“Freedom: To ask
nothing. To expect nothing. To depend on nothing.”
-Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead
Welcome to The
Golden Sense! Riding on the coat tails of the puppy fashion industry,
there’s been an uptick in the number of chicken owners who are dressing their
pet hens in knitted sweaters to provide an extra dose of warmth during the
winter months. Chicken sweaters are also used by many rescue organizations that
take in retired hens to compensate for their lack of feathers caused by
overcrowded, traumatic living conditions.
Of course, not everybody
believes in accessorizing chickens. Opponents claim that birds are warm blooded
and can regulate their own body temperatures, rendering sweaters unnecessary.
Proponents disagree, saying sweaters are more than just a fashion statement and
are necessary to keep the birds toasty and comfortable in the cold. (Brown
2016)
For some reason when I
hear about accessorizing chickens, it instantly reminds me of the United States
of America’s financial situation. The guest article for the month updates us on
how dire the U.S. financial situation is. No matter how you dress this chicken
up, it looks bad.
Written by Simon Black
of Sovereign Man:
“Hot off the presses, the US government just published its
audited financial statements this morning, signed and sealed by Treasury
Secretary Jack Lew.
These reports are intended provide an accurate
accounting of government finances, just like any big corporation would do.
And once again, the US government’s financial
condition has declined significantly from the previous year.
For 2015, the government reports $3.2
trillion in total assets.
This includes everything from financial assets
like bank balances to physical assets like tanks, bullets, aircraft carriers,
and the federal highway system.
Curiously, the single biggest line item among these listed assets is the $1.2 trillion in student loans that are owed
to the government by the young people of America.
This is pretty extraordinary when you think
about it.
37% of the government’s total reported assets
are student loans, which is now
considered one of the most precarious bubbles in finance.
$1.2 trillion is similar to the size of the
subprime mortgage market back in 2008. And delinquency rates are rising, now at
11.5% according to Federal Reserve data.
Plus, it’s simply astonishing that so much of
the federal government’s asset base is tantamount to indentured servitude as
young people pay off expensive university degrees that barely land them jobs
making coffee at Starbucks.
On the other side of the equation are a reported $21.5
trillion in liabilities, giving the government an official net
worth of negative $18.2 trillion.
This is down from last year’s negative $17.7
trillion and $16.9 trillion the year prior. It just keeps getting worse.
But there’s one thing that’s even more
incredible about all of this.
You see, each year these financial statements
are audited by the government’s in-house agency known as the Government
Accountability Office (GAO).
All big companies do this. They publish
financial statements, which are then reviewed by an independent audit firm.
Auditors are a critical component of the
financial reporting process.
It’s their responsibility to make sure that
shareholders and the public can have confidence in a company’s financial
statements.
When Apple publishes an annual report,
auditors go through all the books of the company and make sure that management
is accurately representing the company’s true condition.
Thus when an auditor issues a failing grade,
or what’s known as a qualified opinion, there’s usually hell to pay.
At the very hint of impropriety a company’s
stock price will tank immediately. People get fired. SEC investigations are
launched.
And now based on US securities law and section
404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act from 2002, senior executives can face criminal
charges if their companies receive a failing grade from their auditors.
This is serious stuff.
Yet year after year the GAO gives the federal
government a failing grade in its audit report of America’s financial
statements.
In this latest report, not only did the GAO
chastise the federal government for its “unsustainable fiscal path”, but they
state that the federal government consistently fails to prepare “reliable and
complete financial information– both for individual federal entities and for
the federal government as a whole.”
The Department of Defense, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, and the Department of Agriculture are all
singled out for their failure to prepare complete and accurate financial
statements.
This is corroborated by a report published
last year stating that the Defense Department has somehow “misplaced”
$8.5 trillion of taxpayer money over the last 20 years.
The GAO cites other material weaknesses in the
government’s reporting of supposed cost reductions in Medicare and Social
Security.
In all, the GAO calculates that these
financial uncertainties total $27.9 trillion, suggesting that the
government’s true financial condition is far worse than reported.
Bottom line– if this were a private company,
Barack Obama and Jack Lew would be wearing day glow orange jumpsuits in court
while facing felony fraud charges.
It’s not just the $18.2 trillion in negative
net worth. Or the $41+ trillion (by their own calculations) in the Social
Security shortfall.
It’s the fact that they can’t even stand in
front of the American people with an honest accounting of how pitiful the
financial situation really is.
The government of the United States is
totally, desperately, hopelessly bankrupt. And they become even more insolvent
with each passing year.
Nearly every single dominant superpower
throughout history was eventually consumed by its unsustainable finances. And in their decline from power, bankrupt
governments rely on a simple playbook to desperately try to maintain the status
quo by every means available.
They destroy freedom. They impose a police and
surveillance state. They seize assets. They wage campaigns of violence and
intimidation.
They impose capital controls. Cash controls.
People controls. Whatever it takes.
This time is not different. The finances of
the US government are obvious, as is the trend.
We’re not talking about what ‘might happen’ or
‘could happen’. We’re talking about what IS happening.
And this is not a consequence free
environment."
Over and Out
T. Norman
References:
(Black, Simon 2016. Sovereign Man)
(Brown, Steve 2016. Bank Investment Daily)
References:
(Black, Simon 2016. Sovereign Man)
(Brown, Steve 2016. Bank Investment Daily)
No comments:
Post a Comment