The following from Senator Warren was in my email box this morning. This is serious stuff. Don't let the regressives kamakaze the entire economy again because of their sick suicidal impulses. Warren:
The United States Treasury says that in exactly one week, it won't have enough money to pay the government's bills.
We're not in this position because President Obama or the Secretary of
the Treasury spent more than they were supposed to. And we're not in
this position because investors refuse to buy our bonds.
We're in this position for one reason, and one reason only: because
Congress told the government to spend more money than we have, and now
Congress is threatening to run out on the bill. This isn't about new
spending. This is about paying for the bills we've already run up.
The idea that we can renege on our debts without paying a high price is a fantasy – a very dangerous fantasy.
We
must raise the debt ceiling – and we must do it now. Tell Congress to
do its job, pay our bills, and prevent the first default in the history
of the United States.
Consider what happened in 2011, the last time the government came to the edge of a voluntary default. Even the possibility that the government would not make good on
its debts spooked investors and pushed up interest rates. According to
experts, even talking about default cost the government $19 billion over ten years.
And consumers and businesses got spooked too. The S&P index dropped
by 17 percent. $800 billion dollars in retirement assets vanished.
Mortgage rates went up nearly three-quarters of a point. The result was
less consumer spending, fewer business investments, lower home ownership
rates, and slower job growth.
That's what happened the last time Congress came to the edge of a voluntary default. What happens if we actually default?
Some economists estimate that the rise in interest rates will cost us
$75 billion a year. Social Security checks and Medicare reimbursements
will be delayed. People won't be able to pay their mortgages or small
business loans. Interest rates will spike, and the credit market could
freeze.
If we default on our debt, we could bring on a worldwide recession – a
recession that would pummel hard-working middle class people, people who
lost homes and jobs and retirement savings and who are barely getting
back on their feet.
I
don't always see eye-to-eye with Wall Street CEOs, but on this one we
agree: We can't run out on the bill and cause financial calamity for
working families.
Tell
Congress to stop playing with the lives of every American and start
doing what the American people sent us here to do. Raise the debt
ceiling and pay our bills now.
This fight is about financial responsibility. I can think of a lot of
things we could do with $75 billion dollars. We could ramp up Meals on
Wheels and Head Start. We could give students some relief on their
loans. We could invest in more medical and scientific research. We could
pay down the debt.
But if we default on our loans, we've just flushed money down the drain. That's about as irresponsible as it gets.
For many things that we do in Congress, we can make a mistake, and then
back up and fix it. A default on our national debt is not one of those
things. If we default, this country will pay.
We are the United States of America. We always pay our debts – in full and on time. That's who we are.
Thank you for being a part of this,
Elizabeth
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