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Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Cog » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:02:08

The best part of being alive right now is the chance to see the mooch class gets what is coming to them. The howls about unfairness will be epic.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Daniel_Plainview » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:06:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Timo', 'T')hey knew full well that the next president would get stuck with the bill for those unpaid wars ...


This is why deficits are so pernicious: the current administration has every incentive to maximize deficits while in office, knowing full well that that the bill won't need to be paid until the next administration takes office.

Except that with Obama, his deficits are SO HUGE that the effects are felt while he is still in office.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby vision-master » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:12:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cog', 'T')he best part of being alive right now is the chance to see the mooch class gets what is coming to them. The howls about unfairness will be epic.


lsol u2 cog :)
The most basic class distinction is between the powerful and the powerless.[1][2] Social classes with a great deal of power are usually viewed as "the elites" within their own societies. Various social and political theories propose that social classes with greater power attempt to cement their own ranking above the lower classes in the hierarchy to the detriment of the society overall.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby AgentR11 » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:12:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mad_marten', 'I')t's like republican's will insist on using a nuke on an ant mound, because by God its their nuke and damn everyone else with an idea or who might be collateral damage.


I know we're being partisan here, but if you'll step back and think historically for a moment... In England, do you recall the political affiliation of the majority of the members of the houses of parliament each time they forced the king to yield some power to them, by means of the pursestrings? I don't. I remember it as an institutional action, not a partisan one, even if there were likely quite tense partisan disputes about the issue of the times.

I kinda think that's what we have going on here, and I've been thinking it was coming for a long time, since listening to some of Sen Byrd's floor speeches concerning the Imperial Presidency years ago. He called it, and rightly so, the executive branch has acquired so much power, and flexibility, and discretion; that the congress has largely written itself out of the picture. All that was left with teeth is this debt limit thing.

So, no, this isn't choosing a nuke when you have some pesticide; this is choosing a nuke after you've been stripped of every other possible weapon, and the Hun's are marching quickly to the broken front gate. It is a terrible, horrific choice to have to make. And the time has now come where the choice must be made. Do we have a Republic, or do we have an Imperial Seat and some petty rabble bickering about bread scraps.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby mad_marten » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:34:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mad_marten', 'I')t's like republican's will insist on using a nuke on an ant mound, because by God its their nuke and damn everyone else with an idea or who might be collateral damage.


I know we're being partisan here, but if you'll step back and think historically for a moment... In England, do you recall the political affiliation of the majority of the members of the houses of parliament each time they forced the king to yield some power to them, by means of the pursestrings? I don't. I remember it as an institutional action, not a partisan one, even if there were likely quite tense partisan disputes about the issue of the times.

I kinda think that's what we have going on here, and I've been thinking it was coming for a long time, since listening to some of Sen Byrd's floor speeches concerning the Imperial Presidency years ago. He called it, and rightly so, the executive branch has acquired so much power, and flexibility, and discretion; that the congress has largely written itself out of the picture. All that was left with teeth is this debt limit thing.

So, no, this isn't choosing a nuke when you have some pesticide; this is choosing a nuke after you've been stripped of every other possible weapon, and the Hun's are marching quickly to the broken front gate. It is a terrible, horrific choice to have to make. And the time has now come where the choice must be made. Do we have a Republic, or do we have an Imperial Seat and some petty rabble bickering about bread scraps.


I understand what you're saying, and part of me agrees. But, there is a heck of a lot more than bread scraps available.

But, it is kind of like a negative self fulfilling prophecy. That is the danger. And what angers me and many people is not just the drastic steps that TPer's feel they need to take, but the fact part of it feels like a set up and the fall guy is the American people.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Plantagenet » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:34:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Timo', 'T')he bills from the Bush wars finally came due.


The bills for the Bush wars are a pittance compared to Obama's current deficits.

If you'd actually read the Standard and Poor's statement explaining why they are so concerned now about the US debt, you'd learn that they are going to lower the US credit rating because Obama's CURRENT AND FUTURE deficits are so huge they are unsustainable.

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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby AgentR11 » Fri 29 Jul 2011, 17:45:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mad_marten', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', 'D')o we have a Republic, or do we have an Imperial Seat and some petty rabble bickering about bread scraps.

I understand what you're saying, and part of me agrees. But, there is a heck of a lot more than bread scraps available.


If you are willing to accept the Imperial Seat, then your disdain for the current debate is understandable.

Short of the debt limit, does there exist an action the House can take that would be substantial enough to force the executive branch to cede some of its ill gotten power? I'm coming up blank. Everything else has failed horribly or no longer exists.

Part of me wants to be content to accept the Imperial Seat, such a government could likely keep this messed up pile running for a good long while, and I do like comfort, if its possible.

Part of me wants to stand firm and strip the Imperial Seat of the power it insidiously acquired. All the way to the point of understanding that it could break the Union. Nations fall over this kind of stuff. There is no underplaying its significance and ramifications.

So I dunno, if the cop at the traffic stop says, "can I search your car", do you take the side of comfort and consent because you know there's nothing interesting in your car, or do you stand for liberty and politely refuse consent (but take no physically obstructive action either), wasting hours of your time and risk angering the officer to the point he might press a false charge.

Like I said, its a horrible, terrible choice to have to make.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Oakley » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 03:12:04

This controversy should highlight the simple fact that the federal government is both morally and financially bankrupt.

How with this bankruptcy play out?

It seems that ultimately people take things into their own hands when the pain and suffering from going along with a system of plunder and control reaches the revolution point, the point at which violence becomes more acceptable and less painful than accepting the status quo.

I am reminded of the French storming the Bastille, the Colonists resisting at Lexington and Concord, the South Carolina militia evicting federals from Ft. Sumter, and Soviet citizens resisting unwilling troops in Red Square. Ultimately people will take to the streets, so to speak, because life becomes intolerable under those in power.

I can almost hear Madame Guillotine begging for the blood of those who have brought us to this point in history.

If you regard this as a simple crisis of too much spending or too much borrowing you only address the symptoms, not the disease. The strain of the disease that afflicts us now began in 1913 when those occupying the seats of federal power colluded with bankers to substitute bank credit for money in the Federal Reserve Act. The Constitution gave us the money of freedom, gold and silver coins. This usurpation had a purpose, and that was to allow banks to create money out of thin air and turn us into their indentured servants paying them interest as we became bound by the traditional instruments of indenture, notes, bonds and mortgages. Is it no wonder that wealth in this country has become concentrated in the hands of the few, while the majority march down the road toward poverty. The scheme worked well as Franklin Roosevelt first took away our gold coins and Richard Nixon took away our silver coins, leaving us only with pseudo money.

The current monetary system has two advantages to banks and government. It transfers wealth to bankers from the public, and it facilitates the expansion of government far beyond what tolerable taxes possibly could. Bankers and politicians love it. The general public does not understand it, and are tricked by deflections such as the current debate.

But there is a catch to this scheme. It is unstable and unsustainable in addition to being predatory and unconstitutional. It can only end badly.

It may end in debt collapse in which the debts owed to banks become overwhelmingly worthless and the resulting insolvency can no longer be ignored and hidden by regulators and the outright fraud of the accountants we trust to tell us about the financial condition of the banks. This in turn would make the debts of the banks to us, i.e., our checking and saving accounts and CD's, worthless - a massive bank holiday and you lose.

It may end by the federal government attempting to borrow and spend a massive amount of newly created pseudo money, causing the public to treat what little of this paper they have left as a hot potato, driving its purchasing power down to near nothing. This is possible, but less likely as the resulting increase in prices would make life almost unlivable for those near the bottom, resulting is chaos and unrest.

But whatever the path the unwinding of the current monetary system follows, people will take to the streets, prompted by pain. Whether the federal government goes quietly into the night or follows the course of the King George in 1775 or Lincoln in 1861, will be seen in due course. I suspect that those in power will not yield to freedom without a fight.

The current charade by those in Washington, DC is nothing more than theater to help them maintain control of the government. Only Ron and Rand Paul are addressing the problem; the overwhelming majority of the rest are a mix of sociopaths and psychopaths, for sale to the highest bidder, and bankers bid very high.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby drgoodword » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 04:01:08

The conflict between moderate Republicans and tea party Republicans during this debt ceiling "crisis" is Obama's best chance for re-election next year.

Between now and November 2012, the economy is just going to keep getting worse, no matter what is done. QE is played out and every other option takes money out of the economy (especially reductions in government spending) which leads to further contraction. Obama's biggest challenge in getting re-elected will be explaining the worsening economy. With the very public Republican in-fighting going on, Obama has something to point to as the reason the economy hasn't improved. I doubt it will be enough, but it's the politically best "justification" for the endlessly bad economy he and his team have.

The more down-to-the-wire the debt talks go, the better it will be for Obama, no matter which plan wins out by Tuesday. (And I'm sure they'll have a plan in place just before the deadline hits.)
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 04:50:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('drgoodword', '
')The more down-to-the-wire the debt talks go, the better it will be for Obama, no matter which plan wins out by Tuesday. (And I'm sure they'll have a plan in place just before the deadline hits.)

You may well be wrong.
Without deal there will be default and all blame squared on Obama.
Republicans will say that they offered and passed a deal but Democratic Senate rejected it.
For me it look that causing default and blaming it on Obama is an actual objection of this charade.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Outcast_Searcher » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 06:56:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'T')his controversy should highlight the simple fact that the federal government is both morally and financially bankrupt.

How with this bankruptcy play out?

It seems that ultimately people take things into their own hands when the pain and suffering from going along with a system of plunder and control reaches the revolution point, the point at which violence becomes more acceptable and less painful than accepting the status quo.

I am reminded of the French storming the Bastille, the Colonists resisting at Lexington and Concord, the South Carolina militia evicting federals from Ft. Sumter, and Soviet citizens resisting unwilling troops in Red Square. Ultimately people will take to the streets, so to speak, because life becomes intolerable under those in power.

Yeah, this government is corrupt. The founding fathers didn't forsee the government becoming a giant wealth redistribution machine, powered by the "we aren't given enough for nothing" majority that pays NO federal income tax. The top 5% of income earners pay about 60% of the federal tax, and the top 1% pay about 40% of it. These people earn a FAR smaller proportion of the total income than this tax bite, BTW. Yeah, it is a pretty terrible deal for those who actually produce the most.

But don't worry. With people like your and Obama's "punish the successful" attitude, these folks are willing to provide less and less jobs. They'll invest internationally, leave, or both.

Who are "the people" you are talking about?

Most "poor" people are used to being on the dole, whether it be tax breaks, government services, tax credits (like unearned income credit) medicaid, food stamps, and on and on. Now the left wants to add endless unemployment insurance (welfare, apparently) to that.

Or is is the middle class who was too irresponsible to save and invest during their career, who now feels entitled to the federal dole?

Or someone else?

...

OK. So "they" take to the streets and plunder everything and perhaps kill everyone they don't like, like say the people who provide the jobs, or with the brains to actually run the infrastructure. After about 30 days of consuming "the loot" like all the food on the shelves, then what? (Sitting around and complaining that they are owed everything will NOT produce anything).

Or are you assuming that somehow this brilliant or lazy class of folk who couldn't make good with a giant safety net will somehow magically do fine now under new leaders who are Marxist or Communist or fascist dictators?

...

And by the way, do you really think the military will just sit there and watch?
Unless the system is REALLY bankrupt, the army (and para-military outfits like the police) will be ready to kick people's asses as long as they are being paid.

They didn't have machine guns and tanks during the French revolution.

...

Do you think these things through, or do you just enjoy fantasies of violence?
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 07:57:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Outcast_Searcher', '
')They didn't have machine guns and tanks during the French revolution.

Amen to that.

These days without external aid mob cannot challenge regular military and as we have recently seen in Iraq, average Bob the enlistee is a psychopath.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Cloud9 » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 08:31:08

The military and the police are not of one mind. You have groups like the Oath Keepers that are reinforcing the notion that it is lawful to disobey an unlawful order. There are different seats of power. Local cops depend on the support of the local population. Without it they are isolated and surrounded. The legitimacy of the government is eroding. Oppression will not reinstate that legitimacy. If anything it would make the government seem more illegitimate.

Like it or not, the Tea Party is a safety valve letting off steam. Its members reject both party elites. They see a third party as a viable means of wresting power away from the plutocracy. Will it succeed? I don’t know but I do not it is an alternative to blood in the streets or a constitutional convention.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby Oakley » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 10:07:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Outcast_Searcher', '
')Yeah, this government is corrupt. The founding fathers didn't forsee the government becoming a giant wealth redistribution machine, powered by the "we aren't given enough for nothing" majority that pays NO federal income tax. The top 5% of income earners pay about 60% of the federal tax, and the top 1% pay about 40% of it. These people earn a FAR smaller proportion of the total income than this tax bite, BTW. Yeah, it is a pretty terrible deal for those who actually produce the most.

But don't worry. With people like your and Obama's "punish the successful" attitude, these folks are willing to provide less and less jobs. They'll invest internationally, leave, or both.

Who are "the people" you are talking about?

Most "poor" people are used to being on the dole, whether it be tax breaks, government services, tax credits (like unearned income credit) medicaid, food stamps, and on and on. Now the left wants to add endless unemployment insurance (welfare, apparently) to that.

Or is is the middle class who was too irresponsible to save and invest during their career, who now feels entitled to the federal dole?

Or someone else?

...

OK. So "they" take to the streets and plunder everything and perhaps kill everyone they don't like, like say the people who provide the jobs, or with the brains to actually run the infrastructure. After about 30 days of consuming "the loot" like all the food on the shelves, then what? (Sitting around and complaining that they are owed everything will NOT produce anything).

Or are you assuming that somehow this brilliant or lazy class of folk who couldn't make good with a giant safety net will somehow magically do fine now under new leaders who are Marxist or Communist or fascist dictators?

...

And by the way, do you really think the military will just sit there and watch?
Unless the system is REALLY bankrupt, the army (and para-military outfits like the police) will be ready to kick people's asses as long as they are being paid.

They didn't have machine guns and tanks during the French revolution.

...

Do you think these things through, or do you just enjoy fantasies of violence?


How is it that you conclude that I am a person like Obama who wants to punish the rich. I am rich myself, and do everything I can to avoid the plunder of government. I am politically a libertarian and believe in free markets, and the absolute minimum government which would be about 5% of what government we have today. Government is force. We as individuals cannot legitimately use force except in self defense, so we cannot authorize government to use force except in our defense. Most of the rest of government is not legitimate and the result is destruction of freedom and the free market. The free market is the best fair distribution of wealth mechanism there is, and the government is the worst distribution of wealth system. We currently have economic fascism, not free markets. When the government decides who gets what, they always give most to themselves and their friends, and only use what is left to buy the votes of the plundered masses. Unlimited government, such as exist in the USA today is very destructive of the economic prosperity.

As far as my assessment of a violent future I am relying upon historical patterns identified by others and general observation of the growing anti government sentiment. To me this is not about Republicans or Democrats, both groups I consider equally vile. Human nature dictates that when the pain and suffering that comes from a political system exceeds the pain and suffering that comes from rebellion, nature takes her course. It does not matter what weapons government has. Peasants in Viet Nam defeated the US military. Our military itself is composed of citizens and you cannot assume they will follow the orders from above any more than the Soviet troops followed orders from above to put down rebellion in Red Square.

This is a big country and citizens are well armed, and substantially outnumber the forces of the government. If it cannot be resolved by the federal government ending peacefully, I would not expect a civil war type conflict where large armies take to the field and massacre one another. I would expect that if the federal government just did not collapse and go away like the Soviet Union that guerrilla warfare would follow. Road side bombs, assassinations of government employees, most of whom cannot be protected, sabotage of significant infrastructure like the electric grid, small raid on government installations and the like would be the tenor of the battle. I think it would arise spontaneously, and I doubt serious if today anyone has plans.

I certainly do not have a desire for violence. I am an observer and this is what I see coming. I think there are three factions who will be involved in this conflict; those already in power who have brought us to this point in history, those who want more government redistribution of wealth, only more to the masses and less to the special interests (an impossibility), and those who wish to return to freedom and truly limited government. As with most violent political resolutions, most of the violence is visited upon the individuals who comprise these groups by members of the other groups; read about the Civil War in border states if you don't understand this.

You assume that when I say people will take to the streets, I am talking about the sort of looting that came to your mind. I am talking about protest along the lines of what you saw in Red Square back in the 1990's, but I am sure that as the breakdown progresses, there will be some of what you think of as taking to the streets too. Such taking to the streets would be one of the early reactions in the progression from the current political theater carried out by the Democrats and Republicans to more substantive change.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 11:54:42

Two thing about domestic uprising that I don't think can be stressed enough;

1) Bob the Mooch... he's got this thing called a food stamp card. As long as the card works, his kids have food to eat, as long as his kids have food to eat, he is *NOT* going to have any interest in insurrection. I predict those cards will never stop working. They are too good a deal on their own as crowd control; and the continuous viable demand on food, insures that the industrial agriculture system will never seize up.

2) Our military is an all volunteer, war time force, highly trained, exceptionally well supplied and equipped. They have no equal. Every single one of them that is in service right now, carrying tens of thousands of dollars worth of gear a piece and hundreds of thousands of dollars of training behind them, joined, INTENDING TO GO TO WAR. They aren't '70s era dodgers, trying to find a way to avoid combat exposure. They joined IN ORDER TO FIGHT. And we have equipped & trained them to be the absolute best there is. Its not even close.

If you bring them into the discussion of domestic uprising and violence. The US military wins the violence issue, regardless of the circumstance.

So, Bob the Mooch, if insurrection was in his mind, would be choosing between laying low and behaving, or suicide. There is no "fighting" for him in this context.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 12:12:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', '
')So, Bob the Mooch, if insurrection was in his mind, would be choosing between laying low and behaving, or suicide. There is no "fighting" for him in this context.

Hey, an odd roadside bomb here and there would certainly take a tasty bite of US military.
Even a hidden sniper with a shotgun could neutralize one or 2 soldiers before being taken out.
Hardware you mention is very expensive, nation is getting bankrupt, Mexican drug cartels (about the only not yet bankrupt entities in America :-D ) may well organize some supply lines for rebellion so who knows...

If Afghan peasants can do it, some Americans could also try.
Of course US Army could go heavy handed and convert New York into Fallujah or even resort to domestic use of atomic weapons, but at this point there would be no US anymore.

Generals would start competing in power struggle and enlisted psychopaths would follow orders and start shooting each other...
Last edited by EnergyUnlimited on Sat 30 Jul 2011, 12:20:08, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 12:17:00

One other thing of note about military in America, and its relationship with its civilian populations; the people that own most of the guns that could be useful in an uprising; are owned by the most right wing, pro military portion of the populations. They have little tolerance for blue hats, but if a battalion of US troops showed up in a fly-over country town wanting to set up headquarters and asking the mayor for assistance; they'd be buried in support so fast the quartermasters would have trouble keeping it all organized. They'd be talking about parades, not uprising. OTOH, if they went into a big city, most of the weapons owned, by gang bangers and liberal morons, can't even penetrate the normal armor worn by US Infantry. Which means, not only can they not kill them, but the infantry guy is in an invincible mindset, which means he'll take aimed shots in response, which means five shots, five dead gang bangers. Crowd rushing won't do either, they can, and would use continuous fire weapons against a crowd that penetrated the first line and was rushing.

There exists no situation in the US that would involve a successful uprising against US military forces. Thus, if they are in the mix, the fight never starts.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby gollum » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 12:18:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', 'T')wo thing about domestic uprising that I don't think can be stressed enough;

1) Bob the Mooch... he's got this thing called a food stamp card. As long as the card works, his kids have food to eat, as long as his kids have food to eat, he is *NOT* going to have any interest in insurrection. I predict those cards will never stop working. They are too good a deal on their own as crowd control; and the continuous viable demand on food, insures that the industrial agriculture system will never seize up.

2) Our military is an all volunteer, war time force, highly trained, exceptionally well supplied and equipped. They have no equal. Every single one of them that is in service right now, carrying tens of thousands of dollars worth of gear a piece and hundreds of thousands of dollars of training behind them, joined, INTENDING TO GO TO WAR. They aren't '70s era dodgers, trying to find a way to avoid combat exposure. They joined IN ORDER TO FIGHT. And we have equipped & trained them to be the absolute best there is. Its not even close.

If you bring them into the discussion of domestic uprising and violence. The US military wins the violence issue, regardless of the circumstance.

So, Bob the Mooch, if insurrection was in his mind, would be choosing between laying low and behaving, or suicide. There is no "fighting" for him in this context.



I respectfully disagree on two grounds. First the military is not some monolith it will fracture along with the national guard, leaving the rebellion with at least some modern equipment. Second America is the most armed populace on the planet and with 75 million guns in private hands the military would be outnumbered by 150 to 1.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 12:26:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gollum', 'S')econd America is the most armed populace on the planet and with 75 million guns in private hands the military would be outnumbered by 150 to 1.

His argument is that most of arms (and best makes of privately held guns) are in hands of pro-military right wingers, so these privately owned guns would be an asset for military, not for rebellion.
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Re: Bold Predictions about the Debt Ceiling

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sat 30 Jul 2011, 12:28:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'H')ey, an odd roadside bomb here and there would certainly take a tasty bite of US military.
Even a hidden sniper with a shotgun could neutralize one or 2 soldiers before being taken out.


As much as they make the press, IEDs are tactically, and strategically insignificant.

Sniper with shotgun would be the stupidest, and most harmless attacker you could ever possibly envision. Where you get this stuff?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ardware you mention is very expensive, nation is getting bankrupt, Mexican drug cartels (about the only not yet bankrupt entities in America :-D ) may well organize some supply lines for rebellion so who knows...


Mexican cartels are incompetent. Can't shoot for beans. Good at chopping off the heads of untrained, unarmed civilians, but that's not exactly the greatest indicator of combat proficiency.

Nation produces several million barrels of oil each year, more grain than we could ever eat, and more mineral wealth than the military could ever, possibly use. Bankrupt has a very different form for us, than it does for Greece or Egypt. The US military is *first* in line for those supplies, and always will be. Food stamp cards + well supplied military = no US civil war. Simple.

You guys in the liberal city cores would want to fight against them anyway?? Whatever, I'll be breaking out the ribs and smoker for the parade when the troops are finished restoring order.
Yes we are, as we are,
And so shall we remain,
Until the end.
AgentR11
Light Sweet Crude
Light Sweet Crude
 
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Joined: Tue 22 Mar 2011, 09:15:51
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