Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

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Dardedar
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Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by Dardedar »

I have been helping a fellow out on Intrade regarding his misunderstandings about the budget surpluses we had under Clinton. He goes by "Daos." He's a supply-sider who is invested in the notion that there were no surpluses during Clinton. See what you think:

***************
DAOS: "That was our national debt for each of those years. You'll notice that in no year did our national debt go down, by even a dollar.">>

Wrong. Even Gingrich likes to brag about 4 years of surplus during his time. Is he a liar? Sometimes, but not this time. Even aside from the fact that you use unadjusted dollars (oops), let's give his one a smack. Factcheck does a nice job:

-------
Q: During the Clinton administration was the federal budget balanced? Was the federal deficit erased?
A: Yes to both questions, whether you count Social Security or not.

http://factcheck.org/2008/02/the-budget ... r-clinton/

It's also useful to look at deficits as a percentage of GDP: viewtopic.php?p=24210#p24210

I've debated this one extensively, so do your homework before passing along something you saw on the google.

Hint: viewtopic.php?f=1&t=6168&hilit=clinton+surplus
***
DAO: "Factcheck.org just uses CBO numbers,">>

Yes, and what would the CBO know about such things, compared to... you?

DAO: "going to them as the final arbiter on the national debt is as useless">>

Daos, you pretend to have answers, when you obviously don't even understand the questions. The Factcheck article is quite introductory and accessible. If you can't digest that, and apparently you can't, then you aren't read for the solid food.

DOA: "Deficits as a percentage of GDP is meaningless here.">>

No, not meaningless, quite useful but certainly a different perspective. And one that shows what spenders your conservatives are.

DOA: "Adjusting for inflation is meaningless here.">>

Wrong, using constant (real dollars) is honest. Not doing that, is not honest. Why would I be surprised with which method you would appeal to?

DAO: "We're talking about having a surplus.">>

Which is precisely what we had. Gingrich was fudging his numbers, as this article shows:
http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/16/politics/ ... index.html

But he was right on the broad strokes. "...policies that resulted in the four consecutive years of surplus that occurred from 1998-2001." --ibid

DAO: "To have a surplus, you must produce one more dollar than you spent.">>

Sorry, you haven't the foggiest idea of what you are talking about. How government (public and private) borrowing and debt works is deep water and your water wings aren't built for that. Do your home work. I gave you the resources.

DAO: "The national debt went up every single year.">>

You obviously don't even know what the phrase "national debt" means.

DAO: "That is not a surplus.">>

I warned you to do your home work before shooting from the hip. I am so surprised you didn't!

D.
----------------
"Receipts into any federal trust fund INCREASE the public debt, they do not reduce it. This is because the funds are immediately invested in Treasury securities so as to earn interest until obligated and expended, and any issuance of Treasury securities increases the public debt. When expended, Treasury securities are redeemed by the trust funds and the cash is used to fund the outlays authorized. This causes public debt to go down. Thus, an increase in debt associated with these trust funds is evidence of a SURPLUS of taxes and other receipts over expenditures made. You are trying to use one surplus to argue that another one didn't exist.

You and Steiner are hardly the only ones who are "confused" as to the actual relationship between debt and deficit. Many bogus right-wing articles try to pull the very same hoax. Just because the numbers they use are taken from valid sources does not mean that the numbers are being used correctly, and in these cases, they most definitely are not.
Bottom line is that the Clinton surpluses were quite real and there is nothing that can magically go back and erase them."
viewtopic.php?p=20707#p20707

***
Hey DAOS, since you are smarter than the CBO, perhaps you should write Factcheck and have them explain it to you. Oh wait, someone already did. And the answer:

"You are looking at a figure that includes money they government owes to itself. The debt owed to the public went down in fiscal 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001. Here's Table 7.1 from the federal budget, giving the historical figures: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy ... st07z1.xls (link broken)
Alan Greenspan even gave a speech about what would happen if the national debt was paid down entirely.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs ... efault.htm
--Brooks Jackson Director, FactCheck.org 320 National Press Building Washington DC

I quote from this fellow who is making the exact same introductory errors you are. Perhaps you can spot his errors and learn from them? http://quaap.com/D/clinton-surplus-factcheck.html

He wrote to Factcheck and got straightforward answers. He didn't understand the answers. We'll see if you do.

Hint: "the governmentd took in more money than it spent for four straight years. That's a surplus. The gross debt is another matter."
Hint: "intergovernmental debt"
***
Hint: Intragovernmental Debt doesn’t count as debt. [well, it kind of does, but it's different than external debt]

“If in a given year you earn $30,000 and a friend loans you $5,000, and you spend $32,000, is that a surplus?”

If that were the right analogy I would agree. The right analogy, of course, is
“If in a given year you earn $30,000 and you write a loan to myself of $5,000, and you spend $28,000, is that a surplus?” The answer is yes because no one cares if you write a loan to yourself.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2768007/posts

***
DAOS: "Are you really going to keep trying to argue this?">>

Spoon feeding session is over. If I was to wager beforehand, I would have guessed that you wouldn't get it. How can you get the answer when you clearly don't understand the question?

Oh, and most of your post is plagiarized from: http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reso ... icdebt.htm

When you post material from someone else in an effort to appear smarter than you are, be careful to be honest and note this correctly with quotation marks and preferably citation.

(one sentence hint... When you owe/loan money to yourself, doesn't count as a net debt)

***
Daos, you've been in the wrong section of the Treasury Department. This is the section your are looking for: http://www.treasurydirect.gov/kids/what/what.htm

And it even has your age appropriate answer right there. "What is debt?"

"Have you ever borrowed money?
Have you ever wanted to buy something, but didn’t have quite enough money? If you've borrowed money from friends, family, or anyone else and promised to repay them, then you are “indebted” to pay it back. This is called "debt."
Debt is money one person, organization, or government owes to another person, organization, or government. Typically, the person who borrows the money has a limited amount of time to pay back that money with interest (an additional amount you pay to use borrowed money)." --ibid

If you want to talk about debt, you first need to know what it is.

***
DAO: "By busted you mean linking you the exact definition of debt and deficits">>

No, by busted I mean providing no link and no identification whatsoever that you were citing comments other than your own. Hence, plagiarism. Don't do that, it's not honest.

DAO: "[your] thinking that our yearly deficit is somehow unrelated to the amount the national debt increases by.">>

Gibberish.

DAO: "Your confusion on this issue is largely caused by the CBO,...">>

Yes, let's give that a smack now too. You pretend you know more than the CBO, but you clearly don't understand the difference between a projection (which "scores" laws made based upon assumptions provided by politicians, and notoriously inaccurate because of bogus assumptions, see Ryan's latest whopper), and *predictions.* There is a difference. Observe:

From their FAQ page... http://www.cbo.gov/aboutcbo/faqs.shtml

---
"How accurate are CBO's budget projections?

By statute, CBO's baseline projections must estimate the future paths of federal spending and revenues under current law and policies. The baseline is therefore not intended to be a prediction of future budgetary outcomes; instead, it is meant to serve as a neutral benchmark that lawmakers can use to measure the effects of proposed changes to spending and taxes. So for that reason and others, actual budgetary outcomes are almost certain to differ from CBO's baseline projections."
This makes perfect sense. Regarding their economic forecasting accuracy, which is *different* they have:
"How accurate are CBO's economic forecasts?
CBO regularly evaluates the accuracy of its economic forecasts and publishes the track record. Those evaluations help guide the agency's efforts to improve its forecasts and help Members of Congress and others in their use of CBO's estimates. Historically, the accuracy of CBO's two-year forecasts and five-year projections has been very similar to the accuracy of those by the Blue Chip consensus (an average of private-sector forecasters) and the Administration."
***

Learn this difference.

The notion that there were years of surplus under Clinton is not controversial except among a few internet cranks and crackpots (Craig Steiner et al) and people like you who clearly have no understanding of how surplus funds are used (perhaps you think the FED puts them under the Bed). Are we to believe you know more about government budgetary issues than say Gingrich? The speaker of the House? Really? Did you notice that when he referred to the years of surplus, he didn't get busted for making that up (he did get busted for getting part of his details wrong), because he actually knows a wee bit more about this than you. Here's what it looks like when you use the same consistent measuring stick for all presidents (as opposed to your attempt to move the goal posts and use a different method, which incidentally, still does work for you but I didn't bother to point this out):
http://www.headybrew.net/images/content ... urplus.gif

DAO: "the national debt increased every single year Clinton was president.">>

Revealing again your grade school understanding of "*gross* national debt" and what is done with surplus funds. You don't know what you are talking about. Stop digging.

***

Regarding those surpluses...

Business Insider refers them, but what do they know about such things compared to Daos?
http://articles.businessinsider.com/201 ... ate-sector

The Wall Street Journal wrote about them extensively, but what would they know compared to Daos?
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... 40058.html

And again "on June 29, 1999 the Wall Street Journal ran two long articles, one boasting that government surpluses would wipe out the national debt and add to national saving-..." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/l-randall ... 43642.html

Alan Greenspan talked about the "surpluses," but again, what would "the economist who served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve of the United States from 1987 to 2006" know about such matters compared to the mighty Daos? http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/03/0 ... -surpluses

The CBO lays out the tables simply enough that a child can understand (but one needs to understand what is done with surplus funds, and Daos has no clue): http://cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbof ... tables.pdf

GW Bush's own White House does the same in 2008. See page 22: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default ... f/hist.pdf

You calling GW Bush's administration a liar? Or perhaps this is one of those conspiracies that just happens to have all of those who know what the hell they are talking about on the same side?

D.
----------------
"Receipts into any federal trust fund INCREASE the public debt, they do not reduce it. This is because the funds are immediately invested in Treasury securities so as to earn interest until obligated and expended, and any issuance of Treasury securities increases the public debt. When expended, Treasury securities are redeemed by the trust funds and the cash is used to fund the outlays authorized. This causes public debt to go down. Thus, an increase in debt associated with these trust funds is evidence of a SURPLUS of taxes and other receipts over expenditures made. You are trying to use one surplus to argue that another one didn't exist.
You and Steiner are hardly the only ones who are "confused" as to the actual relationship between debt and deficit. Many bogus right-wing articles try to pull the very same hoax. Just because the numbers they use are taken from valid sources does not mean that the numbers are being used correctly, and in these cases, they most definitely are not.
Bottom line is that the Clinton surpluses were quite real and there is nothing that can magically go back and erase them."
viewtopic.php?p=20707#p20707

***
Daos: "There is no national debt and "gross national debt.">>

Of course there is. Why do you continue to make a fool of yourself? Until you understand the difference between gross and net, you will never begin to understand this issue. And the answer was clearly given to you in the very first, easily digestible factcheck link I gave you: http://factcheck.org/2008/02/the-budget ... r-clinton/

If that's too hard, why don't you try politicfact's specific explanation to another conservative wingnut who can't grasp the difference between "gross" and "net" and makes the same introductory errors you are making: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter ... -down-deb/

DAO: "now you're trying to argue that the national debt didn't increase every year under Clinton">>

Again you refer to "national debt" but you clearly haven't even made an effort to understand the nuances of what that phrase refers to. You can't talk intelligently about this topic until you do. Get off your butt, do a little homework and begin your education here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Us_national_debt

Daos: "Willful ignorance is never an attractive quality.">>

You've got that right.

***

Daos: "There is no "net" and "gross" national debt.">>

Actually there is far more nuance than even that. But if you can't even grasp that introductory concept, then there is no hope. Why don't you call the Treasury Dept. and ask them if there was a surplus in the '90's? Maybe they'll explain it to you. Serious. But there is no reason to think you would understand their answer because you don't even understand the questions. To understand their answer you would need to understand the meaning of the terms being used! Imagine that?

Why don't you read the most basic wiki on US debt: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Us_national_debt
(gee, why does the word "gross" appear 18 times on that page? Why do they differentiate between "gross" debt and other kinds? Poor wiki, they don't know anything compared to you either...). Conservatives always struggle with nuance and anything other than black and white, on/off, up/down answers. They prefer simple answers to a complex universe.

Daos, smarter than the Congressional Budget Office, Speaker Gingrich, WSJ, Greenspan, Clinton and all the economists combined, but shucks, just doesn't understand the difference between "gross" national debt and "national debt" or what is done with surplus funds.

D.
-------------
"Receipts into any federal trust fund INCREASE the public debt, they do not reduce it. This is because the funds are immediately invested in Treasury securities so as to earn interest until obligated and expended, and any issuance of Treasury securities increases the public debt. When expended, Treasury securities are redeemed by the trust funds and the cash is used to fund the outlays authorized. This causes public debt to go down. Thus, an increase in debt associated with these trust funds is evidence of a SURPLUS of taxes and other receipts over expenditures made." --ibid

***

DAO: 'Dardedar, how much did the national debt increase by in...">>

Again you refer to "national debt" but you don't know what that term means. Here is your answer. You won't like it. It refers to years of surplus:
---
Fiscal Year 1997-2004 Financial Reports of the U.S. Government
The Secretary of the Treasury, in coordination with the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), is required annually to submit financial statements for the U.S. government to the President and the Congress. GAO is required to audit these statements.
This page includes financial reports from fiscal year 1997 through 2004, along with related GAO publications."
http://www.gao.gov/financial/fy1997_fy2 ... ports.html
---
But what would the Treasury, GAO, OMB, CBO, presidents, congress and everyone else possibly know about the issue of Federal debt, compared to... you?

D.
---------------
President Clinton announces another record budget surplus
BUDGET SURPLUS
September 27, 2000
http://articles.cnn.com/2000-09-27/poli ... LLPOLITICS

***
In reply to Daos's comment on Apr 26, 2012 04:20:00...

DAO: "what in the world are you talking about?">>

Plagiarism. It's when you cite text as your own without reference, link or identification that it isn't yours. That's what you did. And you got busted.

DAO: "Me linking you the exact definition of debt and deficit?">>

You didn't give a link, or quotation marks. You did this on purpose. Your problem is with different and rudimentary aspects of federal debt, and what is done with surplus funds. Until you understand what is done with surplus funds, and how the purchase of T-bills affects gross federal debt, you will be entirely lost. This has been explained to you many times. You may have a learning disorder. Not understanding this is perfectly acceptable. It's complicated and your misunderstanding is very common. Not bothering to read even introductory material to correct you basic misunderstanding, is intellectual cowardice.
A bright red flag (and by red flag I mean a parade of clown cars with horns blaring and lights flashing) that your head is not partly up your bum but completely up your bum on this issue is that all of the experts, without exception, are against you. That's never a good place to be. We are to believe that those who put the government financial report together via GAO, OMB, Treasury etc. don't know what a surplus is, but that you do? It's not possible that a serious person could possibly believe this.

DAO: "so YOU could see what the literal definition of the word deficit and debt was">>

I don't need those definitions. I already know. I probably knew before you were born. And I also know what is done with surplus funds and how this has fooled you into thinking there wasn't a surplus when there unquestionably was. But this is all quite boring.

DAO: "you refuse to give any number for what you think the national debt was in 2000 or 2010.">>

There is no sense in talking about "national debt" with someone who doesn't know what the term means or what it refers to. And we know categorically that you don't know this because you said: "There is no national debt and "gross national debt."

"Receipts into any federal trust fund INCREASE the public debt, they do not reduce it. This is because the funds are immediately invested in Treasury securities so as to earn interest until obligated and expended, and any issuance of Treasury securities increases the public debt." --link already provided.

D.
-----------
All here in black and white: "Fiscal Year 1997-2004 Financial Reports of the U.S. Government
The Secretary of the Treasury, in coordination with the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), is required annually to submit financial statements for the U.S. government to the President and the Congress. GAO is required to audit these statements. This page includes financial reports from fiscal year 1997 through 2004, along with related GAO publications."
http://www.gao.gov/financial/fy1997_fy2 ... ports.html

***
Dardedar wrote on May 03, 2012

DAOS: "...I bet Dardedar was surprised when he found out... increased the national debt by... [blah blah blah]"

Again dear Daos, before you can even *begin* to speak intelligently about Federal Debt, (and rise to something beyond the equivalent of putting your hand in your armpit and making farting sounds), you will need to educate yourself about what the Federal Debt is, and the many different ways and aspects it is referred to. They are not the same. You haven't made this effort, perhaps because you are lazy. I've already done the work for you and provided you many resources, but perhaps also make use of the very introductory tract put out by the GAO, cited below. It has your answers, and reveals why all of the adults understand that we had years of surplus in the '90's and the only ones that disagree with this are a few internet cranks and crackpots who are uninformed and driven by their political ideology.

D.
----------------
"UNITED STATES FEDERAL DEBT ANSWERS TO FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Excerpt, page 10:
"In contrast, debt held by government accounts
(intragovernmental debt) and the interest on it represent a
claim on future resources. This debt performs largely an
internal accounting function. Special federal securities
credited to government accounts (primarily trust funds)
represent the cumulative surpluses of these accounts that have
been lent to the general fund. These transactions net out on
the government’s consolidated financial statements. Debt
issued to government accounts does not affect today’s
economy and does not currently compete with the private
sector for available funds in the credit market."
http://web.archive.org/web/201011110746 ... 4485sp.pdf
See also page 15.

***
NextD: "How does the Gross National Debt affect the National Debt again?">>

Good question. And it's answered nicely in this succinct and introductory 81 page FAQ put out by the GAO. Don't get up, let me get it for you:
http://web.archive.org/web/201011110746 ... 4485sp.pdf

Would you like some milk and cookies while you read it? Okay. Then it's a spanking and off to bed with you.

***
DAO: "your own article.... just refuted EVERYTHING that you've ever said...">>

Actually, in another bit of irony (let's call it a mini IQ test), even that little quote you cited, agrees perfectly with what I've said. But for you to understand this, you would need to understand the words being used here. And as before, and now again, you do not. In order for us to discuss this in English, you would need to understand the language being used. And you are apparently too lazy or dogmatic to go to that trouble.

DAO: "every time someone doesn't use the exact terminology of "National debt">>

No, not everyone. Just you. Even though these answers have been spoon fed to you, you don't still don't get it. Truly an amazing display of cognitive confusion and dogmatism in spite of overwhelming evidence.

DAO: "The national debt is... ">>

Please. Just stop. It's beyond embarrassing. Here's a little exercise for you. The word "surplus" occurs 64 times in the FAQ I've given to you. Do a word search and read each occasion, and the context, that it occurs. Start with the table of contents which addresses your misunderstanding directly: "What does it mean to have a budget surplus or deficit and how are they related to federal debt? . . . 15"

I can't blend the baby food any finer, I can't make this any simpler for you.

DAO: "The national debt is the...">>

Again, just stop.

DAO: "If the sum of these two numbers is positive, then well done! You have a surplus.">>

Indeed we do. And I'll quote from *page 1,* indeed the 3rd sentence of this FAQ which you either are too lazy to read, or can't comprehend:
"The Congress and the President responded to the high deficits and rising debt over the 1990s by enacting several deficit reduction initiatives. These actions, along with economic growth, helped shrink annual deficits and led to 4 consecutive years of surpluses in fiscal years 1998 through 2001, which in turn reduced debt held by the public. " --ibid

So either the GAO, Treasury, CBO, OMB and all economists are too GD stupid to know what a surplus is/means... or maybe it's the case that you're just thick. And we don't need to guess about this, it's you.

DAO: "the national debt can go down since it hasn't happened since 1960, but there ya have it.">>

There you have it indeed. Dogmatism on display. Too dumb to understand the issue and to much of a fundamentalist to admit you don't understand. Knowledge is specialized and you have shown you don't even a high school understanding of this issue, yet we are to believe you know more than all (and I do mean all) of those who do have training in this field. So what's new? Another brilliant conservative genius that knows more than all of the experts.

D.
----------------
"Surplus.... The amount by which the government’s revenues exceed outlays in a given period." --definition, ibid. pg. 77.

Definition of different aspects of debt, page 74:
"Debt There are three basic measures of federal debt: (1) debt held by the public, (2) debt held by government accounts, and (3) gross debt.

Debt Held by the Public Federal debt held by all investors outside of the federal government, including individuals, corporations, state or local governments, the Federal Reserve banking system, and foreign governments. When debt held by the Federal Reserve
is excluded, the remaining amount is referred to as privately held debt.

Debt Held by Government Accounts (Intragovernmental Debt)
Federal debt owed by the federal government to itself. Most of this debt is held by trust funds, such as Social Security and Medicare.

Gross Debt (Total Debt) The total amount of outstanding federal debt, whether issued by the Treasury or other agencies and held by the public or federal government accounts.

U.S. Gross External Debt Debt owed by U.S. residents to nonresidents"

Contrast this with your ignorant comment made days ago: "Daos: "There is no national debt and "gross national debt."

***
DAO: "You're just mindlessly going by CBO">>

Nope. I know a little Glen Beck bell goes off in your head every time you think you can smear something as being associated with the CBO (I refer here to the Treasury, GAO, OMB, and *all* government entities involved with accounting), but that's just due to your not understanding the role of the CBO and the difference between when it makes predictions and when to does projections based upon the scoring of laws based upon assumptions given by politicians. But I explained this over a week ago and it sailed over your head.

DAO: "http://usgovinfo.about.com/library/weekly/aa101500b.htm">>

Your link says:
"Where the "surplus" came from
For the last few years, the government has not practiced deficit spending. That is, the government has been taking in more from taxes than it has been spending. As a result, the government has money left over -- a budget surplus.
An overall "downsizing" of government and a virtual end to the arms race have contributed to the surplus, but the vast majority is coming from excess Social Security taxes being paid by the workforce in an attempt to keep Social Security benefit checks coming once the "baby-boomers" start to retire. Both Vice President Gore and Gov. Bush agree that the total surplus will...."

Suggestion: perhaps you should read your own links. You will not find a legitimate economist, even with all of the wingnuts at your disposal, that will support the grade school nonsense you are peddling here. Try to find one and see.

DAO: "Maybe another article will help? Probably not but what the heck. http://mises.org/daily/542>>

Of course, Mises. Remember what I said about internet cranks and crackpots? That's these guys with bells on and horns blaring. No wonder you can't think.

DAO: "Once again I'll ask. If you disagree with the treasuries numbers,">>

You don't know how to read numbers because you don't understand the words being used. I've already cited the Secretary of the Treasury referring to the surplus (to those watching closely, note he specifically brags it is "accrual-based," and that's actually an important distinction). Again:

"Financial Report of the United States Government 1999"
"The 1997 Balanced Budget Act proposed to eliminate the Federal deficit by fiscal 2002. In fact, it reached its goal 4 years ahead of schedule, producing the first budget surplus ($69 bil lion) in a generation in 1998."
GAO, page 4: http://www.gao.gov/financial/fy99cfs.pdf

"A MESSAGE FROM THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
"I am pleased to present the fiscal year 2000 Financial Report of the United States Government....
"The U.S. Government is again reporting an accrual-based surplus, which this year is $46 billion. Additionally, this past year the size of the Federal debt held by the public has been reduced by $223 billion." --Paul H. O’Neill, Treasury Secretary (2000)
http://www.gao.gov/special.pubs/00frusg.pdf

"For fiscal year 2001, our results were an accrual-based deficit of $515 billion in contrast to a $127 billion budget surplus reported last fall." http://www.gao.gov/special.pubs/01frusg.pdf --Paul H. O’Neill, Tresury Secretary

I didn't bother to look at 1998. Who is one to believe regarding "the treasuries numbers?" The head of the agency or Dim bulb Dao? This is not a close call.

DAO: "If you go by the real numbers used by the US Treasury,">>

The Treasury says four years of surplus. They even wrote a little tract explaining it to you. They even have a kiddies section and I even got the link for you. Stop digging. You've got bupkis.

***
Dao: "The Treasury does not say that at all.">>

Doesn't say what? They say there was a surplus, just like everyone else (except you and a few internet cranks) and I have cited this repeatedly.

Dao: "I've already... posted the exact numbers of our intragovernmental holding and public debt surplus and deficits.">>

Then you should know there was a surplus. Do you not know what "a surplus" is? You certainly don't seem to know what is done with surplus funds. Should I tell you again? No, I think about six times is enough.

Dao: "tell me what you think the national debt went up by...">>

It is an interesting pickle, surplus exists, debt numbers go up. Child doesn't understand! That's why years ago I started a thread on this in the forum I administrate, and then gave you the link. Perhaps you have a learning disorder.

Dao: "Quoting politicians who have been....">>

I've been referring to all government agencies involved with the task of government accounting. The existence of the surplus is not remotely controversial, even in your rightwing circles (lunatics like Mises excluded). Apparently you know more than all of the experts. I'm very impressed.

Dao: "old silly argument of using CBO">>

What does the CBO know about such things compared to you? Aren't you curious why you can't find any reputable source that agrees with you? I'm not.

Dao: "then quoting factcheck.org">>

Oh, you mean this:
"Q: During the Clinton administration was the federal budget balanced? Was the federal deficit erased?
A: Yes to both questions, whether you count Social Security or not. http://factcheck.org/2008/02/the-budget ... r-clinton/

Yes, what would an award winning factchecking organisation know about checking facts? Compare to you. I suspect you can't accept this basic reality because it means you would have to adjust some of your faith based supply-side beliefs. You've probably been getting this wrong for a long time.

Dao: "If you want to be taken seriously.">>

Obviously I have no interest in being taken seriously or I wouldn't still be talking to you.

Dao: "Go to the treasuries website.">>

Actually, why don't you call them on the phone? Tell them you can't be bothered to read their FAQ, or you don't understand it, and you would like a person to explain to you why a budget surplus doesn't cause the Gross National Debt to go down. Maybe they'll abide your elementary error. I could call them but, I'm not the one with problem: US Department of the Treasury, General Information, (202) 622-2000
After that, come back here and we'll have a nice big crow prepared for you to dine on. Oh wait, who am I kidding. You're not going to believe the US Treasury! What do they know compared to you?

Dao: "Unless you think there's a vast right wing conspiracy that took over the treasury and rewrote all the numbers?">>

The numbers are fine. You don't know what is done with surplus funds. Note: "Trust fund total surpluses add to debt held by government accounts,..." --FAQ, pg. 22. The fact that this is the case, does not change the fact that there was a four year budget surplus.

Dao: "You link this quote as if it helps your argument "The U.S. Government is again reporting an accrual-based surplus,..." --Paul H. O’Neill, Treasury Secretary (2000) "

Yes, I think citing the Treasury Secretary referring to the surplus helps my argument. You said don't use the CBO, go to the Treasury. Treasury, like everyone else, says surplus. But you don't grasp what is done with surplus funds.

Dao: "you either don't understand that intragovernmental holdings exist, or just refuse to count them as deficits or as part of the national debt.">>

As addressed in the FAQ, they are a function of internal accounting. If I were to loan money from one bank account to another, I wouldn't count it as net debt. The government counts it as gross debt. When they do this, it fools some of the children who go on websites and read numbers in charts they don't understand. They make the elementary mistake of thinking gross debt should go down when there is a budget surplus. It doesn't. Boring.

The reason why I put all of this information together is because this regularly pops up with confused conservatives that can read numbers in a chart but don't know what they mean. Next time a wingnut pops up and says there wasn't a surplus, I'll have these further references ready.

Dao: "do you just think to yourself "Well Intragovernmental holdings don't count,...">>

When we have a budget surplus, intragovernmental debt goes up. As I told you over a week ago:
"Until you understand what is done with surplus funds, and how the purchase of T-bills affects gross federal debt, you will be entirely lost. This has been explained to you many times. You may have a learning disorder. Not understanding this is perfectly acceptable. It's complicated and your misunderstanding is very common. Not bothering to read even introductory material to correct you basic misunderstanding, is intellectual cowardice."

I hate intellectual cowardice.

***
Dardedar wrote on May 03, 2012 18:28:56

Dao: "Care to dispute any of these numbers then?">>

Not at all. When there is a surplus, Gross Federal Debt can (and certainly will in the short term) go up, as I've said from the beginning. What you haven't understood from the beginning is that Gross Federal Debt is quite independent of a budget surplus. Thus the complete and utter futility of your attempting to claim there wasn't a surplus based upon your reference to Gross Federal Debt (which you sloppily refer to as "National debt" which has at least three basic parts as I've covered above).

Again, for the 5th time:
"Receipts into any federal trust fund INCREASE the public debt, they do not reduce it. This is because the funds are immediately invested in Treasury securities so as to earn interest until obligated and expended, and any issuance of Treasury securities increases the public debt. When expended, Treasury securities are redeemed by the trust funds and the cash is used to fund the outlays authorized. This causes public debt to go down. Thus, an increase in debt associated with these trust funds is evidence of a SURPLUS of taxes and other receipts over expenditures made. You are trying to use one surplus to argue that another one didn't exist." --link already provided.

Dao: "little more from http://justfacts.com/nationaldebt.asp ">>

Something written by "James D. Agresti." I don't know his qualifications but if you look at his charts, you will clearly see the Clinton surpluses.
Let's look at this chart: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CBO_- ... nt_GDP.png
It uses GDP but that's not relevant to my point. Look at the years '98 to 2000 or so. GDP is X for a given year. That's our fixed point. Revenue is R, Outlay is O. Since R is greater than O for those given years, we have a surplus.

Dao: "* PolitiFact,... wrote that there were "several years of budget surpluses" during Bill Clinton's presidency.">>

Of course they did. Because there were surpluses and they're not buffoons. As you have been snooping around the google looking for a reed to grasp on to, I am glad you are finding you don't have one.

Dao: "* Using the same criterion PolitiFact applied to Bush's presidency (change in gross national debt), the national debt rose every year of Clinton's presidency:">>

This dumb dumb makes the *exact* same mistake you are making. Gross Federal Debt going up is quite independent of, and not relevant to there being a budget surplus, which there was under Clinton. This is because surplus funds aren't stored under a mattress, they are sunk into Treasury notes, which increase Gross Federal Debt. There are different kinds of Federal debt and it's not useful to pretend they are all the same. This kind is the equivalent to me loaning money from one of my bank accounts to another. On paper this looks like I've increased my debt load, but looked at objectively, in the big picture, it's just internal accounting. Loaning money from one pocket to another.

Dao: "I've seen some liberals try and argue that Clinton had "Surpluses" even though the national debt went up.">>

It's not just "liberals," it's everyone, no exceptions, who knows anything about this issue at a high school level or anything about basic accounting. Have you called the Treasury yet? If not, perhaps you live near a high school and can go and talk to an economics teacher. Your errors here are grade school.

***

Clearly you don't, or you would address my claim that a surplus is defined as revenues exceeding outlays, and measurement of gross federal debt, is not never, not *ever,* a way to determine whether a budget surplus has been obtained.

Dao: "You are trying to make an amazingly ridiculous case.">>

Yes, the notion that all of the branches of government responsible for accounting practices, actually know a bit more about this issue than you. The "ridiculous" notion that a surplus is not measured by a referring to gross federal debt which includes internal government loans.

Dao: "finding the real deficit for any given year is as simple as adding two numbers together.">>

Then you should be able to find an economist on the planet that agrees with you. Why haven't you done that? I know why.

Dao: "the unified budget "does not account for the intergovernmental debt.">>

Explain why it should. After you show how all of the economists and all branches of the government have no idea of how to do accounting, I do definitely see a Nobel Prize in your future. Then you can perhaps go on to show how evolution is wrong and all of the climatologists are wrong about the earth warming. And yet the answers are so simple! If only the experts would listen to you.

Dao: "the CBO claim a surplus by not counting hundreds of billions of dollars of debt that was borrowed from social security surpluses...">>

Actually, you are just factually wrong again. As was shown in my very first response to you, via factcheck, the surpluses were so strong, it doesn't even matter if you count SS or not. And that's quite extraordinary.

Dao: "If the country ran a surplus, the national debt goes down. It's that simple.">>

Conservatives love simple answers to a complex universe. I hope this exchange has been useful to people. It's very difficult for humans to change their minds about things. It's one of the hardest things we do. You've given an excellent display of how hard it is, and the depths of irrationality you will descend to in order to preserve your emotional devotion to your heavy investment in the false belief that Clinton didn't have surpluses. For you to admit that would require you to admit to being wrong about this for a very long time.

Dao: "Do you actually believe that the US ran a surplus of... [blah blah blah]?">>

Every economist in the world believes that. Note:
"The Largest Surplus in History:
The $123 billion surplus in 1999 is the largest dollar surplus in history, even after adjusting for inflation;
The surplus, expected to be about 1.4% of GDP, is the largest surplus as a share of the economy since 1951;
1999 is the second year in a row of surplus, marking the first back-to-back surpluses since 1956-57;

The Largest Debt Reduction in History:
Over the last two years, America has paid down $140 billion in public debt, the largest debt pay-down ever;
The debt held by the public is $1.7 trillion lower than was projected when President Clinton took office;
As a result, in 1999 alone, interest payments on the debt were $91 billion lower than projected.http://clinton3.nara.gov/WH/Work/102899.html

Dao: "If so, why did we have to borrow 1.4 trillion dollars?">>

Revealing again that you don't understand what is done with surplus funds. They are largely used to purchase Treasury Securities, which in a rather irrelevant sense (for your purposes), is considered "borrowing." What would you suggest we should do with surplus funds, put them in a mattress? And let's give this one another kick:

Dao: "I've seen some liberals try and argue that Clinton had "Surpluses" even though the national debt went up.">>

Since the following people have directly referred to the surpluses during Clinton, we are then to believe that they are liberals:

Both Treasury Secretaries under Bush
Alan Greenspan (Ayn Rand devotee)
Newt (moon colony) Gingrich
And of course... you're very own, George, W. Bush:

"And as we debate this issue, always remember: The surplus is not the government's money; the surplus is the people's money." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/on ... 022701.htm

You know, when your argument is reduced to referring to those people (and many many more uber conservatives), as "liberals," it's a pretty bright and shiny clue that your argument is all wet. I told you to do your homework. You didn't listen. Not listening is why you don't learn to correct your errors.
https://www.intrade.com/v4/markets/cont ... ment-28718

***

Excerpts from G.W. Bush (registered liberal), going on about the "surplus," while addressing Congress, Feb. 2001:

"My budget has funded a responsible increase in our ongoing operations. It has funded our nation's important priorities. It has protected Social Security and Medicare. And our surpluses are big enough that there is still money left over."

"Last year, government spending shot up 8 percent. That's far more than our economy grew, far more than personal income grew and far more than the rate of inflation. If you continue on that road, you will spend the surplus and have to dip into Social Security to pay other bills."

"I hope you'll join me in standing firmly on the side of the people. You see, the growing surplus exists because taxes are too high, and government is charging more than it needs. The people of America have been overcharged, and, on their behalf, I'm here asking for a refund." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/on ... 022701.htm
***

Dao: "[your] thinking that Intragovernmental holdings aren't actually debt.">>

It's debt, but:
a) it's differs (greatly) from debt owed to foreign nations (for instance), and
b) it is in *no way* a measurement of whether a budget surplus has been obtained (for reasons stated)

Dao: "That's about 1/3rd of our national debt,...">>

But "national debt" is more than one thing. There are different aspects of it, and they differ greatly. Your mistake lies with not understanding these different aspects of debt, and how a surplus is measured.

Dao: "I think we've reached an impasse.">>

Indeed. If you come up with something new, rather than the same old duck and avoidance, feel free to post it in our forum (we don't censor), and I'll unpack it with due diligence: http://fayfreethinkers.com/forums/

Dao: "Unless you think the Treasury is just counting debt it doesn't need to count in order to make our debt situation look worse than it is?">>

The Treasury necessarily counts the purchase of T-bills as a form of gross federal debt when budget surplus funds are used in this way. This is just honest accounting and it doesn't change the fact that a surplus exists. This is internal government debt and rather than something to get your deficit hawk knickers in a twist about, is actually good news.

D.
------------
"Using the Bush White House's own numbers, the federal government under Bill Clinton grew at an annual rate of 3.4 percent. But over the past four years under George W. Bush and his Republican Congress, the federal government has grown at a staggering rate of 10.4 percent. More damning is the fact that... George Bush never once vetoed a congressional bill." --Republican Joe Scarborough, "Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day”, pg. 29 (2004)
***

Dao: "the guy that's been ducking and dodging for a week...">>

If you think you have an important point or question that I have not addressed, simply post it in our forum and I'll respond to it promptly and directly. I think we have imposed your remedial intro to government debt class on the fine folks in this forum long enough. As the record clearly shows here, I respond to points and questions directly, something you almost never do.

Dao: "We owe it, and have to pay it back.">>

To ourselves, thus gross debt but not net debt. Not that you know the difference.

Dao: "Otherwise, why would they count it?">>

How would you know?

Dao: "your fantasy world where you can rob social security and the other trust funds blind...">>

As your Bush said before congress: "My budget... has protected Social Security and Medicare. And our surpluses are big enough that there is still money left over." --ibid
Was your Bush lying before congress? Isn't that a no no?

Dao: "unfortunately for you the treasury does keep track.">>

And unfortunately for you, the treasury says there was a surplus.

Dao: "is there actually a way for the national debt to go down?">>

Indeed. Good question. Post it in our forum and I'll answer it with a specific example I have handy.

Dao: "If the imaginary Clinton surplus which was "so strong" wasn't enough to bring it down, does it require an ultramega strong surplus to do that?">>

Post that one too.

D.
----------------
"Who gave us the surplus?" http://www.cato.org/publications/commen ... us-surplus (republicans of course)
"Return the Surplus to Those Who Earned It" http://www.cato.org/publications/commen ... -earned-it

Doggone it, don't tell me the libertarians over at the Cato Institute also got fooled into thinking there was a surplus too. Yep. Seems everyone got fooled except our resident genius, Daos. What are the odds of that?

***
Nextdoor spams his little debt bit, on schedule. Let me go on a little tear here for our resident deficit hawk greenhorns.

NextD: "5-4-2012 – Daily Update @9:05pm, EST (US National Debt now exceeds GDP!!!) National Debt........$[blah blah blah] (Trillion)>>

I remember when I was young and dumb (early 80's) and thought debt was bad. Certainly not the way to go. I was going to be smart, save up and pay cash down. My uncle (who grew up poor), was at the time a millionaire a couple times over (back in the 80's when it was a bigger deal), and he said no, there is smart debt and dumb debt, and you definitely want to leverage smart debt to build wealth faster than you could otherwise. He was right.

Nextdoor passes along this knee jerk wank about debt but he consistently leaves out a very essential bit of context. Without it, his data is nearly useless. With out it, it needlessly scares him and the kiddies (like Daos). That context is.... how much equity, net worth does the US have? What is *that* number?

Naive deficit hawks, who only see a big number but don't understand this context, really aren't saying anything useful. Sometimes naive deficit hawks like to use a home budget as an analogy. They go on about how a family with this sort of debt ratio would be bankrupt. Or even worse, they like to go on about how the US is already "broke" or "bankrupt." These people are idiots.

Lets use their analogy to a family budget. US gross debt is around yearly GDP. This is historically high, it would be good if it was lower. It probably will be. But it matters what that debt is used to finance. If it is solid infrastructure and investment in society and things that will pay back in the future (like a thriving economy decimated from a Great Recession), it's money well spent and not too high at around one year GDP. Unfortunately, in this case it's largely to finance Bush and republican warmongering stupidity and needless wars and tax cuts for the rich and for the purpose of concentration of wealth at the very top (references upon request).

I came to the US in 1987 with a high school degree and $300 in my pocket. With hard work, my own businesses and using debt smartly, I now have five homes and will buy two more this summer. Note: my debt is about *six times* my yearly income. Is that a bad thing? No. It's a very good thing and this ratio will even go more in this direction when I buy two additional properties this summer. My debt may go to 10 times my yearly income. Remember, if we use GDP as a crude measure of income, the US is at 1x right now. Not using your available debt to leverage value in the future *is dumb* (this is partly why Greenspan spoke against using surpluses to paying down debt too quickly).

The wealthiest country in the world per capita? Luxembourg. The country with the greatest debt per person? Luxembourg. This is not by accident, it's very much on purpose. Nextdoor cites the "Share of Debt Per Individual" in the US is as "$50,101." Does he know what the per capita external (national) debt is in Luxembourg?

Answer: $3,696,467.

Is this a problem? No. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_co ... ernal_debt

So, how much is the US worth? What is the essential context behind this terrifying, 100% of GDP, $15 trillion debt that has Nextdoor peeing his pants every night?

"Total Assets of the U.S. Economy $188 Trillion, 13.4x GDP" http://rutledgecapital.com/2009/05/24/t ... n-134xgdp/

Subtracting $15T, leaves us about $173T in the plus. That's way better than my debt of 6x my yearly income.

D.
-----------------
Even FOX News can see through this: "The Federal Budget Crisis Hoax" http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/04/ ... z1JBYrDG00
***

Para: "I would hope you'd have assets to cover your debt,">>

But of course. Homes owned free and clear. Assets to debt is a couple hundred k in positive area (it was a lot better before Bush).

Compare this with US assets of *13 times* debt.

daos: "not sure I've ever seen anyone that knows as little about economics....">>

Yes, the very same Daos who knows more than every economist in the world and every branch of government involved with accounting. He doesn't know what a surplus is, and certainly not how to measure one, but he knows we didn't have one in the 90's because a wingnut on the internet told him.

Btw Daos, I'll be reposting all of my detailed explanations to you regarding your misunderstandings about budget surpluses on our forum where they can serve as a useful resource for others who have fallen for the same rudimentary mistakes you have. I'll pass the link along shortly. Feel free to join in with those questions you think I am afraid to address.

***

Current link to date.
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Re: Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by Dardedar »

Continued:

***
Daos: "you... pretend Intragovernmental holdings aren't real debt,">>

I specifically said they were. But it is certainly is a different aspect of debt.

Daos: "or that the country ran a surplus during years when the national debt went up?">>

A country (or a person), can chose to use surplus funds to pay down debt, or they can spend the funds in other ways (see the Cato Institute links I gave you yesterday which show the battles that raged regarding how to use the surplus funds). Why is such a concept so difficult for you to grasp?

Daos: "Have you tried telling the bank that the debt you owe on those houses doesn't count?">>

A straightforward fallacy of dis-analogy. The analogy to intragovernmental debt would be me loaning money from one account of mine to another account, not net external debt such as what would be owed to a bank for a house.

Dao: "It would be funny if it wasn't so sad.">>

I don't know if folks will find your errors funny or sad (probably a little of both), but I think they will find them instructive. I don't like to spend time putting research together and having it go to waste, so I've reposted all of my responses to you on this question (18 pages, about 8,000 words) here: viewtopic.php?p=25364#p25364

Where they shall stay for all time. Thanks for your assistance in providing the incentive to have me put this information together. Next time a wing-nut pulls this one, the roast will be ready to go. It wouldn't have happened without you.

***
Dao: "not sure why you think [intragov debt] it doesn't get counted">>

I've specifically said, several times, it does. You should learn to read with comprehension.

Dao: "when you borrow money from those trust funds, you get to repay it later. With interest.">>

To ourselves (kinda). Oh my. And the surplus existed without borrowing from SS. That's what your Bush said before Congress. Was he lying? (quote at bottom)

Dao: "the countries(sic) deficit or surplus is calculated by adding the yearly Intragovernmental holdings to public debt.">>

No. Wrong. This is the nub of your problem so pay attention. You shouldn't talk about things in public until you know what they are. You don't know what a surplus is. This is *not* what a surplus is or how a surplus is calculated. A surplus is having revenue that exceeds outlays. The reason you can't see a surplus is because, amazingly, you haven't gone to the trouble to learn what the word means. Astonishing incompetence indeed but not entirely uncommon for devoted conservatives. Again:

"Surplus.... The amount by which the government’s revenues exceed outlays in a given period." --definition, "UNITED STATES FEDERAL DEBT ANSWERS TO FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS, pg. 77. http://web.archive.org/web/201011110746 ... 4485sp.pdf

Dao: "If the sum of the two numbers is positive the national debt will go down, and you will have had an actual surplus.">>

Not only do you not know what a budget surplus is, I bet you don't even know what money is. Did you know those dollars in your pocket are IOU's and are a form of debt and were created by debt? Of course you don't.

D.
------------
G.W. Bush, talking about the imaginary "surplus," while addressing Congress, Feb. 2001:
"My budget has funded a responsible increase in our ongoing operations. It has funded our nation's important priorities. It has protected Social Security and Medicare. And our surpluses are big enough that there is still money left over."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/on ... 022701.htm

***
UPDATED May 5.

Daos: "And did our revenues exceed our outlays in the year 2000? Nope. The country lost 17.9 billion dollars.">>

When Daos thought I was using the CBO he said that was verboten and I must look to the Treasury. So I did. Now he doesn't like that. Let's see what the 24 agencies responsible for doing all of the government accounting on this matter have to say:
Fiscal Year 2000
Financial Report of the United States Government, 2000
March 30, 2001
Full Report (PDF, 138 pages)

Excerpt:

"A MESSAGE FROM THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
I am pleased to present the fiscal year 2000 Financial Report of the United States Government. The Report
includes audited financial statements that cover the executive branch, as well as parts of the legislative and judicial
branches of U.S. Government. This is the fourth report issued pursuant to the Federal Financial Management Act of
1994. Our goal is to present the activities of the U.S. Government in a timely, accurate, and professional manner.
Developing the capability for the Government to produce financial reports in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles continues to be an enormous task.

The U.S. Government is again reporting an accrual-based surplus, which this year is $46 billion.
Additionally, this past year the size of the Federal debt held by the public has been reduced by $223 billion. All 24
major agencies completed their financial statements on time and the quality of their reporting continues to improve."
http://www.gao.gov/special.pubs/00frusg.pdf
Poor Daos. He doesn't understand what the word surplus means or how to measure one, but he insists upon going on about it as if he does. And he knows more than all of the economists and accountants in the world about high finance and government debt.

I'm not cross posting and archiving all of this on our freethinker forum because I think this exchange went well for you.
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Re: Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by David Franks »

Talk about an advanced case of osteocephaly. Perhaps it would be useful to Daos to get the following explanation. I'm not signed up to comment at Intrade.

>>>>>>>

The national debt in its various forms is the total debt accrued by the United States over time. It is money owed to itself (trust funds) and to other entities (investors). It represents an accumulation of shortfalls in yearly federal budgets, as well as of other obligations undertaken by the government, such as Social Security and Treasury notes.

The federal budget, on the other hand, is a yearly creation that is an entirely separate entity from the debt. Government spending (outlay) and revenue sources are anticipated by the President, hammered out by Congress, and a budget is eventually passed. (As a general rule, Congress doesn't significantly change the amount of the President's budget, even if it changes the intended spending targets.)

You have probably heard the terms "budget surplus" and "budget deficit". These are the same thing referred to by "surplus" and "deficit". All of these terms refer to the yearly budget, which, remember, is a separate entity from the debt.

When revenue exceeds spending, there is a surplus (also called a budget surplus). This is true regardless of the size, or change in size, of the debt, which is a separate entity from the budget. The government could use surplus funds to pay off part of the debt, but instead it usually lends surplus revenue to itself, where is gains a little interest while waiting for a Republican President to squander it. In that case, because the government is lending money to itself, the surplus funds stay on the books and show up as additional debt because it is more honest to show the obligation than it is the money being lent. (It might be the honesty that confuses you, as it is probably foreign to your way of thinking.) That is why surplus funds often appear to increase the debt.

When revenue is not adequate to cover expenditures, there is a deficit (also called a budget deficit). This is true regardless of the size, or change in size, of the debt. The government borrows money-- either from its invested surplus, or from other sources-- to pay the difference. That borrowed money is, of course, added to the debt.

Another reason that the debt can appear to grow in a year with a budget surplus is that the other obligations of the government, such as Social Security, can grow more than the amount of the surplus. For example, it should be easy to see that if a fairly large increase in Social Security funding (due to a SS tax increase) accompanies a smaller budget surplus, the obligation of the Social Security funds will increase the debt more than the surplus could decrease it-- assuming the surplus was applied to debt reduction at all. Usually, though, because surplus funds are lent back to the government, they show up as additional debt.

Remember: the debt and the budget are two separate entities. The terms "surplus" and "deficit" refer to the budget, not to the debt.
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Re: Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by Dardedar »

Excellent David. Thanks for taking the time to write that. I will make sure Daos gets a copy. I'll post it on intrade.
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Re: Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by Dardedar »

Daos responds (and that's being charitable) to D. Franks comment:

***
"Daos wrote on May 06, 2012 01:51:01 #

Aw that's adorable! You're getting your left wing friends off your site to debate for you. And they like to call names as well! What a shock. He's basically just repeating the same things you've said, and he's just as wrong as you are.

The confusion you guys seem to have on this, is thinking that whatever the CBO thinks the word "budget" means becomes the automatic definition of the word "budget." Unfortunately the word budget existed long before they did, so their rather interesting conception of what a "budget" is falls a bit short.

You're either "budgeting" for all your expenses or you're not. If you choose to look at a 17.9 billion dollar deficit and then claim "well it's a surplus because the CBO uses some other accounting method and the CBO is always right" then it's pretty obvious we're never going to agree.

Social Security is legally required to use all of it's surpluses to buy US government securities. Guess where the money instantly goes? Into the Public debt column. Which is where that Public debt surplus came from that year. Which I've already showed exactly how much was borrowed and from exactly which trust funds.

Again, if you were to tell a random person who knew very little about economics that the Clinton years generated a 62 billion dollar surplus, he would just assume that the country had made 62 billion more dollars than it had spent over that 8 year period. Which is just slightly misleading seeing as how we actually went 1.4 trillion more dollars into debt instead. This is the massive difference between the CBO's "Budget surplus" and actually running a real surplus that translates into real money.

Your friend's other point, that you can have a surplus, but then not use it for debt reduction is also flawed. If you have a surplus, then spend it right away, then it's spent. Gone. As in, not a surplus. If you win 50k in the lottery and use it to buy a 50k car, you don't have a surplus. Had you kept the money, or used it to pay down your debts, then you would have. It would be fair to say that you briefly had a surplus, then spent it."

LINK

DAR
I wrote:

Dardedar wrote on May 06, 2012 02:06:09 #...

Daos: " that you can have a surplus, but then not use it for debt reduction is also flawed.">>

DAR
Oh poor Daos, you really aren't going to grasp this. It's quite beyond your ken. If intrade had made a market on whether you would have gotten this and had the intellectual courage to admit that you really don't know more than the 24 agencies devoted to accounting as well as every economist in the US, it would have been a safe bet (from my perspective) that you wouldn't be up for eating the rather large crow you have created before you. This is because you're a conservative fundamentalist. It's very common. Perhaps you'll run into a libertarian or other far right wing nut who can explain it to you some day. If they have any basic knowledge of government finance, you'll find they all agree with me and they'll know you are all wet. Perhaps if you hear it from a fellow wingnut it may click in your noggin. Your response really doesn't even address the points made, as usual (you don't know what a surplus is or how it is calculated), but I'll put it in the archive for it's novelty value.

D.
--------------
"Fiscal Year 1997-2004 Financial Reports of the U.S. Government
The Secretary of the Treasury, in coordination with the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), is required annually to submit financial statements for the U.S. government to the President and the Congress. GAO is required to audit these statements.
This page includes financial reports from fiscal year 1997 through 2004, along with related GAO publications."
http://www.gao.gov/financial/fy1997_fy2 ... ports.html

***
Surly David won't mind if I archive a few of his intrade responses to Daos, here:
Following responses by D. Franks:
[Update: Now snipped since David added them below]
LINK
"I'm not a skeptic because I want to believe, I'm a skeptic because I want to know." --Michael Shermer
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David Franks
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Re: Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by David Franks »

Comments I have posted so far in the thread:

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 03:27:42
In reply to Daos's comment [to Dardedar] on May 06, 2012 01:51:01

RE "You're getting your left wing friends off your site to debate for you."
No, this was strictly voluntary. I live a life of public service; I'm something of an expert on the Americans with Disabilities Act, so I thought I could help you as well.

RE "And they like to call names as well!"
I haven't called any names. I have made reasonable suppositions as to your thought processes, based on my reading of your posts. In other words, I'm addressing your posts; if you want my suppositions to be more flattering, post more intelligently.

RE "The confusion you guys seem to have on this, is thinking that whatever the CBO thinks the word 'budget' means becomes the automatic definition of the word 'budget.'"
That is your confusion, not ours. When you discuss the budget, budget surpluses and budget deficits in the contest of the financial structure of the United States, and make declarations on the subject in the course of that discussion, you are obligated to use the vocabulary according to its established meaning as determined by people who know what they are talking about-- in this case, the people who invented the financial structure. To do otherwise, as you have, makes you appear to be osteocephalic. You could as easily have used "mimsy" or "brillig" as your preferred definition of "surplus"-- they would be no more meaningless.

RE "Your friend's other point, that you can have a surplus, but then not use it for debt reduction is also flawed."
Like it or not, it's true. the fact that you don't approve the situation does not mean that it, or my elucidation, is flawed.

RE "If you have a surplus, then spend it right away, then it's spent."
When YOU are in charge of the country, do as you like-- if you can get the votes. I'll bet, though, that you wouldn't be able to create a budget surplus.

RE "If you win 50k in the lottery and use it to buy a 50k car, you don't have a surplus."
If I need the $50K to make my budget work, I never have a surplus; that is true whether or not the purchase of a car is in the budget. If the $50K is gravy, then I have a surplus, no matter what I do with the money. The fact that it is more money than I need that year is what makes it a surplus-- no matter what I do with the money.

RE "Had you kept the money, or used it to pay down your debts, then you would have."
If I have additional income beyond my year's expenses, I have a surplus, no matter what I do with the extra money. If I keep the money and lend it to myself, it ceases to be a surplus-- it becomes a debt: even though I.still have the asset, the debt is the more pressing representation of the money. If I pay down my debt, then I have had both a surplus and a debt reduction.

>>>>>>>
DF wrote on May 06, 2012 05:14:19
In reply to Daos's comment on May 06, 2012 03:45:15

RE "Yes how could saying someone appears osteocephalic or implying that someone has a mental impairment possibly be construed as an insult or name calling?"
It could indeed be so construed by somebody who doesn't know the difference between a critique of what is being said and calling somebody a name.

RE "Long story short, there's nothing you can ever do or say to erase that actual deficit of 17.9 billion dollars in the year 2000, or change the fact that the public debt surplus that year resulted from borrowing from Intragovernmental holdings."
Assuming you have quoted accurate figures-- and your record on that is not stellar-- it is pretty well an inarguable fact that the debt increased during years that the government ran a budget surplus. Indeed, nobody here has argued that the debt is not large, or that it doesn't increase even when there is a budget surplus. But since the debt and the budget are two different issues entirely, growth of the debt doesn't negate the fact that at the ends of four years, the government didn't spend as much as it took in in revenue, which is a surplus. Given the revenue aversion of the Republican Party, this is fast becoming an ever more special achievement.

RE "That's gotta drive you nuts."
No, the fact that the government has a debt that is a separate entity from the yearly budget doesn't bother me one whit. It seems to bother you, though: besides committing various factual errors, you go so far as to abuse the language normally used by experts and other knowledgeable people to discuss such things in order to whine about it. That smacks of botherment.

Perhaps you'd like to proffer another inapt and irrelevant analogy from household finance, which I might be able to correct in a way that will make the disparate natures of the debt and the deficit more clear to you. In the meantime, I'll light a candle to St. Jude.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 05:22:26
In reply to archy2's comment on May 06, 2012 02:31:47

RE "Don't tell me why you know he can't win, tell me why he shouldn't be president.."

Because "libertarian society" is an oxymoron.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 05:37:46
In reply to TITLEMIKE's comment on May 06, 2012 03:27:31

RE "The Democrats believe the government should take over free enterprise by taxing them to death, kick em while their down and introduce socialism."
The U.S. military, one of the world's largest socialist undertakings, was built by our first presidents-- Independent, Whig, and Democrat; George Washington started this mammoth socialist undertaking. The interstate highway system, one of the most stunning socialist achievements of the twentieth century, was inaugurated by a Republican president.

RE "[Democrats] pretend to stick up for the individual but fail to bring civil liberties to the table."
You neglected to mention that the Republicans-- they of the Party of Family Values-- take at every step the opportunity to throw families under the bus-- in their legislation, in their disregard for the rights of certain people, and, in numerous spectacular examples-- in their own personal lives. Who is louder at claiming the mantle of running the country according to moral precepts that are alleged to make us free? Who is doing the greater damage by their hypocrisy? It isn't the Democrats.

RE "Why on earth would anybody vote for the same crap..."
Because some of us are adept at choosing the lesser of two evils.

RE "...when we have an alternative. Gary Johnson and Judge Jim Gray."
Because some of us are also adept at choosing the least of three evils.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 07:29:02
In reply to archy2's comment on May 06, 2012 06:38:35

RE "Why do you think our credit rating went from triple A to double A?"
Standard & Poor's lowered the U.S. credit rating from AAA to AA+, not AA. According to their downgrade announcement,, "Compared with previous projections, our revised base case scenario now assumes that the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, due to expire by the end of 2012, remain in place. We have changed our assumption on this because the majority of Republicans in Congress continue to resist any measure that would raise revenues, a position we believe Congress reinforced by passing [the Budget Control Act Amendment of 2011]." (See http://tinyurl.com/44xrv4f Page 4.) In other words, Teabagger opposition to raising revenue caused the national credit rating to drop. Why do YOU think our credit rating was lowered?

RE "If we keep on the same path we will end up like Greece and Spain."
Oh, for corn's sake. This country has a long way to go before that happens.

RE "We are in uncharted waters..."
But you just said that Greece and Spain charted these waters. Make up your mind.

RE "...and we need some common sense in our government."
Dismantling the government is not a commonsense approach to governing a society.

RE "The Libertarians will use this issue like a Democrat trick to get votes."
What-- they aren't devious enough to use it like a Republican trick?

RE "The educated voter has the insight to see how legalizing pot is good...."
Yes, and one need not be or vote Libertarian to have this insight; indeed, I'll bet that most people who have this insight are not libertarians.. Let me guess: you were living your Libertarian convictions when you posted this.

RE "My point is don't underestimate the Libertarian way of thinking, it might just save this county."
Yes, in much the same way that killing a cancer patient with chemotherapy and radiation treatments solves his cancer problem.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 17:21:17
In reply to Daos's comment on May 06, 2012 16:33:42

RE "Again, it's funny how fast you resorted to this."
Congratulations on your ability to recognize a sense of humor.

RE "Is there some reason you can't go to the treasuries web site and confirm the information I gave you?"
Yes, there is: as I said before, the fact that the debt and the budget are two separate entities doesn't bother me one whit, so there was no need for me to check. If it had been of any significance to me, I would have checked. If I have tricked you into checking your information, good for me.

RE "The question is, why would you want to less accurately gauge the deficit?"
The yearly budget deficit or budget surplus is generally a good way to judge an individual administration, as you appear to do when you try to claim that Clinton had no surplus. Administration policy-- how much is spent, and where the money comes from-- is more accurately gauged by the yearly deficit or surplus; the debt is more a reflection of government as a whole. The actual question is, why would you torture the standard vocabulary of experts in the field in an attempt to make a point about that field? Note that your quoted source uses the vocabulary correctly. Maybe if you had come across this source sooner, you could have made your point in a literate fashion instead of making yourself look like a dolt.

RE "Going by CBO rules I could simply declare that from now on, military spending, medicare and medicaid are 'off budget.'"
But that's not what happened. The vocabulary, and the circumstances under which it is used, are pretty well standardized. Torturing the facts doesn't make your case any more than torturing the language does.

RE "When making a budget you either count all of your expenses and get an accurate number, or count some of your expenses and get an inaccurate number."
Thanks to revolving credit, installment payments and that sort of thing, there is a difference between a debt and an expense. (Thank-- or blame-- the Medici family.) When I make a budget, my expense related to my debt is not my entire debt; it is the amount required to pay it off in a timely-- or at least legal-- manner. My yearly budget includes twelve house payments (plus whatever extra principal I can kick in), not the amount I owe on my house. And remember when credit card companies used to calculate minimum payments due so the customer would never be able to pay off his debt? It is entirely possible to budget for one's expenses without ever paying off one's debt. Of course, it is wise to be aware of one's total debt when one creates a budget, but the two are separate, and handled differently in real life. (Note that I just gave you an analogy using household finance, which is supposedly applicable to how the government should be run.) Expense and debt are not the same thing. The budget and the debt are not the same thing.

You have misused the standard vocabulary for discussing the federal debt and deficit in order to claim that something didn't happen. You were both incorrect and wrong. Clinton had a surplus. Spanky-spank spanking for you.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 17:59:25
In reply to rsdcllc's comment on May 06, 2012 12:55:58

RE "The Interstate Highway system is not socialism.It's an alliance between government and private industry."
So is Obamacare.

Of course, as for the military, we are taxed without recourse to pay for the interstate system-- both through gasoline taxes and through regular taxation. The interstate system caused the greatest wealth redistribution in twentieth-century America-- and it is ongoing. The interstate highway system overrides state and local choice as to routing and imposes national standards for engineering, land requirements, access and signage. Further, the interstate highway system is an adjunct to our socialist military (if it isn't a militia, it's socialized), as it was created for defense.

RE "The military performs in spite of itself"
The military sucks up way too many of our resources, and far more of that is due to the private enterprise attached to it than to its socialist underpinnings.

RE "It's the Privates, Corporals, Sargeants, etc, ( the little guys) , in other words, the individual that is it's saving grace!"
These people, and the people above them, do nothing without orders from above.

RE "The individual is the building block of our nation..."
And what is built is a society.

RE "...and that's what the Constitution celebrates!"
If the Constitution "celebrates" the individual, there is no need for a Constitution. The Constitution is the construction document for a society. If it celebrates anything, it celebrates a society that provides a milieu within which the individual may prosper. Its very existence is proof that the Constitution's primary concern is a society.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 19:30:47
In reply to Daos's comment on May 06, 2012 18:39:20

RE "But the year you buy the house, that would be in your budget for that year. "
If you mean the year in which I close the purchase of the house, that is not correct. I buy my house (with other considerations, of course) according to a price, and the bank lends to me, based on my monthly or yearly ability to pay toward the debt. Even the lender's approach (and so the government's interest in my debt) is incremental and budget-related. Until the year in which the mortgage is paid off, the remaining debt has only an incidental relation to my budget. I might or might not budget so as to pay additional principal in order to hasten the payoff and reduce the total interest paid, just as the government might or might not apply a budget surplus to pay off the debt. The total debt on the house is otherwise never a budget consideration.

RE "One time expenses still count, whether you like it or not."
That one-time expense is a debt, not a budget item. The payments on the debt are the budget items.

RE "You can say Clinton had a budget surplus all day, but only by the very interesting accounting used by the CBO is that true."
However, that accounting is the circumstance under which budget deficits and surpluses are properly discussed. You moved the goalposts without properly informing the NFL.

RE "The USA ran a deficit of 17.9 billion dollars in 2000."
You're talking about the debt again.

RE "A number referred to by that article you just enjoyed, as the 'true deficit.'"
That article also referred to the Clinton surplus.

RE "But feel free to argue your point with some more name calling."
Oh now, don't slip into victimhood. I have criticized your posts for the impression they give. If I had actually been calling you names, I would never have suggested that you can do better. I'll even go so far as to say that you don't really enjoy all of these spankings you keep returning for.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 20:38:57
In reply to Daos's comment on May 06, 2012 19:59:04

RE "Yes, many articles refer to the Clinton surplus in order to debunk it."
What they are "debunking" is the notion-- not held by anybody I know-- that Clinton's budget surplus was nearly adequate to pay off the debt in the time his policy was allowed to stand. I have acknowledged, as does everybody I've ever heard on the subject, that there was more debt than was covered by Clinton's budget surpluses-- which existed, because the debt and the budget are two different things.

RE "When I say the country ran a deficit of 17.9 billion in 2000, it means exactly that. The country spent 17.9 billion more than it took in."
Yet Clinton had budget surpluses, as I-- and almost every expert on the subject of federal financing, keep saying. If that fact bothers you, change the system and the way it is discussed. But that won't change history. Clinton had budget surpluses.

Note that I am not really arguing against you-- particularly now that you are couching your argument in terms more closely resembling the accustomed ones. I have never said or even suggested [train of thought loss due to input error]

RE "Your methodology is quite simply that whatever the CBO says becomes fact, regardless of the truth. I disagree."
No, I'm just pointing out that in a discussion about a subject that has a long-established nomenclature, you arbitrarily changed the meaning of one of the terms and made yourself look bad as a result. Your disagreement needs to be couched in terms as they are used for this discussion. Then we can see whether you are right to disagree.

RE "Also, your spanking obsession is getting creepy."
The fact that you keep coming back for more is even creepier. Is it your birthday? If that's your reason, you must be far older than you look.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 06, 2012 21:14:08
In reply to Daos's comment on May 06, 2012 20:40:23

RE "Someone's getting angry!"
Took you long enough to notice-- your intemperate mood has been pretty obvious to the rest of us for a while now.

RE "A federal reserve bank talking about what a true deficit is and which way is more accurate to access a deficit isn't good enough?"
As I pointed out, that article pointed out the inaccuracy of the claim you had been making (which was based on your willful refusal to discuss this topic using accepted vocabulary). I have not disagreed with the article's point that the country spent more money than was budgeted, even though it was less more than it might have been because there were budget surpluses (after all, the debt and the budget are two different things). The article proposes a different assessment than what is normal, as it discusses surplus and deficit in relation to the debt rather than to the budget. And, as I pointed out, it took you a long time to properly incorporate this information into your argument. I do not necessarily disagree with the article itself-- yet.

RE "At the end of the day, you see a country that loses 17.9 billion dollars."
No, I see a country that has spent 17.9 billion dollars more than it had (except that it has the money in a trust fund, and the money can be replaced), and bought a bunch of stuff with it. I don't automatically see it as "lost" money, because we probably got something for it, like more of that socialized military than we need. As a general rule, I am more likely to see such money as "lost" when it goes for something I'm not in favor of, like unfunded wars started under false pretenses, and less likely to see it as "lost" when it is invested in our future, such as on infrastructure projects and otherwise catching up with the maintenance on our neglected nation. But of course we live in a pluralistic society, and apparently there were enough people who approved of spending a lot of money on unfunded wars started under false pretenses, so I guess that money wasn't "lost". After all, somebody got rich because of it.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 07, 2012 03:34:58
In reply to NextdoorSolutions's comment on May 07, 2012 03:13:47

RE "With just 31% of Americans thinking that the country is heading in the right direction, I doubt Obama can be re-elected."

But with Congressional approval ratings between 10% and 20% for months-- having hit 9% last October-- and Obama's approval ratings at 45% to 50% for months, it's pretty clear who those other 69% of people hold responsible. Looks like the Teabaggers are in trouble.

Thanks for bringing up the subject.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 07, 2012 04:58:45
In reply to rsdcllc's comment on May 07, 2012 02:55:28

RE "The Constitution's purpose is to arrange for an orderly society where the the rights of the individual are supreme and protected.. It is based on The Declaration of Independence."
The Declaration of Independence is not a governing document. It is a hyped-up, florid, hot-button-pushing justification for severing legal and governmental ties with England. As such, it depends for its force and effect almost entirely upon the fallacy of emotional appeal. It is a rallying cry, not a foundation for government.

On the other hand, the tone and content of the Constitution is completely different from that of the Declaration of Independence. For example, the words "God" does not appear in the Constitution at all, and that it creates a government whose powers include many of those that caused the colonists to break with England. Also note that the words "man", "individual" and "individuality" do not appear. The word "person" is used five times in Article I - The Legislative Branch, twice in Article III, Section 3 - Treason, twice in Article IV, Section 2 - State citizens, Extradition, twice in Amendment 5 - Trial and Punishment, Compensation for Takings, seven times in Amendment 12 - Choosing the President, Vice-President, twice in Amendment 14 - Citizenship Rights (twice in Line 1, due process and equal protection, and once in Line 3, succession in case of death of President-elect), and five times in Amendment 22 - Presidential Term Limits. In other words, every reference to an individual in the Constitution is specifically in reference to holding office or direct legal entanglement with a government. There is no indication in the Constitution that the individual is supreme-- only that his rights in regard to the government are protected. The Constitution is a living monument to a society, not a temple to the individual.

RE "But, many other areas of our national government waste more money than the Defense Department."
Examples, please. Given that the U.S. military spending, at $700 billion, is more than that of the next 17 countries combined. (China, about $100B, Britain, France, Russia and Japan, about $60B each, and so on.)
http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailycha ... y-spending
Be sure to show us other areas of the government that waste about 50% of their money.

RE "But, the Interstate highway system is still an alliance betwen government and private industry."
So is Obamacare. Let's hear you cheer for /that/ bit of socialism.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 07, 2012 06:42:33
In reply to rsdcllc's comment on May 07, 2012 05:54:19

RE "...the First amendment guarantees the right to Freedom of Religion and Freedom of Expression from government interference."
You left out freedom /from/ religion.

RE "Now who are the rights being guaranteed to, robots, apparitions, the trees, the sky. the sun , the moon?"
As I pointed out, the Constitution refers to individuals in the context of becoming or being elected officials, and in the context of legal problems. It is very businesslike-- and hardly the paean to individualism that you make it out to be.

RE "Because the Founders knew our rights didn't come from the government, they came from our Creator, as proclaimed in the Declaration!"
Yet the Constitution never mentions all rights, or where they come from. And it would be more correct to say that the great majority of the Founding Fathers believed that human rights come from the very status if being a (white male) human, not from God.

RE "You seem glad that God isn't mentioned in the Constitution"
I am, but I mentioned this to contrast the Constitution with the Declaration of Independence.

RE "neither is the Right to Privacy, the underpinning of the pro-abortion argue."
That argument is used only because if you point out that the Bible is pro-abortion, it makes conservative Christians' heads explode. And then the messy remains try to crabwalk around the issue by claiming that their opposition isn't really religious in nature. It's far more neat and orderly to posit a right to privacy-- which seems as much a natural right as any of the others.

RE "The people, that's who, individuals all."
"How can a group have privacy if the individuals in it don't have privacy!"
I've not said that individuals don't have rights. Indeed, that goes without saying, and the Constitution is not needed in order to say it. The fact that the Constitution exists is proof that its concerns are societal, not individual. At the same time, it reiterates some of the rights of the (white male) individual, as they pertain directly to the government (the instrument of a society) created therein.

Societies are indeed made up of individuals. But a society is like a masonry wall: unless the individuals are very uniform, and/or are stacked very carefully, mortar is needed to make a strong wall. In our pluralistic society where individuals are neither uniform nor carefully stacked, the Constitution is that mortar.

RE "Obamacare is not an alliance with the government, Romneycare is."
Explain the difference.

RE "Obamacare is a takeover of the Healthcare system, just like Medicare is for those over 65."
Really? All of those private hospitals, clinics, treatment centers, doctors, personnel and bookkeepers are still out there, and still making plenty of money-- as are the insurance companies. In what way is Medicare a takeover of the healthcare system, and in what way would Obamacare be a takeover?

RE "An alliance wouldn't take 2074 pages to establish it."
You must have had to stand up to extract that. A prenuptial agreement increases the paperwork involved with a marriage, but the marriage is no less an alliance because of it. Much of the verbiage in the health care bill was added by Republicans, who in my opinion did most but not all of the watering down of the bill, as they sought to protect the status quo-- particularly the business interests of the insurance industry. In other words, making the health care bill more of an alliance is what makes the bill so ponderous.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 07, 2012 20:29:08
In reply to tprescott's comment on May 07, 2012 18:08:13

RE "If it means having a doctor diagnose them with chronic depression or anxiety to get disability even though they seemed to be able to hold a job before the economy fell off a cliff then that's what it means."
Or it might mean that they have actually developed chronic depression or anxiety. Losing a job and not being able to find a job are two of the most stressful life experiences-- right up there wit the death of a spouse. I would be surprised-- and a little worried-- if somebody who has been looking for a job for a year or more /didn't/ have chronic depression or anxiety.

I have found, upon interviewing a number of people who think that the jobless are shirkers, that they believe this because that's what they'd do if they lost their jobs. Very impressive, and hardly a criterion for judging others.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 07, 2012 20:32:29
In reply to NextdoorSolutions's comment on May 07, 2012 19:33:31

RE "Is that the best you can do? Laughable!!!"
Is that why you're laughing, instead of refuting the information in the post? Revealing!!!

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 07, 2012 21:02:34
In reply to rsdcllc's comment on May 07, 2012 17:10:45

RE "The Constitution is business like, it's actively setting up a blueprint by which to run a nation and a political system."
In other words, the primary concern of the Constitution is society, not the individual. You're coming around.

RE "More importantly, the Founders didn't leave out Freedom from Religion."
I know that. I pointed out that /you/ left out freedom from religion.

RE "We're back to the 'old white male' thing now, are we?"
You were talking about the supremacy of the individual. I mentioned "white" and "male" to point out the fact that, although a lot of individuals were not white and/or not male, the Constitution did not consider their rights. As a celebration of the individual, the Constitution is clearly lacking.

RE "The Founders were older white men for sure, in the Progressive world that's a bad thing."
No, for progressives, the bad thing is that others are perennially excluded. If you are glad that women and black people have rights that are almost commensurate with the rights of white males, then you should thank progressives rather than make fun of them.

RE "But, It was needed to spell out these rights..."
The Constitution does not spell out rights, except as they relate directly to participation in, or legal interaction with, the government. It is certainly no catalog of rights.

RE "...and to impose safeguards in order to keep the government and other groups or individuals from taking those rights from any other individual."
The Constitution imposes safeguards against much (not all) abrogation of individual rights by government, but it says relatively little about the abrogation of individual rights by other individuals.

RE "I'm glad that you agree that societies are composed of individuals."
It would be foolish to believe otherwise. Even Japanese society is composed of individuals, however strong their societal bonds and conformities.

RE "But, when you mention a pluralistic society like America , you're, most likely, talking about groups."
No, I'm considering the individuals in groups as well as in societies. I've been to far too many meetings of far too many different kinds of groups to ignore the individuals in groups.

RE "The Founders saw individuals as pluralistic, in other words, different and unique from each other, regardless of whatever group to which they might belong."
Assuming that this is true, where is it evident in the Constitution?

RE "Progressives put everyone into a group, the rest of us see individuals."
Yet here you are, putting me in a group, then saying that all members of that group are alike.

RE "Your comment about the " old white men" alludes to this point!"
No, it points out that the Constitution ignores the rights of about half of the individuals in the society it creates. Again, the Constitution is not overly concerned with the individual.

You appear to have a rather romanticized notion of the Constitution, as if it were written by Thomas Kinkade.

RE "The purpose of Obamacare is to drive the insurance companies out of business."
No, Obamacare does a pretty good job of keeping insurance companies in business.

RE "That would pave the way for single-payer health care."
Obamacare took several steps away from single-payer; it doesn't even approach two-tier in any useful fashion. We're still a long way from anything resembling pavement.

RE "This is what Progressives want, that's why they are so in favor of it!"
Not just progressives-- anybody with more sense than paranoia wants single-payer.

RE "all [the government] has to do is control what goes in inside those buildings(socialism.)"
Do you really want an unregulated medical industry? An unregulated insurance industry? Some socialism is a good thing.

RE "Obamacare is out to destroy it's 'partner!'"
Show how this is the case. Obamacare goes out of its way-- several hundred pages out of its way-- to accommodate private insurance.

RE "Medicare is very invasive as well as wasteful."
In comparison to private insurance? Not necessarily. Read and weep:
"Medicare Advantage, which enrolls seniors in private health plans, has failed to deliver care more efficiently than traditional fee-for-service Medicare." http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2011/09/2 ... insurance/ (Note that the "alliance" isn't particularly successful.)
"In inflation-adjusted terms, Medicare spending per beneficiary increased more than 400 percent between 1969 and 2009 while private insurance premiums increased by more than 700 percent." http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/01/0 ... -insurance
"A Chicago doctor faces as many as 17,000 different sets of benefits for her patients. Your physician in Oregon might deal with only 300. But that's still a lot of paperwork that doesn't provide health care." http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index ... e_sys.html
"Duke University Hospital, for example, has 900 hospital beds and 1,300 billing clerks. On top of this are the administrative workers in health insurance. Health insurance administration is 12 percent of premiums in the United States and less than half that in Canada." http://conversableeconomist.blogspot.co ... -come.html

RE "But, like all or most things, whomever controls the money or purse strings, that's who controls the situation. In health care and for those 65 and older, that's the Federal Government."
How is it preferable for an entity that is primarily concerned about profit to hold the purse strings rather than an entity that exists to support a society that can number good health among its freedoms?

RE "Obamacare would spread that control to everyone!"
Obamacare will do no such thing. All of your exclamation points notwithstanding, fervor does not make conjecture true. Go ahead and try to show this, though.

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 08, 2012 01:32:46
In reply to NextdoorSolutions's comment on May 07, 2012 21:27:24

RE "Yes, what is there to refute?"
The list of promises kept has references. For your further delectation, here's a list of accomplishments of the Obama administration, with references. He's gotten quite a bit done, despite all the Teabagger-driven Republican obstructionism. http://pleasecutthecrap.typepad.com/mai ... -2009.html Obama is not the do-nothing president of Republican portrayals.

RE "Obama promised to reduce the national debt in half, but instead the debt grew by 50%."
You appear to have Daos syndrome: Obama promised to cut the /deficit/ in half, and CBO estimates at the time supported his claim. He probably didn't realize how little cooperation he would get from Republicans in Congress. By the way: this was not a campaign promise-- it was made in March 2009.

RE "Obama promised to close Guantanamo within 6 months of taking office"
That's disappointing. He must have listened to his military and security advisers. (What would you be saying about Obama if he /had/ closed Guantanamo?)

RE "Obama promised not to raise the debt ceiling but did it 2X when he became President. In fact he voted against it as a Senator."
Republicans put us in the position of needing debt ceiling increase by refusing to include revenue increases in budget negotiations. Obama probably didn't realize how little cooperation he would get from Republicans in Congress. (And you see what happened to the national credit rating as a result of their revenue aversion.)

RE "Obama promised to pull out all the troops within 6 months of getting elected"
How dare he listen to his military and security advisers? If Bush had listened to people who knew what was going on, we wouldn't have been in Iraq in the first place. Did you vote to re-elect him anyway?

RE "Obama promised to repeal the Bush Tax Cuts but extended it anyway. Despite having control of both houses."
Having majorities in both houses is not necessarily having control of both houses. The Democrats have never had control of both houses during the Obama administration.

RE "Obama promised that if the 800 billion stimulus package is approved, unemployment will never go up above 8%."
Nobody in the Obama administration ever made that promise. Unemployment projections were made in a report that included the following note: "Forecasts of the unemployment rate without the recovery plan vary substantially. Some private forecasters anticipate unemployment rates as high as 11% in the absence of action." Unemployment has remained in the middle of the projected range. In the meantime, the "job creators" are not performing as promised. Now /that's/ a letdown-- we've paid them good money to create jobs for over ten years.

RE "Obama promised immigration reform in hist first year in office but didn't deliver on it, even with control of both houses."
Again, the Democrats have never had control of both houses during the Obama administration.

Did Bush keep all of his promises by 2004? Did you vote to re-elect him anyway?

>>>>>>>

DF wrote on May 08, 2012 02:24:54
In reply to rsdcllc's comment on May 08, 2012 00:52:47

RE "The Preamble to the Constitution states as much."
The Preamble speaks of society, not of individuals-- "more perfect Union", "the common defence", "the general Welfare", "ourselves and our Posterity"-- all terms that refer to the whole, not the parts.

RE "I left out a number of freedoms, the number of them is not what we're discussing, we're discussing to whom the freedoms belong."
So did the Constitution. You started out saying that the Constitution enumerates our individual freedoms. Please be more careful in formulating and stating your position, and stop changing it. For your information, as I have said before, I believe that individuals have rights, and you can stop pretending that I don't believe that. I also know that the Constitution is limited in how it approaches those rights because it is primarily a document for a society.

RE "The Constitution considers everyone's rights."
But it does not enumerate them. The rights of individuals are discussed in the Constitution only in relation to how the government may affect them, and specific rights are hammered out in this regard only by way of the judicial system.

RE "Sure the Constitution spells out some of our rights , that's the Bill of Rights."
The Bill of Rights spells out rights specifically pertaining to government interaction with citizens. Other rights of individuals are vaguely mentioned, but not enumerated, in Amendment 9 - Construction of Constitution.

RE "You should thank these 'old white men' for women, blacks, gays, etc to have a chance at equality!"
No, I thank progressives of whatever age, sex or color.

RE "There are Progressives and people who want progress! Gigantic difference!"
In other words, you are not dealing with me as an individual; you've put me in a group of people you don't like.

RE "....I try to deal with people on an 'individual' level"
Yet you labeled me a "Progressive" so you can deal with me as a member of that group. You don't even respond carefully my comments; you reply to them rather generically.

RE "If you doubt that they wanted progress, just read the Preamble!"
The Constitution set up an idealized society in the sense that society was know at the time: slavery was legal, and women and children were considered property. The Constitution was used to protect that part of the status quo until society evolved enough that the Constitution had to catch up with it. The authors of the Constitution had enough sense to not be overly specific in its language. But the Constitution remains useful because it is a document of society, not of individuality.

RE "I purely and truely love it!"
Then you should read the original for understanding, instead of reading the conservative annotated version. They lied to you.

RE "You're confusing Socialism with the social good."
Sometimes socialism /is/ the social good. You're confusing socialism with Communism.

RE "Medicare fraud and waste is rampant."
Yes, and most of it is committed by doctors and hospitals-- the very group you want to deregulate.

RE "You demonize the insurance companies because they make money"
No, I don't. Read and react to what I actually say. I believe that it is inappropriate for my access to health care to be dependent upon the ability of a bunch of strangers to make a profit. Respond to that.

RE "What do you have against people making money?"
Nothing. But there are far more appropriate ways for people to make money than betting for profit against my health care.

RE "why are you here on Intrade."
I'm here strictly for the scintillating conversation on this thread.

RE "Americans have good health! They live better and longer than they ever have."
People in Canada, much of Europe, much of Scandinavia, Japan, Australia and New Zealand outlive us. http://www.disabled-world.com/calculato ... istics.php Damned socialists and their better health.

RE "Our problem now is paying for it and that problem began to increase greatly once the Government began to take it over!"
Apparently you ignored this link I posted earlier: "In inflation-adjusted terms, Medicare spending per beneficiary increased more than 400 percent between 1969 and 2009 while private insurance premiums increased by more than 700 percent." http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/01/0 ... -insurance In other words, private health care is driving our high health care costs.

RE "Fervor may or may not make truth, but neither does some worthless website written by some supposed " expert" with an agenda."
By all means, show how any of the information I link to is incorrect or biased. Your say-so is not convincing.
"Debating with a conservative is like cleaning up your dog's vomit: It is an inevitable consequence of your association, he isn't much help, and it makes very clear the fact that he will swallow anything."
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David Franks
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Re: Regarding the Years of Surplus During Clinton

Post by David Franks »

.
From Dave Manuel

How Did A Surplus Result In The National Debt Going Up?
2012-09-06 05:30:00

"Earlier tonight, former President Bill Clinton took to the stage at the Democratic National Convention and gave his endorsement to President Barack Obama.

"Since Bill Clinton is in the news tonight, I thought that it would be a good time to try and answer one of the questions that I receive most often through this site. That question is:
Why did the US national debt continue to increase during the Clinton surplus years?

--

"The Clinton era surplus numbers look something like this:

"1998 - $69.2 billion surplus
1999 - $125.6 billion surplus
2000 - $236.4 billion surplus
2001 - $127.3 billion surplus

"Let's take one year to focus on - 2000. The "official" surplus number for that year was $236.4 billion. So the national debt must have declined that year, right?

"Wrong.

"Let's take a look at the numbers.
[Linked to http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/BPDLog ... ication=np]

"The total national debt on October 1st, 1999 was:
$5,540,570,493,226.32

"The total national debt on September 30th, 2000 was:
$5,656,270,901,633.43

"That's an INCREASE of over $100 billion, despite the fact that the country posted a surplus.

--

"So what gives?

"There are two things that happened here:

"1) The 'on-budget' surplus was actually much smaller than the number that included both the 'on-budget' and 'off-budget' numbers, which is the number that is widely reported by the media.

"2) Any excess revenues from the Social Security trust funds are automatically invested in government-issued debt:
'Federal law requires that all excess funds be invested in interest-bearing securities backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.'"


But wait-- there's more! Continue reading at
http://www.davemanuel.com/2012/09/06/wh ... lus-years/
"Debating with a conservative is like cleaning up your dog's vomit: It is an inevitable consequence of your association, he isn't much help, and it makes very clear the fact that he will swallow anything."
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