home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.activism
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!uxa.cso.uiuc.edu!bfrg9732
- From: bfrg9732@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (Brian F. Redman)
- Subject: Bankruptcy 1995 (part 8)
- Message-ID: <By7An4.7ny@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Summary: The approaching fiscal Armageddon
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 1992 03:21:03 GMT
- Keywords: treachery trickery deceit deception
- Lines: 154
-
-
-
- Bankruptcy 1995: The Coming Collapse of America & How to Stop It.
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- by Harry E. Figgie, Jr.
- with Gerald J. Swanson, Ph.D.
-
- About the authors:
- -- Harry E. Figgie, Jr. is the CEO of Figgie International Inc.,
- a diversified *Fortune 500* operating company. He was co-chairman
- of President Reagan's Private Sector Survey on Cost Control, also
- known as the Grace Commission.
- -- Dr. Gerald J. Swanson is an Associate Professor of Economics
- at the University of Arizona.
-
- "Any profits from this book have long since been assigned to
- charity. We make no profit whatsoever from it." (p. 25).
-
- $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- * *
- * The United States has a problem that is easy to understand, *
- * but whose effects are difficult to comprehend. Its solution *
- * is simple to prescribe, but hard to implement. This problem *
- * is more insidious than drug addiction, more pressing than *
- * recession; it is crueler than poverty and illness and more *
- * hazardous than a hole in the ozone. *
- * *
- * This problem, which is of our own making, will precipitate *
- * an economic nightmare that will dwarf the Great Depression *
- * and turn the history of America into one of history's *
- * closed chapters. This problem has a name. It is *government *
- * debt.* *
- * *
- $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
- --------------------------- part 8 ------------------------------
-
- "A man in the prime of his life is lying on an operating table,
- bleeding from open wounds. A team of surgeons is busily clipping
- his toenails."
-
- "The United States desperately needs fiscal surgery to staunch
- the dollars bleeding from its deficit wounds." Instead, the
- government quibbles over "...which of the country's toenails to
- clip."
-
- According to the authors, it is almost too late. The middle class
- is about to go under. The money is about to inflate. By 1995, if
- not sooner, the United States will have an economic collapse.
- Then, like the former Soviet Union, we will be "...vulnerable to
- exploitation, dependent on the kindness of foreign strangers,
- and, in a word, pathetic -- the hulk of a once-great nation."
-
- "The odds of American survival as a proud, independent nation
- have already grown terribly slim."
-
-
- The citizens of the U.S. are going to have to insist of our
- government that "...we won't stand for more delay and
- infighting." According to the authors, here is what the
- government must do:
-
- 1) Re-establish Credibility.
- The government must start telling the truth. "The slick gimmickry
- and shameful deceit now practiced by the executive and the
- legislative branches have to end. Our leaders must, for one, stop
- masking the size and the seriousness of the deficit situation."
-
- 2) Put a General in Charge of the Fiscal War.
- [The authors have great faith in the use of war symbolism as part
- of the solution. B.R.] The authors call for "...an army of highly
- trained and experienced cost-cutters." They believe we will need
- a "general," several "colonels," and a mass of "foot soldiers."
- This army "...would be divided into battalions, each assigned to
- tackle overspending in a particular sector of the government."
-
- 3) Create a Deficit-War Cabinet.
- "The deficit-war cabinet must keep driving home the message that
- there is a larger battle to be won, and that cutting costs
- doesn't necessarily result in fewer services or a reduction of
- their quality. We can reduce costs simply by doing the same jobs
- more efficiently."
-
- 4) Set Overall Strategic Goals.
- "Roughly $3 out of every $10 currently spent [by the government]
- must be eliminated. [Curiously, the authors do not call for a
- rise in the corporate tax rate as a possible "strategic goal."
- B.R.]
-
- 5) Establish Postwar Reform.
- The authors favor streamlining of government, with a reduction in
- the layers of management and elimination of bureaucratic fat. The
- debt must also be reduced or else "...we will remain vulnerable
- to attack by rising interest rates."
- The authors also suggest that we (a) examine possibilities
- of privatizing one or more areas of government and (b) contract
- out on a competitive basis many of the services it now provides.
-
- 6) Don't Raise Taxes.
- "Raising taxes does not eliminate deficit spending."
-
- 7) Don't Raid Savings to Pay for Current Expenditures.
- The government must stop borrowing money from Social Security and
- from trust funds. Even if it does this, however, "We need to face
- reality and tell some people that the generous Social Security
- benefits they are planning on when they retire won't be there."
-
- 8) Don't Allow Government Agencies to Create Debt.
- "Loans and loan guarantees [such as S&L, FHA, VA, etcetera]...
- are ticking time bombs that have to be defused." The authors feel
- that these federal guarantees just cause more expense for
- taxpayers. "The collapse of the thrift industry, for instance,
- has saddled taxpayers with as much as $500 billion in added
- obligations..."
-
- 9) Don't Monetize the Debt.
- In other words, don't reduce the debt by simply printing more
- money.
-
- 10) Don't Count on a Balanced-Budget Amendment.
- The idea that a balanced-budget amendment will solve the problem
- is a delusion. "It will take at least three years to get the
- required number of thirty-eight states to ratify the amendment.
- We can't wait that long... Moreover, any balanced-budget
- amendment could easily be evaded." The Congress would just invent
- new tricks to avoid fiscal responsibility.
-
-
- "Once we show the world that we have the will and discipline to
- face our toughest problem, the value of our debt instrument and
- our credit rating would rise immediately." There would be "...a
- resurgence of confidence in American industry."
-
- The authors insist that we are already late in launching this
- "war" on the deficit/debt and that we must begin now.
-
-
- ------------------------- end part 8 ----------------------------
-
- You can do a lot of good by taking this article and posting it to
- other areas besides "alt.activism." You can also post this or
- upload it as a file to a local BBS. This would help give the
- people of this nation an alternative to the "fluff" and
- propaganda posturing as hard news which they are currently
- getting from the major networks.
-
-
- Synopsis/Review by Brian Redman
- "Ah yes, Armageddon. I remember it well."
- End part 8
-
-
-
-