Category Archives: Federal Government

Mexico reconquers the U.S.

Stardora <stardora@bellsouth.net> wrote:

Mexico reconquers the U.S.


Posted: May 19, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=50284

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

For
years, we’ve been hearing the rumblings that radical activists in Mexico were
planning a “Reconquista” or reconquering of the American Southwest.

Judging
by the events of the past few months, it seems clear that they’ve already
succeeded.

This
week, the U.S. Senate decided to reward those who break our laws and enter our
nation illegally by granting them legal citizenship here. It’s called amnesty,
and it’s a concept that has found growing support among conservative
politicians who had once promised us that they would fight against any amnesty
proposal.

Forget
the Democrats – they have been hopeless on this issue. Now, Republicans are
breaking a promise to those who elected them because of the political pressures
they face – not from their conservative base, but from the pro-illegal
immigration lobby that is strongly backed by the Mexican government.

This
is mind boggling given recent polls which show Republican voters are furious
about the way the immigration issue is being handled by GOP leaders. A brand
new poll taken by Datamar Inc., a non-partisan and highly respected polling
firm, showed that 62.6 percent of Republicans in the Golden State said they
felt that immigration was, “The Most Important Problem Facing California
Today.”

Here’s
a clue for the Republican leadership: Those 62 percent of California Republicans
aren’t worked up about the immigration issue because they think illegal aliens
deserve amnesty and drivers’ licenses.

Rank-and-file
Republicans are furious because they see the unchecked flow of illegal
immigrants into this country being rewarded by our elected officials with
billions of dollars in taxpayer benefits for those who are in this country
illegally. That’s $68 billion each and every year in benefits to illegal
aliens.

Surely
that fact alone should provide politicians the “cover” they need to
stick to their principles, even in the face of accusations of being
“racists” and “mean-spirited” that would inevitably be
lobbed at them from the liberal news media.

But
Republican leaders aren’t afraid of the wrath from Republican voters. Instead,
our own senators have become conquered by the Third World nation to our south.

Reconquista:
A long time coming

I
would focus my outrage primarily on the Mexican government, and be more
understanding toward American officials, if this Reconquista movement had
sprung up out of nowhere and taken us by surprise.

But
that’s not the case – the effort to change our nation and make our policy
compliant with Mexico’s demands has been in the making for decades. Forget the
Mexican-American War. Forget the Gadsen purchase. The land that comprises the
American Southwest is land that the La Raza movement believes should belong to
the people of Mexico.

In
1997, it was politically acceptable for Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo to
announce – while on U.S. soil no less – the following:

I
have proudly affirmed that the Mexican nation extends beyond the territory
enclosed by its borders and that Mexican migrants are an important – a very
important – part of this.

Surrendering
to the demands of Reconquista

The
illegals who sneaked across our borders are now today taking to our streets en
masse to tell U.S. government officials that we must comply with the demands of
the Reconquista, or else they will threaten us with anarchy.

In
Oceanside, Calif., the uprising by pro-illegal immigrant activists was so
potent that school officials took down all U.S. flags and banned anyone from
displaying Old Glory. Do you get it yet? They banned the American flag to
appease those who are calling the shots – those who have reconquered our land.

If
the United States will not provide full-blown amnesty and taxpayer-funded
social welfare benefits to illegal aliens, then these illegal immigrants have
vowed to continue to go on strike; close down our schools; block our highways;
prevent the display of our nation’s flag; whatever they can do to bring this
nation to a halt.

This
is how they show their love for their new homeland. No wonder the nation from
which they came is in such shambles.

Yet
our leaders are impotent to the challenge. Strike that – they are complicit in
the problem.

Last
week, we all heard the allegations that the
U.S. Border Patrol was quietly collaborating with the Mexican government,
supplying them with information on the location of Minutemen civilian patrols.

This
week, the Mexican government announced that they would sue the United States if
National Guardsmen tried to stop the influx of illegal aliens from Mexico into
the United States.

Instead
of the United States patrolling the border to protect our nation, there
are reports that Mexico is sending in a larger contingent of Grupo Beta, an
elite Mexican police force that ensures the safe passage of illegal aliens from
Mexico into the United States.

If
only our nation was as determined to secure our border, as the Mexican
government was to ensure it remained porous.

Who is
fighting for America’s future?

While
Republican leaders are busy betraying their base, they risk not only political
suicide, but are jeopardizing the future of our nation.

How
can we watch the waves of riots in France (the world’s official home of
appeasement) and not recognize the dangers from taking in a flood of unskilled
immigrants without assimilation?

The
rallies in this country run the risk of becoming similar to the riots in France
if more illegal immigrants stream into this country. The La Raza movement will
feel more emboldened to up their demands from political leaders, and whenever
they are not met, they will exact their revenge against America’s institutions.

Someone
must step forward and lead a political movement that counters the capitulation
to the pro-illegal alien movement. If Congressman Tom Tancredo does not run for
president in 2008, then someone with his commitment to the issue must run in
his place.

Whenever
candidates of any political party vote to support amnesty – as a number of
Republicans and Democrats did earlier this week – then they must face political
repercussions and be voted out of office.

If
we don’t take action now, then we will slowly become more and more like the
Third World nation to our south where so many of these illegal immigrants are
coming from.

It’s
time to fight back.


RELATED OFFERS:

Get this
month’s hot Whistleblower issue: “SECRETS OF THE INVASION”

“Conquest of
Aztlan”: Will Mexicans retake American Southwest?

Michelle Malkin’s
“Invasion”

 


 

Melanie Morgan is chairman
of the conservative, pro-troop non-profit organization Move America Forward and is
co-host of the “Lee Rodgers & Melanie Morgan Show” on KSFO 560 AM in San Francisco.

**STOP THE MASS INVASIONS**

    "CLOSE OUR BORDERS"



The end of money

THE UNITED STATES IS INSOLVENT
by Dr. Chris Martenson
The End of Money
December 17, 2006



Prepare to be shocked.


The US is insolvent. There is simply no way for our national bills to be paid under current levels of taxation and promised benefits. Our federal deficits alone now total more than 400% of GDP.


That is the conclusion of a recent Treasury/OMB report entitled Financial Report of the United States Government that was quietly slipped out on a Friday (12/15/06), deep in the holiday season, with little fanfare. Sometimes I wonder why the Treasury Department doesn’t just pay somebody to come in at 4:30 am Christmas morning to release the report. Additionally, I’ve yet to read a single account of this report in any of the major news media outlets but that is another matter.


But, hey, I understand. A report this bad requires all the muffling it can get.


In his accompanying statement to the report, David Walker, Comptroller of the US, warmed up his audience by stating that the GAO had found so many significant material deficiencies in the government’s accounting systems that the GAO was “unable to express an opinion” on the financial statements. Ha ha! He really knows how to play an audience!


In accounting parlance, that’s the same as telling your spouse “Our checkbook is such an out of control mess I can’t tell if we’re broke or rich!” The next time you have an unexplained rash of checking withdrawals from that fishing trip with your buddies, just tell her that you are “unable to express an opinion” and see how that flies. Let us know how it goes!


Then Walker went on to deliver the really bad news:


Despite improvement in both the fiscal year 2006 reported net operating cost and the cash-based budget deficit, the U.S. government’s total reported liabilities, net social insurance commitments, and other fiscal exposures continue to grow and now total approximately $50 trillion, representing approximately four times the Nation’s total output (GDP) in fiscal year 2006, up from about $20 trillion, or two times GDP in fiscal year 2000.


As this long-term fiscal imbalance continues to grow, the retirement of the “baby boom” generation is closer to becoming a reality with the first wave of boomers eligible for early retirement under Social Security in 2008.


Given these and other factors, it seems clear that the nation’s current fiscal path is unsustainable and that tough choices by the President and the Congress are necessary in order to address the nation’s large and growing long-term fiscal imbalance.


Wow! I know David Walker’s been vocal lately about his concern over our economic future but it seems almost impossible to ignore the implications of his statements above. From $20 trillion in fiscal exposures in 2000 to over $50 trillion in only six years? What shall we do for an encore…shoot for $100 trillion?


And how about the fact that boomers begin retiring in 2008…that always seemed to be waaaay out in the future. However, beginning January 1st we can start referring to 2008 as ‘next year’ instead of ‘some point in the future too distant to get concerned about now’. Our economic problems need to be classified as growing, imminent, and unsustainable.


And let me clarify something. The $53 trillion shortfall is expressed as a ‘net present value’. That means that in order to make the shortfall disappear we’d have to have that amount of cash in the bank – today – earning interest (the GAO uses 5.7% & 5.8% as the assumed long-term rate of return). I’ll say it again – $53 trillion, in the bank, today. Heck, I don’t even know how much a trillion is let alone fifty-three of ‘em.


And next year we’d have to put even more into this mythical interest bearing account simply because we didn’t collect any interest on money we didn’t put in the bank account this year. For the record, 5.7% on $53 trillion is a bit more than $3 trillion dollars so you can see how the math is working against us here. This means the deficit will swell by at least another $3 trillion plus whatever other shortfalls the government can rack up in the meantime. So call it another $4 trillion as an early guess for next year.


Given how studiously our nation is avoiding this topic both in the major media outlets and during our last election cycle, I sometimes feel as if I live in a small mountain town that has decided to ignore an avalanche that has already let loose above in favor of holding the annual kindergarten ski sale.


The Treasury department soft-pedaled the whole unsustainable gigantic deficit thingy in last year’s report but they have taken a quite different approach this year. From page 10 of the report:


The net social insurance responsibilities scheduled benefits in excess of estimated revenues) indicate that those programs are on an unsustainable fiscal path and difficult choices will be necessary in order to address their large and growing long-term fiscal imbalance.


Delay is costly and choices will be more difficult as the retirement of the ‘baby boom’ gets closer to becoming a reality with the first wave of boomers eligible for retirement under Social Security in 2008


I don’t know how that could be any clearer. The US Treasury department has issued a public report warning that we are on an unsustainable path and that we face difficult choices that will only become more costly the longer we delay. 


Perhaps the reason US bonds and the dollar have held up so well is that we are far from alone in our predicament. In a recent article detailing why the UK Pound Sterling may fall, we read this horrifying evidence:


Officially, [UK] public sector net debt stands at £486.7bn. That’s equal to US$953.9bn and represents a little under 38% of annual GDP. Add the state’s “off balance sheet” debt, however – including its pension promises to state-paid employees – and the total shoots nearly three times higher. Research by the Centre for Policy Studies in London says it would put UK government deficits at a staggering 103% of GDP.


If we perform the same calculations for the US, however, we find that the official debt stands at $8.507 trillion or 65% of (nominal) GDP but when we add in our “off balance sheet” items the national debt stands at $53 trillion or 403% of GDP.


Now that’s horrifying. Staggering. Whatever you wish to call it. More than four hundred percent of GDP(!). And that’s just at the federal level. We could easily make this story a bit more ominous by including state, municipal and corporate shortfalls. But let’s not do that.


Here’s what the federal shortfall means in the simplest terms.



  1. There is no way to ‘grow out of this problem’. What really jumps out is that the US financial position has deteriorated by over $22 trillion in only 4 years and $4.5 trillion in the last 12 months (see table below, from page 10 of the report). The problem did not ‘get better’ as a result of the excellent economic growth over the past 3 years but rather got worse and is apparently accelerating to the downside.

Any economic weakness will only exacerbate the problem. You should be aware that the budgetary assumptions of the US government are for greater than 5% nominal GDP growth through at least 2011. In other words, because no economic weakness is included in the deficit projections below, $53 trillion could be on the low side. Further, none of the long-term costs associated with the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are factored in any of the numbers presented (thought to be upwards of $2 trillion more).


The future will be defined by lowered standards of living. As Lawrence Kotlikoff pointed out in his paper titled “Is the US Bankrupt?” posted to the St. Louis Federal Reserve website, the insolvency of the US will minimally require some combination of lowered entitlement payouts and higher taxes. Both of those represent less money in the taxpayer’s pockets and, last time I checked, less money meant a lower standard of living.



  1. Every government facing this position has opted to “print its way out of trouble”. That’s an historical fact and our country shows no indications, unfortunately, of possessing the unique brand of political courage required to take a different route. In the simplest terms this means you & I will face a future of uncomfortably high inflation, possibly hyperinflation if the US dollar loses its reserve currency status somewhere along the way.

    Of course, it is impossible to print our way out of this particular pickle because printing money is inflationary and therefore a ‘hidden tax’ on everyone. Consider, what’s the difference between having half of your money directly taken (taxed) by the government and having half of its value disappear due to inflation? Nothing. Except that the former is political suicide while the second is conveniently never discussed by the US financial mainstream press (for some reason) and therefore goes undetected by a majority of people as the thoroughly predictable outcome of deficit spending. All printing can realistically accomplish is the preservation of some DC jobs and the decimation of the middle and lower classes.

In summary, I am wondering how long we can pretend this problem does not exist. How long can we continue to buy stocks and flip houses, forget to save, pile up debt, import Chinese made goods, and export debt? Are these useful activities to perform while there’s an economic avalanche bearing down upon us?


Unfortunately, I am not smart enough to know the answer. I only know that hoping a significant and mounting problem will go away is not a winning strategy.


I know that we, as a nation, owe it to ourselves to have the hard conversation about our financial future sooner rather than later. And I suspect that conversation will have to begin right here, between you and me because I cannot detect even the faintest glimmer that our current crop of leaders can distinguish between urgent and expedient.


What we need is a good, old-fashioned grassroots campaign.


In the meantime, I simply do not know of any way to fully protect oneself against the economic ravages resulting from poorly managed monetary and fiscal institutions. For what it’s worth, I am heavily invested in gold and silver and will remain that way until the aforementioned institutions choose to confront “what is” rather than “what’s expedient”. This could be a very long-term investment.


Are you shocked?


All the best.


Chris

© 2006 Dr. Chris Martenson