Our Opinion: 'Unsustainable' defines climb of national debt

WEREN'T many Amer­i­cans gen­uinely up­set way back in 2011 when the pre­vi­ous ad­min­is­tra­tion's spend­ing brought the na­tion close to, then over, $15 tril­lion in debt?

Back then the wars were said to be wind­ing down. But Oba­macare was all the rage, and we mean rage. And pro­grams like So­cial Se­cu­rity, Medi­care and Med­i­caid were grow­ing, as al­ways. But $15 tril­lion in debt? We can't af­ford that. No way. Un­sus­tain­able.

Af­ter all, when Ge­orge W. Bush left of­fice - af­ter the shock of 9/11, a cou­ple of wars and the be­gin­ning of the Great Recession - the to­tal debt had just topped $10 tril­lion. In his first term in of­fice, how­ever, Pres­i­dent Obama's ad­min­is­tra­tion had added an­other $5 tril­lion.

Now here we Amer­i­cans are, in the first few months of a new ad­min­is­tra­tion, hav­ing re­tired Barack Obama and his peo­ple, and the debt clock says . Twenty.

Tril­lion.

Ac­tu­ally, of this writ­ing, the na­tional debt is "only" $19,887,630,884. But it's a-ris­ing fast, mama. By the time you read this, Gen­tle Reader and Weary Tax­payer, the debt could very well ex­ceed $20 tril­lion. (You can watch the climb at www.us­debt­clock.org.)

And ev­ery month, it seems, the United States gov­ern­ment puts more money on the credit card. The last story we saw said the fed­eral gov­ern­ment's monthly deficit for March was "sharply higher" than a year ago and through the first half of this bud­get year, the deficit is about 15 per­cent higher than the same pe­riod a year ago.

Through the first six months of this bud­get year, the deficit (the yearly spend­ing above rev­enue) to­taled al­most $527 bil­lion. So just add that to the $20 tril­lion credit card debt, too.

All of this is with a rise in in­come taxes that the gov­ern­ment has taken in - al­beit cor­po­rate taxes are down.

Folks, it took 220 years and 43 pres­i­dents to get to $10 tril­lion in debt. Eight years of Barack Obama's poli­cies and in­creases in en­ti­tle­ments, even as we spent less on de­fense, and the na­tion might have gone over $20 tril­lion last night.

Again, there's a word for this: Un­sus­tain­able.

One day, the in­ter­est we Amer­i­can tax­pay­ers pay on that debt will be­come so high that we can't af­ford it. Or to pay it we have to cut So­cial Se­cu­rity, Medi­care, Med­i­caid or de­fense. An­other option is, we sup­pose, de­fault. Which would bring on an eco­nomic down­turn that would make the Great Recession look like a hic­cup. So it's not re­ally an option, not for the United States and its world­wide cur­rency.

Some­body pointed to the news the other day and said two things scared him: North Korea and the U.S. na­tional debt.

Yes, the proper word is, for both crises: Un­sus­tain­able.

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