

It’s all about two kinds of beliefs: Sincerely held beliefs and religious beliefs. To conform to the Supreme Court’s ruling, a belief must be both sincerely held and religious.

And the Court ruled that it magically is competent to distinguish both sincerity and religiosity. (Mind reading?)

Let’s say I see you sneaking out of my neighbor’s house, and because of your manner (stealthy, bent and furtive), and your clothing (you’re wearing a face-hiding hood in summer) or other factors (you’re carrying a big, dripping knife and a large bag), I sincerely believe you have murdered my neighbor and stolen his valuables.

So I shoot you.

It turns out you were enlisted by my neighbor to cut down a bee hive from a tree. But, since I sincerely believed you were a murderer, was I legally entitled to shoot you?

No? Why not?

Well, let’s assume the Court, using its crystal ball or ouija board, somehow can determine that my belief was sincere, and I wasn’t just engaging in a bit of live target practice, still it wasn’t a religious belief.

Let’s try another example. You are a taxpayer, and the local school lunch program, for which you pay in taxes, includes, but is not limited to, pork, shrimp and rabbit, all of which are forbidden in Leviticus. Should you be able to force the school to serve only Kosher meals?

Or, let’s get closer to the Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. case.

You are a Jehovah’s Witness. You feel blood transfusions are a sin, so your closely held company refuses to fund insurance that covers your 22 thousand employees for transfusions. Have you converted your employees into defacto Jehovah’s Witnesses?

In truth there are all sorts of caveats in the Burwell decision, including the definition of “closely held,” and whether there are other less-restrictive ways to accomplish the government’s aims.

Virtually all bad legal decisions devolve into a morass of Rube Goldbergian rules, exceptions, qualifications and interpretations. “Burwell” is no exception.

Example: The decision requires that closely held corporations be considered “persons” who have religious rights (though presumably not voting rights).

Again, I suggest this is beside the point.

The United States is not a theocracy. It intentionally was created to be a secular nation, because theocracies invariably become dictatorships. The leader speaks for God, and no one may disagree with God. That is one of the great differences between the U.S. and, for instance, Saudi Arabia.

And while American law makes some accommodation for each individual’s religious practices, secular law trumps religious law.

Supposedly.

So, supposedly, the Supreme Court focuses on secular law, and avoids if at all possible, delving into religious law.

In the Burwell case, the Court’s right-wing made a religious decision, and then desperately searched for rationales to justify its decision.

The idea that, as Ruth Bader Ginsberg dissented: “commercial enterprises, including corporations, along with partnerships and sole proprietorships, can opt out of any law (saving only tax laws) they judge incompatible with their sincerely held religious beliefs” — this idea is so preposterous, it would be humorous but for the real-life implications.

Even now, the Burwell decision has limited the secular rights of more than 22 thousand people, and we are at only the beginning.

The United States Supreme Court ruled in Employment Division v. Smith that a person may not defy neutral laws of general applicability even as an expression of religious belief.

“To permit this,” wrote Justice Scalia, “would make the professed doctrines of religious belief superior to the law of the land, and in effect to permit every citizen to become a law unto himself.”

He wrote that generally applicable laws do not have to meet the standard of strict scrutiny, because such a requirement would create “a private right to ignore generally applicable laws.”

Yet, Scalia was one of the most energetic supporters of Burwell. Such is the incongruity caused by faulty decisions based on personal ideology rather than on law.

(One can only wonder what the decision of this Court, which is composed solely of Catholics and Jews, would have been had the plaintiffs been Muslim or Buddhist.)

In every similar case, the Court now must determine individual definitions of what constitutes a “religion,” what constitutes “sincerity,” what constitutes “undue burden,” and whether an individual’s personal interpretation of his religious doctrine, supercedes secular law (except in tax cases).

Many thought Roe v. Wade decided abortion rights. Many now think Burwell decided contraceptive rights for “closely held corporations. Thomas Jefferson may have believed the 1st Amendment clarified the position of religion in American law.

All were wrong. The battle between religious and secular rights never ends.

This particularly will be true with a Supreme Court that ignores its mission of legal independence and neutrality, and relies instead on personal ideology. These arguments never end because the Court’s decisions are based on the volatility of Supreme Court membership.

That the Court infamously has a solid right-wing and a solid left-wing is a disgrace. Such a division is understandable for Congress, but for the court to be so political leads to the question: Of what value is the Supreme Court, if it is no different from a Congressional, politically-driven, ideology-driven committee?

If this Court is so weak-minded it cannot even maintain a secular legal balance, but repeatedly drifts into religious interpretations, it is nothing more than a term-for-life carbuncle on citizens’ necks.

The question then becomes, is there a way to find and appoint and guide Justice who will be more neutral arbitrators of secular law, or will we forever fight the democracy vs theocracy battle between immobile sides?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

 

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Ten Steps to Prosperity:
1. Eliminate FICA (Click here)
2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D plus long term nursing care — for everyone (Click here)
3. Provide an Economic Bonus to every man, woman and child in America, and/or every state a per capita Economic Bonus. (Click here) Or institute a reverse income tax.
4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone. Click here
5. Salary for attending school (Click here)
6. Eliminate corporate taxes (Click here)
7. Increase the standard income tax deduction annually Click here
8. Tax the very rich (.1%) more, with higher, progressive tax rates on all forms of income. (Click here)
9. Federal ownership of all banks (Click here and here)

10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99% (Click here)

The Ten Steps will grow the economy, and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and you.
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10 Steps to Economic Misery: (Click here:)
1. Maintain or increase the FICA tax..
2. Spread the myth Social Security, Medicare and the U.S. government are insolvent.
3. Cut federal employment in the military, post office, other federal agencies.
4. Broaden the income tax base so more lower income people will pay.
5. Cut financial assistance to the states.
6. Spread the myth federal taxes pay for federal spending.
7. Allow banks to trade for their own accounts; save them when their investments go sour.
8. Never prosecute any banker for criminal activity.
9. Nominate arch conservatives to the Supreme Court.
10. Reduce the federal deficit and debt

THE RECESSION CLOCK

Recessions begin an average of 2 years after the blue line first dips below zero. A common phenomenon is for the line briefly to dip below zero, then rise above zero, before falling dramatically below zero. There was a brief dip below zero in 2015, followed by another dip – the familiar pre-recession pattern.
Recessions are cured by a rising red line.

Monetary Sovereignty

Vertical gray bars mark recessions.

As the federal deficit growth lines drop, we approach recession, which will be cured only when the growth lines rise. Increasing federal deficit growth (aka “stimulus”) is necessary for long-term economic growth.

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Mitchell’s laws:
•Those, who do not understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty, do not understand economics.
•Any monetarily NON-sovereign government — be it city, county, state or nation — that runs an ongoing trade deficit, eventually will run out of money.
•The more federal budgets are cut and taxes increased, the weaker an economy becomes..

•No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.
•Cutting federal deficits to grow the economy is like applying leeches to cure anemia.
•A growing economy requires a growing supply of money (GDP = Federal Spending + Non-federal Spending + Net Exports)
•Deficit spending grows the supply of money
•The limit to federal deficit spending is an inflation that cannot be cured with interest rate control.
•The limit to non-federal deficit spending is the ability to borrow.

Liberals think the purpose of government is to protect the poor and powerless from the rich and powerful. Conservatives think the purpose of government is to protect the rich and powerful from the poor and powerless.

•The single most important problem in economics is the Gap between rich and the rest..
•Austerity is the government’s method for widening
the Gap between rich and poor.
•Until the 99% understand the need for federal deficits, the upper 1% will rule.
•Everything in economics devolves to motive, and the motive is the Gap between the rich and the rest..

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY