You might have a debt problem if…

The U.S. [tag]Debt Clock[/tag] has a special significance in American culture; it’s a depressing reminder not only of our astonishing national debt, but also of each Americans’ share of the national fiscal liability.

But it now appears that there’s a practical problem with the clock: It’s run out of digits.

Tick, 20,000 dollars, tock, another 20,000 dollars.

So rapid is the rise of the US [tag]national debt[/tag], that the last four digits of a giant digital signboard counting the moving total near New York’s Times Square move in seemingly random increments as they struggle to keep pace.

The national debt clock, as it is known, is a big clock. A spot-check last week showed a readout of 8.3 trillion — or more precisely 8,310,200,545,702 — dollars … and counting.

But it’s not big enough. Sometime in the next two years, the total amount of US government borrowing is going to break through the 10-trillion-dollar mark and, lacking space for the extra digit such a figure would require, the clock is in danger of running itself into obsolescence.

Oddly enough, in the late 1990s, the Debt Clock faced a different kind of problem. Clinton was starting to pay off the debt and the clock had technical troubles. Apparently, it was never designed to run backwards to reflect a shrinking debt. In fact, at the end of Clinton’s second term, Douglas Durst, who owns the clock after inheriting it from his inventor father, pulled the plug on the clock altogether.

Fortunately — or unfortunately, depending on one’s perspective — the Debt Clock wasn’t dismantled.

[Durst] only had to wait two years as the Bush presidency coincided with an upsurge in borrowing. The curtain was raised in 2002 and the digital readout flickered back to life showing a national debt of 6.1 trillion dollars with the numerals whizzing round faster than ever.

Now, the 10-trillion-dollar mark is right around the corner. And the man responsible for the federal budget just got promoted.

I think the key to the story is the Josh Bolton who couldn’t get the President to veto one Republicanite appropriations bill over five years now gets a promotion.

This shameless piling up of debt by the Bushies is just the deepest and longest effecting tradegy of 2000.

  • “Tax wars in a country that considers public payment to be an infringement on private liberty guarantee that all costs remain hidden, shunted off on revolving credit until the unpayable lump sum comes due.”

    Richard Powers
    from Operation Wandering Soul – 1993

  • 10 Trillion dollars in debt… China has matched and soon to surpass US as largest exporter of manufactured goods… A US trade deficit surpassing 600 billion dollars… The fed has stopped publishing M3 stats… Iran opens an oil bourse trading in Euros… They closed the local hardware store. Each a tremednous event that really amount to nothing at all – The US will be fine, and I can shop at Wal-mart. I mean, it’s not as if I pay my taxes anyways…

  • It just shows how George W. Bush is an uncaring, reckless president who causes more long-lasting problems–and has solved none–faced by average
    Americans.

    The problem is exacerbated because the Republican majority in the Congress and Senate refuses to hold him accountable for his reckless actions. I hope the American public will rectify that problem by voting most–if not all–current Republican representatives and senators out of office in the coming ’06 elections.

  • It’s also due to a pervasive mindset in America that the world owes them something. I’m appalled at the sense of entitlement in this country.

    No one wants to pay for anything, ever, but they want it all handed to them.

    Little to no work ethic, corporate greed, and easy access to credit. The list goes on and on.

  • This is sadly a recurring pattern in government; our country is not exempt.

    In the middle ages, monarchies routinely borrowed themselves into insolvency, causing ruin and catastrophe. In our case, the GOP has to spend like a drunken prostitute with a stolen credit card in order to bribe its backers into continuing to support the party. [CB, didn’t an earlier post you did more or less say that–a party member said that without pork, the GOP would collapse?] This alone reveals the bankruptcy of ideas within the GOP, and why corruption is so rampant. The GOP needs it to keep the party going.

  • I forgot to add that the GOP is a tricked-out old whore too far along in her years to get customers the honest way, and now has to bribe people to obtain her services. A sick image, I know, but seemingly apt.

  • Speaking of debt clocks, it galls me to no end that Sam Brownback has a white-erase board with the current debt on it in his office.

    (despite voting for all of Bush’s tax cuts, because, you know, the government takes too much of YOUR money)

    What a fucking idiot.

  • Hey, keeping crazy bombers only bombing in their own countries costs money… Look at what 9/11 cost… 4.5 years later, and the stock markets are just now recovering. A major hit (9/11 was minor and localized) on a Big Blue city would make New Orleans, a fine example of politicians absconding with infrastructure funding, appear as a mite upon the arse-end of a barren economic moonscape.

    The economy’s doing fine (unless you’re working in an industry who still thinks that doing things the same way we did ’em in the sixties is the way to go), and hey, our kids’ll pay for it, the same way they’ll pay for social security. Squirt ’em out, folks – we’ll need ’em.

    And remember – Freedom’s coming…

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