Greece Today, America Tomorrow?

undefinedThe drama over Greece’s financial crisis continues to dominate the headlines. As this column is being written, a deal may have been reached providing Greece with yet another bailout if the Greek government adopts new “austerity” measures. The deal will allow all sides to brag about how they came together to save the Greek economy and the European Monetary Union. However, this deal is merely a Band-Aid, not a permanent fix to Greece’s problems. So another crisis is inevitable.

The Greek crisis provides a look into what awaits us unless we stop overspending on warfare and welfare and restore a sound monetary system. While most commentators have focused on Greece’s welfare state, much of Greece’s deficit was caused by excessive military spending. Even as its economy collapses and the government makes (minor) cuts in welfare spending, Greece’s military budget remains among the largest in the European Union.

Despite all the handwringing over how the phony sequestration cuts have weakened America’s defenses, the United States military budget remains larger than the combined budgets of the world’s next 15 highest spending militaries. Little, if any, of the military budget is spent defending the American people from foreign threats. Instead, the American government wastes billions of dollars on an imperial foreign policy that makes Americans less safe. America will never get its fiscal house in order until we change our foreign policy and stop wasting trillions on unnecessary and unconstitutional wars.

Excessive military spending is not the sole cause of America’s problems. Like Greece, America suffers from excessive welfare and entitlement spending. Reducing military spending and corporate welfare will allow the government to transition away from the welfare state without hurting those dependent on government programs. Supporting an orderly transition away from the welfare state should not be confused with denying the need to reduce welfare and entitlement spending.

On reason Greece has been forced to seek bailouts from its EU partners is that Greece ceded control over its currency when it joined the European Union. In contrast, the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency is the main reason the US has been able to run up huge deficits without suffering a major economic crisis. The need for the Federal Reserve to monetize ever-increasing levels of government spending will eventually create hyperinflation, which will lead to increasing threats to the dollar’s status. China and Russia are already moving away from using the dollar in international transactions. It is only a matter of time before more countries challenge the dollar’s reserve currency status, and, when this happens, a Greece-style catastrophe may be unavoidable.

Despite the clear dangers of staying on our recent course, Congress continues to increase spending. The only real debate between the two parties is over whether we should spend more on welfare or warfare. It is easy to blame the politicians for our current dilemma. But the politicians are responding to demands from the people for greater spending. Too many Americans believe they have a moral right to government support. This entitlement mentally is just as common, if not more so, among the corporate welfare queens of the militarily-industrial complex, the big banks, and the crony capitalists as it is among lower-income Americans.

Congress will only reverse course when a critical mass of people reject the entitlement mentality and understand that the government is incapable of running the world, running our lives, and running the economy. Therefore, those of us who know the truth must spread the ideas of, and grow the movement for, limited government, free markets, sound money, and peace.


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5 Comments
Gungadin
Gungadin
July 13, 2015 9:32 am

Fuck you- pay me

S

underfire
underfire
July 13, 2015 10:46 am

This post by RP illustrates how there is no realistic solution.

On one hand the military profiteers are an integral part of the club, have a iron hold on DC, and will not be easily displaced. On the other is a entitlement sector that is bigger than the productive class. Finally we have a fat, complacent, population that’s content with things as they are.

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
July 13, 2015 3:47 pm

I honestly don’t see any good reason for the United States to borrow money at all. MAYBE, if you had a large interstate infrastructure project, you could finance that specific project with a 10 or 15-year bond, but we shouldn’t be passing debt from one generation to the next.

Decide what you want the government to do, figure out how big you want the welfare system to be, and then pay for it as you go! Pay for current-year expenditures with current-year taxes.

card802
card802
July 14, 2015 7:01 am

We really live in a sick time.

Cut military spending and hundreds of thousands lose jobs. Military personnel, civilian support of all our base’s, factories and the satellite companies (like mine) that do business with government military factories.

What are those people going to do for jobs?

So we make up threats to our way of life and our freedoms, then march off to keep the economy going.

Bizarre.

ZombieDawg
ZombieDawg
July 16, 2015 8:57 am

Shouldn’t laugh at the “dead” but that’s what they are – of their own damn making as we all know.

http://therepublican.ca/greek-crisis-funnies/