U.S. Headlines
- Bill Authorizes Use of Unmanned Drones in U.S. Airspace
- Reid Poised to Introduce Yet Another Internet Bill
- Regulatory Agencies Continue to Slow the Economy
- Federal Court Rules Against Traditional Marriage in California
- Congress Probes “Green Energy” Loans, Wasted “Stimulus”
- Former Congresswoman Regrets ObamaCare Vote; Unaware of Contraceptive Mandate
Some ads are provided by Google
They are not endorsed by The New American
| Obama Signs $1.9 Trillion Debt Limit Increase | | Print | |
| Written by Thomas R. Eddlem | ||||||
| Saturday, 13 February 2010 13:00 | ||||||
|
The legislation — which amounts to increased borrowing of more than $15,000 for every household in America — will only account for scheduled borrowing for a little more than a year. The current annual deficit for fiscal 2010 is expected to be nearly $1.6 trillion, and Obama introduced a budget calling for an additional $1.3 trillion deficit in fiscal 2011. “When I first walked through the door,” Obama claimed in his weekly radio address February 13, “the government’s budget deficit stood at $1.3 trillion, with the budget gap over the next decade projected to be $8 trillion.” One year after walking through the door, President Obama's new budget proposal would add $12 trillion to the national debt over the next decade. In other words, the nation is on a path of being $4 trillion deeper in the debt hole after just a year of the Obama administration — even according to the President's own highly questionable figures. The “pay-as-you-go” rule would in fact do nothing to cut the current deficit projections, as it allows continued deficit spending on the current $1 trillion-plus level per year. All it would do is to help to prevent the deficit from going higher than it already is (currently, more than 40 percent of everything the U.S. government spends is deficit spending). President Obama touted in his weekly radio address that “this year, I’ve proposed another $20 billion in budget cuts.” But $20 billion in cuts amounts to less than 1.3 percent — less than one-fiftieth — of the current deficit. President Obama concluded in his weekly radio address that “after a decade of profligacy, the American people are tired of politicians who talk the talk but don’t walk the walk when it comes to fiscal responsibility.” It would be nice if Obama would change from the former to the latter, but Americans haven't seen that transformation yet. Photo: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (3)
![]()
Bonnie
said:
|
|
So until fall... "...will only account for scheduled borrowing for a little more than a year." And when was the last time the fedgov was actually able to keep to a budget or a schedule? Barry will be back in the fall (probably just AFTER the election) for another increase. |
zoinks
said:
|
Here come the taxes Ahhhh, Paygo. Get ready for tax increases because we all know government never cuts spending to make way for new spending. |
Flu-Bird
said:
|
Aother Great Depression? Are we heading for another GREAT DEPRESSION? and if so it will be becuase of a liberal left-wing demacrat |





President Obama 

