| Almost six months into the federal governments fiscal year,
its far enough to predict how much money the government will save with their money
laundering scam of stealing Social Security and other entitlement money to pay down one
side of the debt. The side where annual interest must be paid in real cash, not simply the
bogus bonds they stuff in entitlement trust funds. Saving interest at the rate of six
cents on every dollar we give them. The Congressional Budget Office expects a surplus
of $281 billion this year. Money to throw into the pot and bringing us nothing but more
debt in return. Enough of a factor to predict this years savings via the money
laundering scams. The moving of debt from one credit card to another. From cash interest
to bond interest. Saving them six real cents, while leaving us with another dollar of
debt, plus more paper interest.
Last year, the government took $237 (236.9) billion from Social Security profits,
Medicare, gas taxes, Airport & Airways profits and other entitlements, throwing $230.8
billion of it against the side of the National Debt that they label Public
Debt. The honest borrowing and legally contracted side of the debt sometimes known
as Debt Held by the Public. All so that you dont confuse it with the
other Intragovernmental or Federal side of the debt. The side with
nothing but nonmarketable nonsense bonds to account for all of the money stolen.
Actually, putting this much of their ill-gotten surplus against the debt is pretty good
for them. Who knows where the other $6 billion went last year, probably against Medicare
Part B that isnt doing so well. Well assume that honest George
will cast the entire $281 billion against the debt this year, while he argues for tax
breaks in personal income tax part of our contribution to crime and corruption.
The story
The money laundering operation, Clintons real legacy, started back in 1998 with
the first surplus. It may have even happened by accident because if the government leaves
any cash in the General Fund at the close of the fiscal year, money that cannot be
attributed to the next years revenue, that leftover cash will go directly and
immediately against outstanding liabilitiesthe national debt.
In the preceding year, fiscal 1997, the government had a deficit of $21.9 billion. Not
as much of a deficit as had been run in previous years, but a deficit nonetheless. The
total interest paid against the national debt at the time was $355.79 billion, according
to the U.S. Treasury Bureau of Public Debt.
Total interest paid over the last few years becomes very interesting. Lets look
at that first.
INTEREST ON THE NATIONAL DEBT
(in billions)
| FISCAL YEAR |
SURPLUS |
INTEREST |
1997 |
-$21.9 |
$355.79 |
1998 |
$69.2 |
$363.82 |
1999 |
$124.4 |
$353.51 |
2000 |
$236.9 |
$361.99 |
2001 |
$281.0 |
$371.86 |
(Surplus for 2001 is CBO estimate.
Interest for 2001 is my estimate)
Hey, wait a minute. The debt is supposed to be going down. Alan Greenspan told us that
the interest on the national debt was killing us. Why is the interest going up if the debt
is going down?
First, the surplus is being applied to only one side of the National Debt. The Investor
(Public Debt) side where annual interest is paid in real money. That side is actually
being paid down.
Secondly, every time the government takes entitlement money to do this, it must deposit
nonmarketable nonsense bonds in the respective entitlement trust fund or the
Intragovernmental side of the National Debt. What, more properly, should be
called the Trust Fund portion of the debt. That side is going up.
And the Trust Fund side of the debt is going up faster than the Investor side is going
down. Thats why we had an $18 billion rise in the overall National Debt last year,
although the overall debt may actually go down a little bit if Bushs income tax cut
is not retroactive or doesnt get off the ground. Trust funds, particularly the
Social Security Trust Fund were already at a high level before the money laundering
operation started in 1998.
By itself, the Social Security Trust Fund held $1.016 trillion at the close of fiscal
2000. Even if the government did not steal close to $100 billion from Social Security
profits this year, 2001, the trust fund would still go up. Interest alone would raise it
somewhere between $60 to $70 billion depending on the rate paid this year.
The Trust Fund side of the debt is paid annual interest too, just like the honest
Investor Public Debt side. But its paid in funny money. More
nonmarketable nonsense bonds are simply handed the trust.
Remember, the results of fiscal 1997 through fiscal 2000 are facts, carved in stone in
the Treasury files. The more than one billion per day estimate for fiscal 2001 is my
estimate and could vary slightly. As someone once said: A billion here. A billion
there. Pretty soon youre talking real money. In this case, a good part of the
annual interest is not real money. Its funny money paid to trust funds with very
real promissory notes that you or your children will someday redeem through income taxes.
The money laundering advantage to the Beltway Bandits is obvious. Lets look at it
more closely.
Interest advantage, six cents for a dollar
Remember, interest is paid annually. Its paid Investors every twelve months from
the date they each formally contracted with the government. Twelve months after they
bought their bills, bonds, notes or other securities. As a result, anything saved by
paying off Investors and not immediately reissuing new securities to replace these does
not show up as a savings for twelve months. Thus, in fiscal reporting, it is in the
following years totals.
SAVINGS ON INVESTOR DEBT INTEREST
Year |
Open balance
(trillions) |
Pay down
(billions) |
End balance
(trillions) |
Annual
interest
rate |
Yearly
savings
(billions) |
Accumulated
interest savings |
| 1998 |
$3.789 |
$55.80 |
$3.733 |
06.556% |
-0- |
-0- |
| 1999 |
$3.773 |
$97.76 |
$3.636 |
06.341% |
$3.54 |
$14.16 (4 yrs) |
| 2000 |
$3.636 |
$230.80 |
$3.405 |
06.489% |
$6.15 |
$18.49 (3 yrs) |
| 2001 |
$3.405 |
$281.00 |
$3.124 |
06.462% |
$14.91 |
$29.82 (2 yrs) |
| 2002 |
$3.124 |
? |
? |
06.462% |
$18.16 |
$18.16 (1 yr.) |
| Totals |
|
$665.36 |
|
|
|
$80.63 |
Note: This amounts to more than the six
cents for every dollar from entitlements because income tax surplus is included.
There you have it. The government saves $80.6 billion by paying $665.4 billion of your
extra income and entitlement taxes against one side of the debt. Its the same as
taking thousands of dollars and throwing it against your home mortgage so you dont
have to make such high monthly payments. A good idea if youve got tons of money to
spare or you just won the lotto. With the surpluses were donating, the federal
government thinks that it has won the lotto.
It would be good business if the other side, the Trust Fund entitlement side of the
National Debt, wasnt going up dollar-for-dollar from everything they steal.
Most of the $665.4 billion comes from Social Security and other entitlement payments
you made. Money that is not supposed to be used for other purposes. Money that is working
for them, but definitely not for us, unless you believe that putting the $80.6 billion
gained this way into discretionary spending is good business or proper use of your
retirement money.
See: Money Laundering
Six Cents for a Dollar

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