In olden times, middle-class people had checking accounts; and
they kept close track of their account balances. No one wanted to inadvertently
write a "hot" check that would "bounce" back to them. Oh, the shame! The embarrassment!
Those days are gone. Today, many
Americans don't pay much attention to their checking account balances. If they
don't have money in their account to buy a suitcase of Miller Lite, they just
put their purchase on a credit card.
That's basically what our government is doing. The national debt tripled between 2008 and 2019 and reached about $20 trillion when Trump came into office.
By the third year of Trump's term in office, the national debt had risen to $22 trillion. Last summer, Congress passed a two-year deficit budget at a time when America had a booming
economy with historically low unemployment.
Then came the coronavirus pandemic, and our government whipped up
more than $2 trillion to deal with that. State and local governments are
running massive deficits because tax revenues are down, and the Democrats want to dole out another $1 trillion to send to the states.
So that brings the national debt to what--$24 trillion? Folks, we
can never pay back this money, and no one believes we can.
If the federal government can't pay its debts—and it can't—it only
has two choices: It can default on its obligations or inflate the money
supply. It will choose inflation, and the consequences won't be pretty.
Inflation, the wise economists tell us, is a way for the rich to
steal from the poor. When hyperinflation starts, the people who will be hurt are
the elderly living on fixed incomes and young people whose wages won't be
enough to pay for the inflated price of necessities like food and rent.
Germany suffered hyperinflation in the 1920s as it struggled to
pay war reparations to the Allied powers after World War I. The German government responded to this onerous
burden by printing more money. This triggered hyperinflation that soon drove
the value of the German mark to virtually zero. The mark became worth so little
that people had to carry baskets of paper currency to pay for their daily needs.
Historians tell us that this period of hyperinflation destroyed
the German economy, causing massive hardship for the German people, whose lives
devolved into a day-to-day struggle for food. The anger and bitterness that
resulted laid the groundwork for Nazism.
Adam Ferguson wrote a book about Germany's inflationary period
titled When Money Dies. Ferguson warns
us about the existential danger of hyperinflation. "The question to be asked,"
Ferguson wrote, "is how inflation, however caused, affects a nation: its
government, its people, its officials, and its society."
If the experience of Germany is anything to go by, Ferguson
cautioned, "then the collapse of a national currency unleashes such greed,
violence, unhappiness, and hatred, largely bred from fear, as no society can
survive uncrippled and unchanged." In Germany, racial passions were unleashed, and nihilistic sexuality prevailed in 1920s Berlin.
Already, our national politicians make hysterical and groundless
charges of racism against their political opponents. State and local
governments refuse to abide by federal immigration law even as they demand more
federal money to prop up their sagging budgets.
Our elite intellectuals have cast off almost all sexual norms and obsess on transgender bathrooms.
Is contemporary America exactly like Germany in the 1920s? Of
course not. But like 1920s Germany, our government is running up debt that it
can't repay. Will this lead to a 21st century Hitler? Probably not, but our future is definitely
going to be unpleasant.
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