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December
18, 2007
The
Importance of Fiscal Responsibility in
Government
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
As
the year draws to a close, the battle over spending
in Washington is heating up. The Democrats want to
expand government healthcare, while the President
has vetoed the second attempt to expand SCHIP.
The latest version of the State Children's
Health Insurance Program would have expanded the
entitlement program and raised taxes, just as the
earlier version did and the President showed fiscal
restraint with his veto.
Reducing our entitlement programs here at home
is not against saving the children, as the rhetoric
goes, it is about saving the country's economy. The
fact is we have huge trade imbalances, massive
deficits, and a $9 trillion national debt, which
balloons to $60 trillion if unfunded future
liabilities in social security and other promises
we have made to Americans are included.
We are at a crucial point in history right now.
We must think very carefully about our next moves.
There is coming a time, if we continue on this
path, when all that our tax dollars and government
revenues will be able to do is pay interest on the
mountain of debt we have compiled in the past few
decades. That will mean no government programs or
services of any kind will be funded, yet future
generations of Americans will still struggle under
a crushing tax burden with nothing to show for it.
That is why fiscal restraint and common sense with
the budget are so vitally important in
government.
The difference now is that our printing presses
at the Federal Reserve are getting worn out as we
have expanded our money supply to the breaking
point with yet another rate cut this week. As the
dollar falls, it is losing its reserve currency
status as many countries are shifting to the Euro
or the Chinese yuan or other currencies. The more
that trend continues, the weaker we become on the
world stage. Those foreign governments and entities
that enabled us to spend so much for so long are
wearing thin and cutting us off.
The truth is, our enemies won't need a nuclear
weapon to harm us if we keep spending phantom
dollars at the current rate. In fact, they won't
need to do anything but sit back and watch as we
spend ourselves into oblivion. Historically,
empires fail because they run out of money, or more
accurately, run out of the ability to spend or
inflate. Unfortunately, that is exactly the
direction we are headed. We need to control
spending, immediately, before it is too late.
I applaud the President for his veto of the
SCHIP expansion bill. It is a step in the right
direction. But it is just one small step. What our
economy needs right now is to go full gallop away
from the tax-and-spend policies that have gotten us
into this mess.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
Because
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