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Feds Prep For E-Gov Shutdown

dcblogs writes "If the federal government is shutdown midnight Friday, the feds plan to stop updating government Web sites that aren't delivering essential services. 'Most Web sites will not continue, only those Web sites that are part of these accepted activities would continue to operate,' the senior White House official said Tuesday. 'Accepted activities,' refers to essential, life and safety-related government services. The IRS, however, will continue to accept tax returns filed electronically and to process payments. 'We need to be able to collect the money that is owed to the U.S. government,' the official said. Paper-based returns won't be processed."

290 comments

  1. So ... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 3

    Electronic tax returns will be processed but paper ones won't? Don't they need the money whether it shows up electronically or as a check?

    1. Re:So ... by countertrolling · · Score: 2

      Most returns will expecting refunds. The government already has their money. Those that owe money should withhold payment until the store reopens. Heh..I wish...

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    2. Re:So ... by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      They cash the checks independent of processing paper. At one time, they even had you send the check to a different mailing address.

    3. Re:So ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Maybe.

      One might expect that those expecting a refund in excess of what they pay would be quick to file, e.g., they'd've filed already to get their money back. Conversely, those who expect to owe something in net would wait as long as possible in order that they gain the use of the money and interest and everything to the greatest extent they can.

    4. Re:So ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You'd expect that, but a human being is generally not what economists would call a "rational actor". Even people expecting a refund often put off filing until the last few days, because doing your taxes is a huge pain in the ass and "expecting a refund" usually means "makes very little money and therefore can't afford to hire a tax preparer".

    5. Re:So ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO, the IRS will take in most taxes because they are taken from payrolls by companies. On tax returns most working people will receive some refund if not a larger tax refund then they payed in.(Maybe no more then their share of payroll tax, Which is an insane tax. punish companies for paying their employees cash*) most people who receive more don't even realize their getting it.(Welfare for people who don't want it) People who work for themselves or really small companies that don't withhold taxes will pay on their returns if they don't have more deductions the taxes. The IRS doesn't want to waste man power(money) on entering tax returns into the computer. Also the IRS doesn't allow paper returns without an excuse.(Being old and not having a computer is one of them I believe.) I would say that 90% of the tax returns for those who actually pay taxes are going to be electronic since figuring out your own taxes without a Computer program or tax Preparer for someone who runs a really small business is very difficult.

      *BTW, this is why businesses like to give out car payments, jets, housing, and other perks. instead of giving more cash to management because it turns into a deduction and not a higher tax. Think about the amount of Big SUVs sold because the managers have car allowance of $1500 or more. I think at least some of them would have bought more efficient sedan if they got the cash in hand and not the $500 or less left over after $1500 dollar added to the payroll. Actually know a banker who owns a Rover and a small classic car because the Rover is free from the bank. It also helps hide how much a Manger is actually taking from the company and hides how much tax a person is really paying to the government since they don't see the payroll taxes.

    6. Re:So ... by Charliemopps · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually no, they will not be taking paper returns. And if you have already filed by paper but don't have your return yet, it's not likely you'll get it any time soon. The problems the IRS will have because of the shutdown will probably be the most disruptive to the government.

    7. Re:So ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank God for that.

    8. Re:So ... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Huh? Must have been before '77 when I first started doing my own returns.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    9. Re:So ... by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Must have been during some years when you got refunds. It was early in the 2000's

    10. Re:So ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dangit, I already paid mine electronically. And it wasn't small.

  2. Government will not shut down by countertrolling · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Your congress people will receive their checks regardless of the outcome of events. Only us lowlifes are being targeted by this. It's like targeting civilians in warfare.

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    1. Re:Government will not shut down by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      When government shuts down, Congress and the President should have to work sans pay until a budget is hammered out. (Not their aides, mind you, but the actual Senators/Representatives/President.) After the budget is passed, they can resume collecting pay but lose out on any back pay. This would ensure that any shut downs are as shortlived as possible.

      Not that it'll ever happen though, apart from one or two Congressfolk publicly rejecting their salary as a "show of support"/upcoming election ploy.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    2. Re:Government will not shut down by maxume · · Score: 2

      Over a period of about 2 months, Obama draws a salary of something like $66,000. He has millions of dollars of personal wealth. Not paying him isn't much of a threat.

      It would likely have more impact on Representatives and Senators, but even there, there are hundreds of them with large personal fortunes.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:Government will not shut down by skids · · Score: 1

      There was a bill proposed to not pay congress for as long as there was a shutdown. It was just posturing of course, because Congress cannot change their own wages for the current session, by law. Also it was ridiculous to think it would pass because it was proposed by a D when the R controls the house.

      So basically, yes, congress will get payed, but there's no legal way for congress to change that, even if they really wanted to.

    4. Re:Government will not shut down by skids · · Score: 1

      See above, the congress cannot by law change their own salaries for the current session.

      Also, their staffs, if they want them to keep working, have to be declared "essential personnel" which they have some sort of special prerogative to do.

    5. Re:Government will not shut down by Aeros · · Score: 1

      Then fine them x amount for each day, or better yet, per hour that they don't have a completed budget.

  3. onoz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean the over-the-top multi million dollar contracts for wordpress, drupal etc is not sustainable?!

  4. What about FY2012? by Nameisyoung007 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If lawmakers can't agree to a budget for the time period starting 7 MONTHS AGO, how are they going to get a FY2012 budget done?

    Federal managers aren't spending more than the Continuing Resolution levels, and should be saving some money in case of cuts. Funding them over the CR level would just lead to waste spending in the 'use it or lose it' model (They have until September to spend it all).

    They need to pass a status quo budget for FY2011, and get started on FY2012. That is where the problem lies, and where a solution can take place.

    1. Re:What about FY2012? by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      FY 2012 starts in October, and the House budget committee proposed a budget this past Tuesday.

    2. Re:What about FY2012? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The crazy thing: Everyone will forget that the democrats controlled the house, senate, and presidents office and didn't draft and pass a budget. So this entire mess is their fault.

    3. Re:What about FY2012? by GumphMaster · · Score: 1

      How long can the opposition parties hold the government to ransom for funds in the US? Are there any mechanisms to break such a crippling deadlock?

      In Australia the Governor General can dissolve both houses of parliament and call elections in this sort of deadlock event (http://www.aec.gov.au/Elections/australian_electoral_system/electoral_procedures/Double_Dissolution.htm). After the elections if the bill is presented and still cannot pass then two houses can be combined for a single vote on the topic. It is not something that is done lightly, but it has happened in my lifetime over appropriation bills (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gough_whitlam).

      --
      Patent litigation: A doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction... in which everyone seems willing to push the button
  5. What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by bogaboga · · Score: 1

    The IRS, however, will continue to accept tax returns filed electronically and to process payments. 'We need to be able to collect the money that is owed to the U.S. government,' the official said.

    So will the government shut-down or not? From some online dictionary, shut-down refers to: "ceasing operations or cause to cease operating."

    Now if the IRS will still be working in some capacity, the government will not be shut-down. It's that simple.

    Heck, this whole thing reminds me of our ISPs' 'unlimited' data plans which turn out to be capped to a ceiling. It's the same thing with our neighbours to the north...Canada.

    My advice: get a better word, for example, 'slow-down.'

    1. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by syousef · · Score: 3, Funny

      What is the meaning of 'shut-down?'

      Fire and brimstone coming down from the skies! Rivers and seas boiling! Forty years of darkness! Earthquakes, volcanoes... The dead rising from the grave! Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together... mass hysteria!

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    2. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Technically, it is a "lapse in appropriations."
      http://www.opm.gov/furlough2011/

    3. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the IRS isn't really a part of the government after all.

      They're not. They're the collection agency for the Federal Reserve (also not part of the government).

      This whole IRS topic is under the heading of "Don't Get Me Started...." ;-)

      CAPTCHA: "Abetted"

    4. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by camperdave · · Score: 1

      I guess this means no more updates to NASA's Cool Robot of the Week site...

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    5. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Fire and brimstone coming down from the skies! Rivers and seas boiling! Forty years of darkness! Earthquakes, volcanoes... The dead rising from the grave! Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together... mass hysteria!

      I see you've visited our nations capital.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    6. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, we'll be fine as long as Dickless here doesn't cut the power grid.

    7. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So.... Monday Morning?

    8. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My teeth are about to start gnashing. . .

    9. Re:What is the meaning of 'shut-down?' by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1

      but that's only if you specify >shutdown --catastrophic

  6. No, they won't. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those e-file servers won't last thirty goddamn minutes if the IT staff is sent home from the shutdown.

    1. Re:No, they won't. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Why not?

      I'm serious, I have never administrated a large site like that, but I could technically walk away from the sites I do administrate for several months on end and not have to worry about much of anything outside of security vulnerabilities discovered in the mean time.

      Am I just not building enough job security into my jobs or is there something seriously different about these sites that require IT staff to constantly be present?

    2. Re:No, they won't. by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      They can't allow them to run unsupervised. Can you imagine the target they'd be for any politically motivated hacker? And they can't pay the technicians watching the hardware, or for the electricity for the servers, etc. So the plugs are pulled.

    3. Re:No, they won't. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I pretty much thought that was the job of the IDS and rules created in it compounded with securing the servers and limited services being exposed. I didn't realize people actually sat there and watched traffic looking for intruders when they could be pretty much reading the comics in the newspaper waiting for the IDS to send an alarm.

      I agree, there would or could be a lot more hacking attempts. I also agree that someone would need to do something about it once it happened. I just wasn't aware of what exactly the IT staff was doing in that regard. I figured 99% of their duties is fielding idiot requests from users who don't understand that just because they set a password with their email, they might not be using the same password when accessing their accounts on the server. Well, that or implementing new functions or altering the existing ones to suit the changes in business needs.

    4. Re:No, they won't. by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      I figured 99% of their duties is fielding idiot requests from users

      Probably; but like firemen, it's the unpredictable 1% of the time when they need to act quickly that is the reason you need them on duty.

  7. The threat is way overblown... by MikeRT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The federal shutdown is only affecting 800,000 employees out of a few million uniformed servicemen, civilian employees and contractors. I would be surprised if it's even 25% of the federal workforce.

    What this shutdown means is that until the budget goes through, the feds aren't buying any new toys and those considered "non-essential" to the mission of their agency (or department, in some cases) will be treated like dead weight.

    Ironically, this would be an excellent time for an audit of the federal labor force and contracts to see who should be permanently let go and/or have their contract torn up.

    1. Re:The threat is way overblown... by stoat · · Score: 2

      This, out of the 30 something federal workers I work with 1 will be furloughed. I guess you could call us mission critical, we work on an airfield that supports 0 aircraft. I would lowball half of federal workers could be eliminated with 0 consequences to the government (probably more like 80%).

    2. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      FYI - Those of us who have to work (including warfighters in harms way) will stop getting pay checks until appropriations are made again. (http://www.opm.gov/furlough2011/) Feds who have to work will get back pay. Congress will have to decide if the non-exempted Feds will.

      Also, most contractors will not be paid. It depends on the type of contract, but the vast majority will go home without hope of a pay check until this is over.

    3. Re:The threat is way overblown... by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      Also those millions of uniformed service members, including those in war zones, won't get paid until congress agrees to some form of budget or continuing resolution. It's generally not a good idea, in any form of government, to not pay your large standing army while asking them to continue to fight. Do that long enough and they'll solve "what needs to be cut" from your budget real quick.

    4. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Skater · · Score: 4, Insightful

      800,000 people in the US suddenly not working and not getting paychecks isn't a serious issue to you?

    5. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Tokolosh · · Score: 2

      It's generally a good idea, in any form of government, to not have large standing army.

      Fixed that for you.

      --
      Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    6. Re:The threat is way overblown... by darjen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Essential reading:

      http://www.constitution.org/afp/brutus10.htm

      The liberties of a people are in danger from a large standing army, not only because the rulers may employ them for the purposes of supporting themselves in any usurpations of power, which they may see proper to exercise, but there is great hazard, that an army will subvert the forms of the government, under whose authority, they are raised, and establish one, according to the pleasure of their leader.

    7. Re:The threat is way overblown... by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 0

      Actually? No, it is not a serious issue. 800,000 GOVT employees *not working* is status quo, is it not?

      I know plenty of federal workers, and believe me, most of them are not like your local DMV stereotype. You may disagree about the government doing certain kinds of work, but the majority of federal workers I know seem to work at least as hard as their private industry counterparts.

    8. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That explains why you have time to post on slashdot ;-)

    9. Re:The threat is way overblown... by LanMan04 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually? No, it is not a serious issue. 800,000 GOVT employees *not working* is status quo, is it not?

      You know, I get really fucking sick of this attitude. I can't tell if you're joking or not, but [rant mode on].

      I used to be a Fed working for an Inspector's General office (as an IT guy), which recovered funds to the tune of FOUR TIMES our operating expenses/budget by performing financial criminal fraud/audit investigations. Yes, we paid for ourselves 3 times over. I went to the office every day and WORKED like any other private worker. So did my auditor and investigator co-workers.

      Hell, I do LESS work/have more downtime now as a programmer at a small, privately-held IT company than I did as a Fed.

      I still have friends at that office (6 years later) and they'll pretty much ALL be furloughed due to a shutdown. So yeah, this does affect real, normal people with families and bills to pay.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    10. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The federal shutdown is only affecting 800,000 employees out of a few million uniformed servicemen, civilian employees and contractors. I would be surprised if it's even 25% of the federal workforce.

      What this shutdown means is that until the budget goes through, the feds aren't buying any new toys and those considered "non-essential" to the mission of their agency (or department, in some cases) will be treated like dead weight.

      Ironically, this would be an excellent time for an audit of the federal labor force and contracts to see who should be permanently let go and/or have their contract torn up.

      Of course such an audit would be performed by the same "non-essential" employees that just got furloughed. Also a shutdown has nothing to do with the fed buying new toys. The military and homeland security are the ones that gets all of those new toys and their budgets are still in place. No, what it means is that the government lays off a bunch of employees, quits paying contractors, quits making transfers to state budgets for federal grants, quits accepting new people into social security, quits processing passport requests and stuff like that. All of those things combined are just a fraction of the budget, but impact real people's lives.. The forced shutdown is a symbolic gesture, made by those who won't be impacted by it.

      Congress has one main job right now -- to come up with a budget for a fiscal year that are half way through. If they can't do it, then maybe they should look towards themself with regards to non-essential personnel.

    11. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      This, out of the 30 something federal workers I work with 1 will be furloughed. I guess you could call us mission critical, we work on an airfield that supports 0 aircraft.

      I would lowball half of federal workers could be eliminated with 0 consequences to the government (probably more like 80%).

      So, you willing accept a federal subsidy for doing no work? At least poor people admit they are on government welfare.

    12. Re:The threat is way overblown... by HikingStick · · Score: 2

      Even if the shutdown was only a week, that would mean all armed services personnel would see only half their regular pay on their next paycheck. While it's true that the US government has always covered back pay after a shut down, that won't do anything to help the individuals and families that are counting on their normal amount of income this month to pay current bills and for everyday needs.

      --
      I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
    13. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      >considered "non-essential" to the mission of their agency
      uhm, somehow I doubt you're a federal employee. At my location, we have 80+ people, only 3 are required to be here without pay. Also if the government is shutdown, employees on travel status, must immediately return (once a budget is passed, generally they are immediately sent back)

      you should see this table: http://www.opm.gov/feddata/HistoricalTables/TotalGovernmentSince1962.asp

      currently there are 2x more civilian employees(2,774,000 total) than there are military; probably 95% or better will be told to not show up on Monday.

    14. Re:The threat is way overblown... by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Actually? No, it is not a serious issue. 800,000 GOVT employees *not working* is status quo, is it not?

      I know plenty of federal workers, and believe me, most of them are not like your local DMV stereotype.

      Do people say stuff like the GP to federal workers?

      I work for the British government, and we don't have anything like the "DMV stereotype" here. It would be quite dispiriting if there was a general assumption that I was lazy, incompetent and a leech on the rest of society.

    15. Re:The threat is way overblown... by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      That depends on what you mean by "affecting". Every one of those "few million uniformed servicemen" will be getting half pay for the duration. The civilian employees and contrators will be getting no pay for their work.

      All of them can hope to get back pay when the shutdowns ends (if the teabaggers don't block it), but I doubt their mortgage and utility companies shut down their billing during the interim.

      Anyone who thinks this is no big deal wasn't paying attention the last time the Republicans pulled this stunt.

    16. Re:The threat is way overblown... by fightinfilipino · · Score: 1
      consider the fact that a Fed shutdown will also necessarily shut down certain services like ICE prosecuting attorney offices (like the DAs for immigration) and the Immigration Courts themselves. that's major. a shutdown prevents the immigration system from doing its job, identifying people who should not be present in the US and deporting them, and also identifying those who have genuine claims to asylum or other valid reasons for being allowed to stay.

      or the fact that without the EPA, a good number of Fed construction projects will have to be put on hold. like that new courthouse downtown that's so desperately needed to handle additional cases. or that highway maintenance and expansion needed in the face of additional traffic and/or crumbling infrastructure.

      it's not "just 800,000 employees". thinking such reflects simplistic binary thinking to a much more complex problem.

    17. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know someone about to be furloughed who works for the DoD. He does auditing. A non-essential position apparently.

    18. Re:The threat is way overblown... by chill · · Score: 1

      Bullshit.

      This stems from the mentality that the military is our #1 priority and we can't let any of them go.

      I work at a federal agency with about 500 employees, and there are only 6 classified as "essential" with another 5 listed as "intermittent/as needed" meaning about 1 hour of work a day.

      Break out your number to federal-military and federal-non-military. Civilian employees and contractors to the DoD being classified as federal-military, whether or not they wear a uniform.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    19. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck them, they're GOVERMENT employees. It's not like they were doing anything useful. Who gives a shit? Now these people will have to find REAL jobs. It almost sounds like you are one of them and are scared that your cushy, overpaid union bullshit job may be gone. FUCKING AWESOME is what that is. Go suck on someone else's tax teat.

    20. Re:The threat is way overblown... by stoat · · Score: 1

      I often remark how it feels exactly like being on welfare.

    21. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only a sudden %6 surge in US unemployment ... occurring during a recession ... what could possibly go wrong?

    22. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO

    23. Re:The threat is way overblown... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 2

      Actually? No, it is not a serious issue. 800,000 GOVT employees *not working* is status quo, is it not?

      I know plenty of federal workers, and believe me, most of them are not like your local DMV stereotype.

      Do people say stuff like the GP to federal workers?

      I work for the British government, and we don't have anything like the "DMV stereotype" here. It would be quite dispiriting if there was a general assumption that I was lazy, incompetent and a leech on the rest of society.

      No, they don't. In fact, people talk about the laziness of government employees like they talk about the weather. Makes for an awkward conversation when you point out you're a government employee. As a fed, I've noticed most of my fellow feds are quite competent. We tend to be paid a lot less than in the private sector (at least for developers), but we don't have to work the insane 60-hour weeks that you do in private sector right now. If working only 40-45 hours per week (yes, I work overtime sometimes) makes me lazy, then so be it.

    24. Re:The threat is way overblown... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      Er, wait, yes they do say the negative things to the federal workers.. They do not say the positive things that the other poster responded with.

    25. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And just who do you think is PAYING those 800,000 workers? The tooth fairy?

    26. Re:The threat is way overblown... by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      Anyone who thinks this is no big deal wasn't paying attention the last time the Republicans pulled this stunt.

      This is for FY 2011, and should have been passed by October of 2010. Astute calendar watchers will notice that this is more than a month before Republican won in the 2010 elections, and three months before the new winners took office.

      Sorry, bro, but the Democrats should have passed this budget almost a year ago.

    27. Re:The threat is way overblown... by cats-paw · · Score: 1

      wow, you're a callous SOB like all right wingers.

      800,000 people are going to lose their paychecks, potentially for a while, and you think it's just dandy.

      See you at the tea part rally on the 16th.

      --
      Absolute statements are never true
    28. Re:The threat is way overblown... by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      8,000,000 people in the US not working and not getting paychecks hasn't been a serious issue to the Congress and the White House for two years, so why should I cry when 10% of the federal workers suddenly feel the pain too?

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    29. Re:The threat is way overblown... by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      They should have yes. I never said the Dems were paragons of competence and feasance. But what they did not do was shut the government down. (Note than when the Dems took over congress back in '06 with an opposite party president, they were also presented with a year overdue budget). The Republicans don't have to shut it down either. They are doing it because they want to. They apparently think they will prove some kind of point that is worth the hardship to millions of American families, and the damage to the economy from those millions not having any money to spend for the duration.

      Perhaps they are right. But the only thing that was achieved the last time they pulled this stunt was that the voters threw them out on their idealogical hineys at the next oppertunity. One could argue that is a great good, but I don't see it being worth the hardship they are putting millions of american familes through.

    30. Re:The threat is way overblown... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      800, 000 out of 3,000,000. It's a sizable piece.
      It also indicates that the government does run pretty lean. The Republicans and Tea party us government employees as whipping boys. The government Has Had around 3 million people since 1946.

      The government runs lean, and pretty damn efficient.
      But hey, no one stands up for them, so they are an easy target.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    31. Re:The threat is way overblown... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't lower the military budget at all. I might even raise it. But the priorities would be: Fair, competitive hourly wages for labor -- nobody would be cheated here, and the wages would be attractive, and fair, reasonable market costs for raw materials. Everything else that represents profit for the defense industry would be paid in the form of bonds. These bonds would bear interest at a decent ROI, but would have a vesting schedule. During wartime they would not be redeemable at all, but they would be paid with interest at the cessation of hostilities.

      The point is, it's immoral and perhaps treasonous to take a large, immediate profit from one's own nation while that nation is at war.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    32. Re:The threat is way overblown... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Not enough information to come to any conclusion.

      What's the mission?

      Before yammering nonsense, you should look at how many people work for the federal government. It really hasn't changed much in 50 years. So the government so doing more, but not hiring a ,lot more. That means its getting more efficient.

      But you keep backing up your person bias with anecdotal evidence. we need more of that~

      Not that I expect any real thinking from someone who claims he does nothing, but still collects a check.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    33. Re:The threat is way overblown... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      It's a good thing active military work isn't a career whose principal motivation is money.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    34. Re:The threat is way overblown... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If it's like myself when I had to go on welfare, or any of my family or friends who had to go no welfare, you job is a lot like trying to find a new job while barely able to feed your family.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    35. Re:The threat is way overblown... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Wow way to abuse context.

      IN context, a standing army was also you police; That is always bad. The army is for outside forces, the police for internal affair. Ones the military i also the police, the civilians become the enemy.

      This also applies to police forces who adopt a military attitude.

       

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    36. Re:The threat is way overblown... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      Senate Republicans would not allow it. I agree that the House should have passed a bill and forced the Senate to go through the motions of their filibuster. I also think that when they threaten filibuster, it shouldn't be a ceremonial thing. They should have to go through with it. Sleeping on cots. Pissing in bottles. Speaking for their full allotted time, 24 hours a day. And the C-SPAN camera stay on.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    37. Re:The threat is way overblown... by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      Actually? No, it is not a serious issue. 800,000 GOVT employees *not working* is status quo, is it not?

      You know, I get really fucking sick of this attitude.

      And no matter how hard you or your friends worked, it doesn't change the fact that we have too many people working for the government. We have more people on government payrolls now than the entire manufacturing, mining, energy,and agriculture sectors combined.

      There are some vital services provided by the government, and by the people that work for the government. But be honest. There are also thousands of government jobs that, if they dissapeared tomorrow, most of the public would never even notice. I work in the aviation sector, and I've been involved in the FAA grant process. There are tremendous amounts of money being spent unneccessarily. There are large swaths of people out there that get a paycheck from government largesse. The problem is that it's a false largesse, with 40 cents on the dollar being borrowed. We simply can't continue like this.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    38. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if they are wasteful federal employees. Sometimes you have to take a short term hit to get some fiscal sanity.

    39. Re:The threat is way overblown... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting anyone to purchase bonds with those kind of limitations. Govt. bonds have traditionally been viewed as a "safe investment"...something you could bank on when you're looking for low risk/low return. I'm using mine to fund my kids college education right now. What would qualify as a "war"...Libya?...Afghanistan?...Iraq?...the war on terror...the war on drugs? We haven't had a legally declared war since WWII, so under your plan was that the last time that counted, or would I never be able to extract my money?

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    40. Re:The threat is way overblown... by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

      800,000 people in the US suddenly not working and not getting paychecks isn't a serious issue to you?

      Lets not forget those not included in the 800k and still working will be payed only *after* the shutdown is resolved.

    41. Re:The threat is way overblown... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      All evidence point to an efficient, effective and cheap federal employment in the US. Compared to corporations the Federal government is amazing.
      But it's an easy target because people suffer from key hole syndrome and showing people that actual facts about federal workers is boring. It's much better to show they rare fuck up and imply the whole government is like that.
      .

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    42. Re:The threat is way overblown... by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      But what [Democrats] did not do was shut the government down.

      They are about to. Keep in mind that the Republican-led House HAS passed a budget resolution, and the Democrats aren't coming back with a counterproposal that includes ANY cuts, which, in fact, is the negotiation point. This government shut down, if it happens, is happening SOLELY because the Democrats think they can call the Republicans heartless when they force the shut down.

    43. Re:The threat is way overblown... by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      Senate Republicans wouldn't allow the Democrats to pass a budget in October 2010? The Democrats had a filibuster proof majority in the Senate at the time. They could have rammed whatever they wanted through the Senate, the House, and gotten the President to sign it.

    44. Re:The threat is way overblown... by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      which recovered funds to the tune of FOUR TIMES our operating expenses/budget

      I don't know what your budget was but since you are using this nebulous figure to brag; I'd say it makes the librarian argument perfectly! The IG mostly investigates the fraud and abuse of government programs such as Medicare correct?

      Let me suggest that if we did not have these programs to abuse well people can't abuse what does not exist.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    45. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well . . . the military IS increasingly taking police roles, and the military is also increasingly training the police, and the police is increasingly buying tanks, machine guns,surveillence drones, etc. . . In fact, the Federal Government is paying a lot of money to local police forces for this to be implemented. Even Obama's so-called "stimulus package" had a lot of pork in those areas.

      So um. . . not exactly out of context. Officer Friendly who helps old ladies change a tire are being phased out. PTSD plagued military men on steroids given the tools of war are what our police are going to be eventually. With Homeland Security constantly saying that the new enemy is "domestic", it makes you wonder if the aformentioned scenario isn't exactly what's in store for us.

    46. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If they can't do it, then maybe they should look towards themself with regards to non-essential personnel."

      Agreed.

      How about...if the Gov shuts down, all of Congress AND the Prez stop getting paid. No salary....no BENEFITS!...nothing. Even the Secret Service is cut down to two Mall Cops and a geriatric German Shepard.

      Until we start pinching THEIR pocket, they won't give a rat's backside about US.

    47. Re:The threat is way overblown... by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      No, they didn't they had 59. Moreover, republicans weren't just filibustering, they were placing anymous holds on every single piece of legislation during that time period on the condition the the democrats pass the tax cuts for the rich they demanded? remember those? Now they want to worry about the deficit. This is seriously 100% the fault of the 2008's senate republicans.

    48. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my country if the congress cannot agree a budget the president has the right to request new elections. The law requires the congress to agree a budged within 4 months from the time it is proposed. This I would say is a good incentive for the representatives to be little bit more willing to negotiate.

    49. Re:The threat is way overblown... by JD770 · · Score: 0

      I know plenty of federal workers, and believe me, most of them are not like your local DMV stereotype. You may disagree about the government doing certain kinds of work, but the majority of federal workers I know seem to work at least as hard as their private industry counterparts.

      I also know plenty of federal workers. And considering the massive, ever growing head-count in the federal workforce, the 800,000 figure might be *low* for the "DMV Stereo-Types". Now, to be fair, I work with (or try to get them working, as the case may be) federal employees on a weekly basis. I know full well there are great people working for Uncle-Sugar. But there are also a *SIGNIFICANT* number of dead-weight, unionized, ass-hats that are wastes of tax-payer money, as well as wastes of DNA. Folks who should absolutely be given the axe, but can't be fired - seemingly because they've somehow been fortunate not to have been caught committing a felony in the workplace (or whatever it takes to actually fire them). I would even go as far as estimating the ratio of producers to leechers is worse in the fed sector than in the commercial sector. Likely because the fed sector does not have to produce anything, nor turn a profit. All they *HAVE* to do is be polite, and even that's too much of a challenge for some of them.

      But yes, it is absolutely true there are some good folks working for the govt.

    50. Re:The threat is way overblown... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      With the War on Drugs (and to a lesser extent, the new War on Terror) have pushed all police forces to adopt a military attitude.

    51. Re:The threat is way overblown... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      It happens under a Republican administration and people call for the lazy people to get a real job (though the "suddenly" wasn't quite so suddenly, I'll admit). It happens under a Democratic administration, and everyone's concerned.

    52. Re:The threat is way overblown... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The number of federal employees has remained essentially constant over the last 50 years. So I'm curious what the issue is.

    53. Re:The threat is way overblown... by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      It is a bit more serious than 800,000 people not getting paid (although.... I kinda consider that fairly serious).

              * Medicare: Some 400,000 newly eligible Medicare recipients were delayed in applying for the program.

              * Social Security: Claims from 112,000 new Social Security applicants were not processed. 212,000 new or replacement Social Security cards were not issued. 360,000 office visits were denied. 800,000 toll-free calls for information were not answered.

              * Healthcare: New patients were not accepted into clinical research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) clinical center. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ceased disease surveillance and hotline calls to NIH concerning diseases were not answered.

              * Environment: Toxic waste clean-up work at 609 sites stopped as 2,400 Superfund workers were sent home.

              * Law Enforcement and Public Safety: Delays occurred in the processing of alcohol, tobacco, firearms, and explosives applications by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms; work on more than 3,500 bankruptcy cases reportedly was suspended; cancellation of the recruitment and testing of federal law enforcement officials reportedly occurred, including the hiring of 400 border patrol agents; and delinquent child-support cases were delayed.

              * US Veterans: Multiple veterans' services were curtailed, ranging from health and welfare to finance and travel.

              * Travel: 80,000 passport applications were delayed. 80,000 visas were delayed. The resulting postponement or cancellation of travel cost U.S. tourist industries and airlines millions of dollars.

              * National Parks: 2 million visitors were turned away from the nation's national parks resulting in the loss of millions in revenue.

              * Government-backed Loans: FHA mortgage loans worth more than $800 million to more than 10,000 low-and-moderate-income working families were delayed.
              * Social Security: Benefit checks would probably keep coming, but no new applications would be accepted or processed.

              * Income Tax: The IRS will probably stop processing paper tax returns and refunds.

              * Border Patrol: Customs and Border Patrol functions will probably continue.

              * Welfare: Again, the checks would probably continue, but new applications for Food Stamps might not be processed.

              * Mail: The U.S. Postal Service supports itself, so mail deliveries would continue as usual.

              * National Defense: All active duty members of all branches of all armed services would continue duty as usual, but might not get paid on time. More than half of the Defense Department's 860,000+ civilian employees would also work, the others sent home.

              * Justice System: Federal courts should remain open. Criminals will still be chased, caught, prosecuted and thrown in federal prisons, which would still be operating.

              * Farms/USDA: Food safety inspections will probably continue, but rural development, and farm credit and loan programs will probably close down.

              * Transportation: Air traffic control, TSA security personnel, and the Coast Guard will remain on the job. Applications for passports and visas may not be processed.

              * National Parks/Tourism: Parks and forests will probably close and visitors told to leave. Visitor and interpretive centers will be closed. Non-volunteer rescue and fire control services might be shut down. National monuments and most historic sites will probably be closed. Parks police will probably continue their patrols.

    54. Re:The threat is way overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno about you, but I'd tend to rate passport requests as fairly essential. If you're scheduled to be out of the country in a couple weeks, you must have a passport...

  8. Re:I only wish... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it was permanent. This shutdown only brings a temporary respite to the oppression the American people suffer at the hands of it's own government.

    Yes, my work on automation software flight plan management for the FAA is very oppressive to you. Douchebag.

  9. Welcome to the real truth by Shivetya · · Score: 3, Informative

    The real truth of the matter is, the Democrats while in power refused to pass a budget for this fiscal year. Worse they refused to even submit one to the floor all because they were afraid of the ramifications of doing so before the election. In other words, if they had submitted their budget they would have had to campaign with that large deficit number hanging over their heads.

    I am all for a government shut down, the problem I have is the press is still giving Obama a free pass. When the press decides to come back to the side of the public and keep Obama honest we might see some progress. Right now they are making this all out to be a Republican anti-(insert minority group/poor here) issue instead of pointing out that if Pelosi had not purposefully ignored her duty we would be fighting over the FY2012 now instead of fighting over something that should have been in place before the election.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Skater · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The real truth of the matter is, the Democrats while in power refused to pass a budget for this fiscal year. Worse they refused to even submit one to the floor all because they were afraid of the ramifications of doing so before the election. In other words, if they had submitted their budget they would have had to campaign with that large deficit number hanging over their heads.

      I note the new Congress has yet to pass a budget either. What's their excuse?

    2. Re:Welcome to the real truth by halivar · · Score: 2

      Congress won't bother sending a bill to the president's desk unless he indicates he will sign it. So far, he has indicated he won't due to several programs being defunded. Myself, I think all these programs are merely an exercise in sunk cost fallacy, but I'm not in Congress, so...

    3. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Chaos+Incarnate · · Score: 1

      The Republicans only control the House; the Democrat-controlled Senate isn't exactly being cooperative.

      --
      Benford's Corollary to Clarke's Law: "Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced."
    4. Re:Welcome to the real truth by hubie · · Score: 1

      On the other side of the coin, saying that the only compromise is if you agree to all my demands isn't necessarily being very cooperative in the House.

    5. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Skater · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You conveniently left out that Obama tried to negotiate a budget and the Republicans decided to change their goal from $33 billion in cuts to $40 billion, just a few days ago. Note, I'm an independent, I hate both parties, but really the Tea Party Republicans are being idiots here...and at least some of the non-Tea Party Republicans seem to agree with that sentiment. It's called negotiating; what we instead have is "I'm taking my ball and going home!!"

      Furthermore, it's all really idiotic, because that $40 billion or whatever in cuts doesn't apply to this year's budget only. It applies to this year and the next several years! The actual cuts in any given year are relatively small, but they multiply them out over several years to make the numbers look bigger so we're all impressed by how Congress is cracking the whip. And it's moot, since Congress passes a new budget every year (roughly), because next year they could change what's funded/cut anyway; there's nothing forcing them to uphold the cuts/spending made in a previous year.

      In short, as usual, the politicians are lying. They could cut $1 out of this year's budget, the remainder out of the next 9 years, and all we'd hear is how they saved $40 billion.

    6. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Chaos+Incarnate · · Score: 1

      That's true. But from what I understand, the Democrats aren't offering up anything for cuts, and are just trying to continue overspending at their current levels. If the media's wrong, I'm open to correction. :)

      --
      Benford's Corollary to Clarke's Law: "Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced."
    7. Re:Welcome to the real truth by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      When you say it like that, it almost sounds as if they've formed a public labor union.

    8. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The Democrats conceded to the Republican's demands for $33 billion in cuts, so now the Republicans are demanding $40 billion in cuts.

      So now the two are going to play "chicken" with each other like a bunch of retarded teenagers.

      You know, I take that back; that's offensive. If everyone in Congress had Down's Syndrome we'd be better off than we are now.

    9. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't October 1 yet, when it's actually due.

    10. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that's just bullshit. Because they seem content enough sending other crap to the president's desk that they know the president will veto (remember their move to abolish the Health care stuff). It is more likely that they are not doing it for other reasons.

    11. Re:Welcome to the real truth by MirthScout · · Score: 1

      It is well past October 2010. It is way overdue.

      They haven't done any real work on the budget that is due October 2011.

    12. Re:Welcome to the real truth by afidel · · Score: 2

      Huh, they've agreed to $30 of the $33B with the complete defunding of a few organizations being unacceptable, the teaparty then tried to get the goal moved to $60B and Boehner "compromised" on $40B with additional program defundings and the original defundings still in place.

      Sort of off topic but I couldn't believe the Republican proposed budget, let's shift profits to private insurance company, shift cost to the poor and retired, and reduce the marginal tax rate on the top 1% to 25%, the lowest level since 1931 which coincidentally failed to bring us out of the great depression and did nothing to spur job growth.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    13. Re:Welcome to the real truth by antifoidulus · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This isn't really about cuts though, if the Tea Partiers actually gave a shit about deficits(here's a hint, they don't), then they would be chopping programs like Social Security and the DoD. However since either of those would be politically unpopular, what they have done instead is focus SOLELY on programs that benefit Democrats(Research, most PhDs aren't republican, NPR, family planning etc). This has nothing to do with cuts and everything to do with the Republicans being puerile and bullying everyone they don't agree with, no matter what the long term consequences for the nation are.

    14. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ya if deficits were the real issue then it would take some real work to deal with it. That would involve two things:

      1) Some cuts to big spending programs. I'm not saying that smaller programs can't share in cuts as well, I mean some rather significant cuts need to be made, however before bothering with that you have to agree to include big ones. Arguing over a couple billion in small programs while refusing to talk about the DoD's $700ish billion is useless and irresponsible. If you really care, you've got to make cuts in multiple places, and the DoD has to be one just because of the size of the budget. That doesn't mean slash and burn, get rid of everything, but it does mean trim off things. Like maybe we could get along with only 8 aircraft carriers instead of 12, as an example.

      2) Increase taxes. There is no reasonable way to cut spending enough to close the deficit down without gutting the government to a problematic level. For better or worse, there are plenty of things the government does that people rely on. That means income must increase and that means higher taxes. May not need to be that drastic, if coupled with cuts, perhaps just a restoration to levels around a decade ago but an increase will be needed.

      If you are serious about deficit reduction, you'd be talking those things. That they aren't means they aren't.

      Now I should note, I'm completely ok with the view that we shouldn't be doing that right now. The economy is still weak, those things could cause it to tank, and economic growth creates solutions of its own to the deficit as revenues increase. It is valid to say "The government can borrow extremely cheaply right now and now isn't the time for cuts or more taxes. Leave it as is for another year, we look at it again when things are better off."

      However it really is one or the other. You either are ok with it for now, and need to not whine, or you are willing to make more broad cuts and increase taxes.

      This bullshit that is being pulled of "We want to get tough on it, but only tiny programs and NO TAX INCREASES EVAR!" is stupid and shows pretty clearly that deficit reduction is not what they are after.

    15. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Bios_Hakr · · Score: 1

      I agree that the partisan politics is really playing a number on things.

      Why not just pull up the budget for last year, cut everything by 10%, and call it a day? Everyone gets screwed equally and no one side can complain about their special interest getting screwed more than the other guys'.

      Just keep cutting everything by 10% every year until income matches expenditures. At that point, enact a law that says the Federal Government isn't allowed to spend any more money than it makes.

      Once we get to that point, then look at re-distribution of resources. Move some of the Military spending into NASA and re-tool the government contractors to build orbiters instead of airplanes.

      --
      I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
    16. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong. The Democrats are offering $33 billion in cuts. The Republicans want not only more cuts (they keep moving the goalposts), they want to attach culture-war riders.

    17. Re:Welcome to the real truth by McKing · · Score: 1

      My thoughts exactly. While there are no simple solutions for complex problems, the only way that we will get out of this is a combination of cuts and taxes. Get serious and roll back the tax cuts to pre-Bush levels as well as an across the board 10% reduction on ALL programs from the smallest to the largest (SS, Military, etc) and I might have some respect for the "TEA Partiers".

      Common sense. I wish it were more common.

      --
      If only "common" sense was actually that common...
    18. Re:Welcome to the real truth by NevarMore · · Score: 2

      So the current best plan on the table is to cut $60B from a budget with an annual deficit of $1400B? They've cut about 0.45% of the deficit.

      Good job boys. If we just give up our morning coffee, we'll get that credit card paid off in no time!

    19. Re:Welcome to the real truth by halivar · · Score: 1

      I believe neither side (house GOP vs WH) is interested in balancing the budget or reducing our debt. The tea party has no influence whatsoever over this process, as they're clamoring for $1.6 trillion in cuts, including the military, SS, and medicaid. Obviously that is not happening. Therefore, the current posturing by both sides is moot. "Arguing over the bar tab on the Titanic" is the best metaphor I've heard for it.

    20. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jnaujok · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're confusing the Discretionary Budget and Mandatory Spending. Continuing Resolutions can ONLY affect discretionary spending. Things like Social Security, medicare, medicaid, welfare, etc. are all part of the mandatory expenditures, and can't be cut in budget bills, only by passing new laws to revise their growth rate. Right now, the mandatory spending exceeds revenues, so whether the Tea Party wants to cut them or not (and they do) there's no way to touch them, and they would amount to a nearly $200B deficit *on their own*.

      So, even if they zeroed all discretionary budgets -- kind of like a total shutdown of all the things you're hearing demagogued at the moment -- they still would be running a deficit.

      America is broke, and it's getting worse. Bernanke is printing money like a crack addict with a credit card. Inflation is on pace to top 20% by next year. If you're not scared to death by the economics of the situation, then you're not paying attention. Go read what happened to the Wiemar Republic.

      $40 Billion, $70 Billion, none of it will make a difference. Call me when they're cutting Trillions from the budget.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    21. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Ryan's budget also wants to cut taxes on the top 1% down to what they were during the Hoover administration, which is as certain to boost our economy today as it was when Hoover did it in the thirties.

      Also he slipped "repeal obamacare!" into the budget so it can't get past the President's desk anyway. It's all just a bunch of posturing.

    22. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      Obama *saying* that the democrats agreed to $33B in cuts doesn't make it so. John Boehner seemed quite surprised on Tuesday to hear Obama said that since he hadn't even met with Boehner, and the House Minority Leader had only agreed to $4B in cuts in the actual meetings with Boehner.

      Ahh, the age of News by Sound-bite (and reporters who do zero fact checking.) Gotta love it.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    23. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real truth of the matter is, the Democrats while in power refused to pass a budget for this fiscal year. Worse they refused to even submit one to the floor all because they were afraid of the ramifications of doing so before the election. In other words, if they had submitted their budget they would have had to campaign with that large deficit number hanging over their heads.

      I note the new Congress has yet to pass a budget either. What's their excuse?

      Congress didn't but the House passed HR1 to fund the government through FY2011 on Februrary 19th.

      Or are you talking about the FY2012 budget, which isn't due until October 1?

    24. Re:Welcome to the real truth by geekoid · · Score: 1

      As someone who has been in several public labor unions meeting(both sides), there is always compromise. I've never seen on side Say we want to cut X, then the other side say will meet you at the 95% mark, and then the original party say well now we want to cut X+N.

      Sometime there will be an issue a Public Union want budge on, but that budge in other areas to make up for it.
      For years public unions have been taking reduct after reduction.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    25. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      According to the CPI, inflation was 1% this year and 2% last year.

      But I'm sure the sky will fall any minute now, Chicken Little.

    26. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Zingledot · · Score: 2

      IMO, people need to be pragmatic about the actual money trail of government spending, if they want to truly make meaningful cuts that don't hurt us. 1.9 million dollars to study ants (for example) sounds like a waste, but you're paying a lot of people in the process, and these people spend their money domestically on goods and services, creating demand for jobs.

      Money that very quickly finds it's way to the top of the financial ladder is where the waste is. This money is both horded, and much of it simply put into investment trading or goes overseas. They aren't hiring more people with this money or bringing jobs back to the US, because an influx of cash does not motivate you to suddenly run an inefficient business. But paying it out to shareholders makes your stock worth more.

      So, you just need to follow the trails of where money is very quickly going into the pool that simply circulates around the top. A lot of medicare/medicaid results in increase spending through freed up resources to do other things than pay for healthcare, but a lot of it also pretty much goes straight into the business side of healthcare - be it pharma or highly profitable private hospitals, etc. Medicare and Medicaid are very efficiently RUN programs - and even the running of it employs middle-income people, so that probably isn't a loss. You'd need to have true healthcare reform to really lower the costs of these programs in meaningful ways so that a smallwe percentage isn't just going straight to the top. There needs to be a great deal more transparency in the business of providing healthcare.

      But for the most part, I would say spending isn't our problem. We're in this situation because of the crowd pleasing policies of cutting taxes and keeping spending. Very nearly all of what the fed spends our money on is either meaninful or unavoidable, and not just wasted - which is why it's so hard to actually cut spending when you get out the microscope. We just need to PAY for 1st world lifestyle that we have, and accept that you can't have what we have in this country for free - it costs a LOT of money.

    27. Re:Welcome to the real truth by uberdilligaff · · Score: 2

      The actual, functional process that USED to be followed for many years is as follows. Assume for definiteness that we are planning for the FY2011 budget which covers the period from Oct 1, 2010 through Sept 30, 2011.

      By Law, the president must prepare and submit his proposed budget by integrating and prioritizing inputs from all the cabinet agencies. He starts this in Sept-Dec of 2009, and sends it to Congress in Jan 2010.

      Congress receives the President's budget proposal, then holds lots of hearings to review, adjust and agree on an overall budget. They pass the resulting budget resolution, sometime in late spring or summer of 2010. This establishes the levels of money that agencies can plan for. They are now 1/3 of the way done. No money can be spent yet.

      For discretionary programs (not entitlements) Congress then passes legislation authorizing expenditures for various programs up to the agreed budget limits, providing the legal basis for the Government to spend the Public treasure. They must then pass appropriations bills (usually about 20, separated out by Agency, such as DoD, Interior, etc.). The appropriation (which can be less than the authorization amount) actually gives the money to the Agency to spend. This is supposed to happen in Aug or Sept of 2010, so that the funds have been budgeted, authorized, and appropriated in advance of the start of the 2011 FY on Oct 1, 2010.

      I left out the parts about reconciliation between House and Senate versions, Presidential vetoes, and other gotchas, but the process is specified by Public Law passed in 1921, and has been mostly followed for most of our modern history. The continuing resolution is supposed to be an emergency measure only used for short periods when some emergency delays the completion of the process by the Oct 1 start date of a FY.

      The current mess we are suffering through now regarding FY 2011 spending is the result of the complete abdication by the Democrats in control at the time, of the fundamental requirements of our federal government expenditure system. This began in early 2010 and continued throughout the campaign season, out of Democratic fear of public scrutiny of their spending plans in advance of the Nov 2010 elections. Shameful.

      --
      Against stupidity, the Gods themselves contend in vain. --Friederich Schiller
    28. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real truth of the matter is that neither Party has the balls to address the real budget sink-holes, namely Defense and Entitlements.

      Trimming a few billion from around the edges is pointless when the USG Machine spends $10 billion PER DAY.

    29. Re:Welcome to the real truth by nosfucious · · Score: 1

      All politicians care about only 2 things:
      (1) getting whatever they can for themselves.
      (2) getting re-elected, to continue (1).

      Neither side really cares about the defecit. They are getting whatever they can for themselves and lasting until the next election. Then, they will pull whatever stunt they can in an effort to get re-elected. If they do, great.If not, the mess is SOMEBODY ELSES PROBLEM.

      No politician is above suspending democratic proesses, if they think they could get away with it.

      They key here (for politicians) to not NOT be around when the revolution happens.

      --
      Q:I was listening to a CD in Grip and it sounded horrible! What's up? A:Perhaps you are listening to country music
    30. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      According to the formula used before Carter revised it in 1980, Inflation last year was 11.6%. Beef prices are up over 20% year over year, gas is up at 50% a year, Milk up 11%, Chicken up 4%. But, yeah, keep believing the CPI, which is almost entirely staying low because of the massive decline in durable goods prices.

      Food and Fuel are going sky high, and you think there's no inflation. March to that drum little lemming. Ignore the cliff ahead of you.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    31. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      2) Increase taxes.

      Since WWII, Federal revenue has been 18-19% of GDP, no matter what the tax rates were. This suggests that increasing taxes will not significantly increase the amount of money that the federal government collects. If increasing taxes will not increase the percentage of GDP that the federal government collects in revenue (which historical figures suggest is indeed the case), I do not see how increasing taxes will help reduce the deficit.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    32. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      This isn't really about cuts though, if the Tea Partiers actually gave a shit about deficits(here's a hint, they don't), then they would be chopping programs like Social Security and the DoD.

      The Republican plan includes cuts for the DoD this year. The Republican plan for NEXT year, which was released on Tuesday, includes massive changes to make Medicaid cheaper. (Medicaid is "like" Social Security in that it's a huge entitlement program.) Their argument for not putting their changes to Medicaid in this year is because we're already 7 months into this year (because the Democrats didn't want to be debating why the budget deficit is so big in an election year, so they simply never passed a budget.) Republican-proposed changes to big entitlement programs ARE coming, and to suggest otherwise makes you uninformed.

    33. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      The House (controlled by Republicans) has passed a Continuing Resolution that would fund the government through the end of this fiscal year. The Senate (controlled by Democrats) has not even brought it up for vote. So far, the Democrats have failed to propose a bill that would form the basis of negotiation between the Republicans and Democrats. The Democrats have thrown out numbers of how much they are willing to cut, but they have not created a detailed proposal of where and in which programs they are willing to make cuts.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    34. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Hogwash, see link below. I also find it amusing that most people bleating about how BLS numbers are 'rigged' didn't start talking about changes in BLS methods until January 2009, and then they only talk about the changes that occurred under Democratic administrations... http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpiqa.htm#Question_5

    35. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      You conveniently left out that Obama tried to negotiate a budget and the Republicans decided to change their goal from $33 billion in cuts to $40 billion, just a few days ago.

      The House passed HR1 on Feb 19, 2011. HR1 would fund the Federal government for the rest of the curent fiscal year. HR1 cut federal spending from 2010 levels by $61 billion. I do not see how you get that the Republicans were at $33 billion in cuts until a few days ago, when they passed a bill in February that cuts $61 billion. Until someone actually presents a bill in Congress with another number, the starting point for negotiations is HR1. The Democrats have to date not presented an alternative to HR1.
      The fact of the matter is that we would not be in this position if the Democrats had passed a budget when they controlled both Houses of Congress and the White House last fall.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    36. Re:Welcome to the real truth by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      One other piece of this whole thing: The last time we had this happen, back in 1995, the shutdown backfired pretty heavily on the Republicans. The reason was simply that a lot of folks who thought they agreed with the Contract With America found out that they actually needed all those government bureaucrats they hated so much. The political dynamics were a bit different then, but there's no reason to think the results will be any different now than they were before.

      However, one could also argue that a shutdown was in fact the Tea Partiers goal. They believe that they really don't want much of a government, and they're about to get it. I'm sure their funders are overjoyed at the prospect of all those pesky government regulators and inspectors no longer in their hair. If they really believe in the smallest possible government, from their point of view they're in a no-lose situation: Either Obama agrees to their cuts, or a much bigger cut occurs.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    37. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      They haven't done any real work on the budget that is due October 2011.

      Actually, that is not true. Paul Ryan has presented a budget plan for 2012. Since Paul Ryan is the Chairman of the House Budget Committee that represents a significant start on the budget that is due in October 2011.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    38. Re:Welcome to the real truth by PickyH3D · · Score: 1

      ote, I'm an independent, I hate both parties, but really the Tea Party Republicans are being idiots here...and at least some of the non-Tea Party Republicans seem to agree with that sentiment.

      Sure doesn't sound like an independent. I am a fiscal conservative. I do not care about the Republicans, nor do I care about the Democrats. I care about the fiscal budget, keeping the government small, and keeping them out of my pocket.

      When this fiscal bloating began I disagreed from the beginning. The fact that some people in the government are trying to continue the status quo is both scary and downright stupid.

      It's called negotiating; what we instead have is "I'm taking my ball and going home!!"

      Furthermore, it's all really idiotic, because that $40 billion or whatever in cuts doesn't apply to this year's budget only. It applies to this year and the next several years! The actual cuts in any given year are relatively small, but they multiply them out over several years to make the numbers look bigger so we're all impressed by how Congress is cracking the whip. And it's moot, since Congress passes a new budget every year (roughly), because next year they could change what's funded/cut anyway; there's nothing forcing them to uphold the cuts/spending made in a previous year.

      If it's all so small, then there should be no fear there except on possible exceptions to the cuts that people might have. Raise those concerns. Blocking cuts for the sake of a number is stupid, especially considering the size of the deficits that the last Congress and the current President ran on top of the already existing deficit spending.

    39. Re:Welcome to the real truth by buzzn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Since WWII, Federal revenue has been 18-19% of GDP, no matter what the tax rates were. This suggests that increasing taxes will not significantly increase the amount of money that the federal government collects. If increasing taxes will not increase the percentage of GDP that the federal government collects in revenue (which historical figures suggest is indeed the case), I do not see how increasing taxes will help reduce the deficit.

      You are not being factual here. This shows federal revenue varying from 14.4% to 20.4% over that period. That's quite a bit different than 18-19%, which sounds flat. It was not flat.

      The highest personal marginal tax rates did vary significantly, from 94% in 1945 to 35% today, but this does not shed light on the subject as it's only one of a large number of contributing variables.

      Of particular note, the revenue as a % of gdp dropped from 20.6 in 2000 to 14.9 in 2009. That's quite a significant drop. Combine that with increased apparent spending, which went from 18% of gdp in 2000 to 24% of gdp in 2010 (primarily because of large drop in gdp in 2008-9 due to the recession), and you have a problem.

      Back to your point. You were implying that there is a causal relationship between federal receipts and GDP, but your data was faulty. If no such link exists, then increasing taxes will indeed reduce the deficit. In fact, this is strongly suggested by the opposite case in the last decade: we have been cutting taxes, and federal revenue has fallen. Therefore, increasing taxes (within reason) will increase federal revenues, and won't affect GDP.

      --
      Join the window installer's union, where prosperity is a brick throw away!
    40. Re:Welcome to the real truth by guruevi · · Score: 1

      That is until a couple of months before the next elections. Republicans rely heavily on the old folks and the rich to vote them into power. Cutting Medicare or equalizing taxes will not put them into power. They're both suckers for votes and that's why nothing ever gets done because they're afraid of pissing off the wrong people. Yes, we need to cut on Medicare/Medicaid and the DoD and equalize the taxes across all brackets but none of that is going to happen. Even if we just redistribute the current budget better we would be far better off - for every airport scanner the DHS puts in they can fund a police officer with a car, for every minute we spend in Iraq, Afghanistan and now Libya they can fund a bridge restoration or fill the potholes in a long stretch of road. However the media is not going to publish benefits of them filling in a pothole or that 10 more people get employed for a month.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    41. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I joined the government as a federal employee in August 2001. Every year since I joined, federal agencies have operated under a Continuing Resolution for the first few months of the fiscal year. In most cases, we managed to get our funding each year by the beginning of January. One year, I believe it stretched out to February. Bottom line is that it hasn't just been the Democrats that have abdicated their responsibility. Lack of leadership and responsibility has come from both sides of the aisle (since the Republicans were the ones in charge back in the beginning of the decade). Both sides play these games and both sides should be fired.

      Also, to pin the current crisis solely on Democrats is not entirely fair because even if they wanted to put forth various budget measures up for a vote, the Senate Republicans were threatening to filibuster. The Republicans had something to gain by letting the budget votes come up after the election. They knew they were going to gain seats so it made a lot of sense for them to defer the battle to a time when they knew they would have more power.

    42. Re:Welcome to the real truth by microbox · · Score: 1

      The real truth of the matter is, the Democrats...

      The real truth of the matter is that the Democrats are in the wrong. Holding the government to ransom in order to push through a social conservative agenda is just a clever way to get things done. You should be proud that the Republican party are so vigilant in sticking up to those power-made Democrat control freaks.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    43. Re:Welcome to the real truth by microbox · · Score: 1

      democrats offering up cuts.

      Which media have you been watching?

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    44. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      What a relief. Now I can walk into my local grocery store, and when they charge me $3 a pound for ground beef instead of $2 a pound like last year, I can just tell them it's all hogwash and only pay them $2. Because the BLS told me there's no inflation.

      Stop confusing government reports with reality.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    45. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      That is until a couple of months before the next elections. Republicans rely heavily on the old folks and the rich to vote them into power. Cutting Medicare or equalizing taxes will not put them into power. They're both suckers for votes and that's why nothing ever gets done because they're afraid of pissing off the wrong people. Yes, we need to cut on Medicare/Medicaid and the DoD and equalize the taxes across all brackets but none of that is going to happen. Even if we just redistribute the current budget better we would be far better off - for every airport scanner the DHS puts in they can fund a police officer with a car, for every minute we spend in Iraq, Afghanistan and now Libya they can fund a bridge restoration or fill the potholes in a long stretch of road. However the media is not going to publish benefits of them filling in a pothole or that 10 more people get employed for a month.

      Hang on, here. GP was arguing that the Tea Party was being dishonest in their "caring about deficits" because the things they're cutting in their budget proposal aren't where most of the deficit comes from. I replied with how (and why) their proposal for NEXT year attacks that part of the deficit.

      You seem to be arguing that the Tea Party is wrong to care about deficits. That's a different argument. Having too much of a deficit is bad because if the government owes too much money, eventually they won't be able to borrow money and they'll have two choices. Either they can print more and more money, reducing the value of each dollar and making it harder to buy things, or they can just decide not to pay their debts and go bankrupt. Either option would be catastrophic (although the first will take longer to become a crisis than the second.) Ultimately, spending has to be cut.

      I'd be a big fan of "equalizing taxes." I make a comparatively small amount of money for the value of the work that I do. If we had more clients, my boss would be able to pay me more money. Or maybe someone else would see how much money we're making, and open up shop in the same industry, and I'd jump ship to a better job with them. If people who needed my company's services had more money, maybe they'd hire my company. If the rich paid taxes at the same (low) rate that I do, they'd be able to invest more in my company's potential clients, which would make them more likely to hire my company. (Over the course of the whole economy, the difference in taxes collected would be made up by me (and everyone else with a better paying job than they have now) paying the same percentage of more money. So the government still gets its cut.)

      The problem is that you'll never get a Fair or Flat Tax style proposal past Congress because the Democrats wouldn't stand for it. The same Democrats who are causing the government shutdown.

    46. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democrats aren't offering up anything for cuts, and are just trying to continue overspending at their current levels. If the media's wrong, I'm open to correction.

      If the TV's on, you're listening to the wrong media.

      "Overspending" is not the problem*. Other than the one-time stimulus plan, Obama hasn't added any spending to speak of. The problem is the gigantic tax cuts Bush gave to the wealthy. If it weren't for those tax cuts the government would be able to collect enough money to pay the bills, at least they will when the economy gets rolling again.

      *Note that "overspending" is not the same thing as "government waste". Having worked for several large organizations I can tell you that bureaucracies are the cause of waste. It just comes with the territory. Too many layers to let anyone see the whole picture.

    47. Re:Welcome to the real truth by guruevi · · Score: 1

      I'm not arguing for or against either the Tea Party (Republicans) or Democrats' solutions. They're both in the same business (that of getting votes) and neither of them will change anything because it will cost them those precious votes. That's the problem with a 2 party system - 40% of the population will vote for one or the other guy regardless and they're fighting over the remaining 20% with razor-thin margins so anything unpopular will not pass.

      If your argument makes economical sense (I'm not an economist - cut taxes so people can invest their tax money?), why don't we just cut taxes all together? Have a federal sales tax (tax all transactions equally - if you spend more, you pay more taxes) then. Currently the rich pay LESS taxes because they're rich and the poor pay comparatively more.

      The problem is that even though the government has comparatively more income, they have an even greater deficit. There is currently no solution to it because the US Government is already too far in. Even if you cut ALL of Medicare and the DoD they would still be running a deficit just because of the interest rates. The Federal Government needs to shut down and remain shut down and transfer all their powers and budget (defense, healthcare etc.) to the states, the only power the federal government should have is to see that the states follow the constitution (the judiciary branch). There is simply too much government to go around and not enough government close to the people.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    48. Re:Welcome to the real truth by labnet · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. I don't think you get it.

      No fiat money system has ever lasted forever, especially when combined with fractional reserve banking. This is because the debt becomes exponential compared to physical goods (see chrismartenson.com and zerohedge, also cavaliers of credit by steve keen)
      The privately owned Fed is currently printing Trillions of dollars of money Wiemar style (QE2)(yes it still being auctioned, but it is buy back merry go round).
      This effectively confiscating the savings of your retirees through deflation of the value of your dollar.
      I'm afraid the USA (and much of the rest of the world) is currently playing out a fiat money end game.

      --
      46137
    49. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shivetya is a prime example why Americans need more courses in basic civics in high school. We're all ears on how this is President Obama's fault, since you've stated he's getting a free pass. You know what they call a President who gets all the responsibility, money, and power? Kim Jong-Il.

      Your proposal that this is somehow the Democrat's fault is exactly the same as the "It's Bush's fault even though Obama is in" crowd. Republicans have been in charge of the House for months and have done practically squat. Both of the major parties are at fault here, and the fanatics aren't helping. They're using government employees as pawns; the latest proposal today will pay the military for the rest of the year (so we don't have 1.2m armed, unpaid, and pissed people) in exchange for concessions that benefit one party over the other entirely. But the rest of the government only gets one week of pay until the *real* budget is passed. And it's a "surprise" that Obama said he'll veto that garbage.

      Ignore the triplespeak for a moment and look at the basic, unbiased facts.

    50. Re:Welcome to the real truth by PTBarnum · · Score: 1

      No gold-based system has ever lasted forever, either.

      Inflation and deflation can still happen in gold-based systems.

    51. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, the CPI is only up 1% this year... after only 2 months of data:

      CPI-W 12/2010 = 215.262, 02/2011 = 217.535, % increase = 1.05%.

      If it continues at that pace we'll be somewhere north of 6% by the end of 2011, but given the massive increase in commodity prices over the past couple months it could be even uglier.

    52. Re:Welcome to the real truth by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      If you cared to overlay that with recession bars, guess what periods the tax revenue is the lowest! Even as a percentage of GDP, due to the disproportionation of unemployment and income tax revenue to spending, how people save money, and fall into debt before and pay it off during recessions.

    53. Re:Welcome to the real truth by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Gold has never collapsed on itself like fiat monies. Yes gold is somewhat inflationary, but it actually requires effort to mine new gold, and it's impossible to have hyperinflation even if a government wanted that, short of ending such a standard. Gold has actually lasted hundreds to thousands of years. What fiat money system has ever lasted more than fifty?

      Gold isn't superior because it's just gold, you could substitute any system whose credit markets can't be manipulated by banking cartels (which is exactly what the Federal Reserve was setup to do prior to the Great Depression, and numerous banking laws, bankers, and central banks before that).

    54. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      I'm not arguing for or against either the Tea Party (Republicans) or Democrats' solutions.

      My mistake. I took what you wrote initially as an attack on my point, the fact that the Tea Party is standing up for its anti-deficit ideology. The reason I proposed a FairTax to you is because I thought you were a liberal.

      If your argument makes economical sense (I'm not an economist - cut taxes so people can invest their tax money?), why don't we just cut taxes all together? Have a federal sales tax (tax all transactions equally - if you spend more, you pay more taxes) then. Currently the rich pay LESS taxes because they're rich and the poor pay comparatively more.

      Again, I typed that thinking you were a liberal attacking conservative ideals. The measures I laid out have been proposed as the Fair Tax or the Flat Tax. The key idea is that everyone pays the same percentage of their income as Taxes. I'm pulling numbers out of my ass here, but if I were to make $40,000 dollars a year and my boss made $80,000, and the tax rate for that year was 20%, I'd owe $8000 in income taxes and my boss would owe $16,000. This is one way of ensuring that the tax brackets would be "equalized;" my boss and I would pay the same percentage of our incomes. Under the current system he would have to pay a higher percentage of his income in taxes, which amounts to MORE than double what I pay. A national sales tax would be worse because it would be too easy to cheat and because poor people would wind up paying a GREATER percentage of their income as taxes, unlike under the current scheme where the rich pay the highest percent. (Under a Fair/Flat tax, everyone would pay the same percent.) But under the current scheme and a Fair/Flat system, the rich would pay the highest amount of dollars.

      The problem is that even though the government has comparatively more income, they have an even greater deficit. There is currently no solution to it because the US Government is already too far in. Even if you cut ALL of Medicare and the DoD they would still be running a deficit just because of the interest rates.

      But each year the deficit would get less and less until it's manageable. And the added financial stability that will come with people realizing that the government isn't going to collapse and suddenly you've got an economic boom. This means, among other things, that the government collects more dollars in taxes, which can be spent on paying off debt or whatever else we need.

      The Federal Government needs to shut down and remain shut down and transfer all their powers and budget (defense, healthcare etc.) to the states, the only power the federal government should have is to see that the states follow the constitution (the judiciary branch). There is simply too much government to go around and not enough government close to the people.

      I agree that we should shrink government. No doubt. But the states CAN NOT effectively defend the country. Joint operations between two branches of the military have historically been a pain in the ass. Now multiply the four services by the fifty states. We wouldn't be able to get any defending done. (And to be honest, as much as I have a healthy distrust for the Federal government, have you SEEN state government?) There are a few things that the Federal Government, and ONLY the Federal Government, can handle. That's why the Founding Fathers put the responsibility to raise a standing army and navy squarely on the shoulders of the Feds.

      Also, there's no Constitutional residency requirement for Federal Judges. If judges in your fantasy world ensure that anyone follows the Constitution, maybe we should sweet talk them into coming over to our side of reality.

    55. Re:Welcome to the real truth by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      When you exclude retirement and health care (independently funded outside the general income tax), the military, and the interest on the debt, which are considered uncuttable, you are left with everything else. The sum of all federal education, "protective services" (police and fire subsidies, and the federal court system), transportation, government admin (all federal employees and contractors and the buildings and such, other than military), welfare, and everything else (including things like research funding and such) is *less* than the deficit.

      If you eliminate everything other than the military and the interest on the debt (assuming if you eliminate Social Security and Medicare, that you'll eliminate the taxes collected for those programs as well), the budget will still not balance. We get spats about Planned Parenthood giving out condoms with federal funds (since everyone knows, they currently don't perform any abortion related services with federal funds, despite the propaganda). Or cuts to "alternative energy" while fully funding oil company subsidies and corn subsidies. When just the military plus debt interest exceeds federal income tax receipts. There's a fundamental issue that no one wants to talk about. The country was bankrupted in the 1980s by Reagan overspending to win the Cold War. And we became so addicted to deficit spending that we'll happily run the country into the ground to not have to demonstrate responsibility. And no, I'm not trying to blame Republicans or Democrats. I'm just pointing to the time in history when the debt tripled under one administration, ending the trend of lowering the debt (at least as a portion of GDP, if not in $$) which, aside from a little blip under Clinton, has been steadily getting worse ever since (and some say the only reason Clinton did well is because of the economy and not because of anything he did).

      There are lots of "simple" fixes. However, they are impossible. All we need to do is listen to one smart dead Republican General. He warned us about the military industrial complex. And he was right. We always have, and will always find, excuses to expend large amounts of money on "defense" that has nothing to do with defending the US. So as far as I can tell, there is nothing that will prevent a complete and total failure of the US economy.

    56. Re:Welcome to the real truth by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      If you're not scared to death by the economics of the situation, then you're not paying attention.

      I'm a native-born American (not Native American). So many generations back that I've never met a relative that wasn't born in the US. I have no known relatives outside the US. And three years ago I applied for permanent residency for another country, moving to a location where I know no one there - friends or relatives. Why? Because sitting in the US whining about its imminent demise seemed a little futile.

      I could fix the problem. It's easy.

      Step 1: Abolish the standing army.
      Step 2: default on all loans.
      Step 3: eliminate all corporate welfare.
      Step 4: convert welfare to a workhouse-type solution.
      Step 5: single payer health care with private option (which will reduce the cost of health care to the government while greatly improving services)
      Step 6: eliminate the War on Drugs, freeing everyone in prison on a non-violent drug charge, and full pardons for anyone who has a similar history. Legalize and tax, and cut enforcement appropriately.

      It's not hard. It's very simple. But the amount of money paid to fund the War on Drugs, the amount paid to subsidize corn, oil, and other corporate welfare lobbyists, the military industrial complex which would likely assassinate anyone contemplating the plan with the power to actually implement it, the massive health care lobby, and such would make sure that plan could never happen. And no politician acts in the best interests of the country, just their own. So we get the government we deserve. So I just moved somewhere where the problems are less, with the understanding that they'll get worse, but not for a while., hopefully.

    57. Re:Welcome to the real truth by BigPhatPhuck · · Score: 1

      My kingdom for a mod point!

    58. Re:Welcome to the real truth by repapetilto · · Score: 1

      Why are you still buying meat?

    59. Re:Welcome to the real truth by repapetilto · · Score: 1

      Do you think it makes sense for someone to have billions of dollars in personal wealth? I mean really, that guy is just that good at contributing to society? There IS something wrong with that, no one individual has contributed that much relative to the average person. At the same time using resources to support financially and emotionally draining troublemakers that cant get a job for the rest of their lives is wrong. (I used to think different but changed due to personal experience) . Give them an opportunity and if they fuck it up, give them one more some number of years later if their able to still function, then never again. Creating a system that does neither but still runs consistently is difficult, but should be what we strive for. I'm not saying I have the exact answer, but tax the super rich and stop giving so much to deadbeats is a start.

    60. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      Do you think it makes sense for someone to have billions of dollars in personal wealth?

      People can accumulate wealth. Given that there's no limit to the currency supply (due to QE2, there really isn't), then yes, it's not logically unreasonable for someone to have ANY arbitrary amount of money...

      Hang on, you're one of those, aren't you? You meant "Do you think people should be allowed to have billions of dollars in personal wealth." In that case, the answer is yes, the government shouldn't set an arbitrary limit on wages for anyone they don't directly employ. (My employer limits my salary to what they can and are willing to pay. The government should have the same relationship with its employees. Note that for large swaths of the Federal workforce, they do.)

      I mean really, that guy is just that good at contributing to society? There IS something wrong with that, no one individual has contributed that much relative to the average person.

      That's not what wealth measures. Wealth measures how much money you have. But in terms of the rich contributing to society, Bill Gates is the richest guy in the country, so let's use him as an example. He founded Microsoft, which, when it went public 20 years ago, made more than 12,000 of its employees millionaires (and 4, including Gates) billionaires. It's made more people rich since then. I can't find how many people they employ at a quick glance, but it's a lot more than that. Not to mention everyone that gets paid to work on stuff FOR (or against) MS products. Would Bungee be paying Halo developers today if not for its success on Xbox? Would Red Hat have nearly as many customers if Windows didn't show medium to small businesses that they needed computers? I'd say by causing all those people to be employed, Bill Gates has done a lot with his wealth, and that's even before his massive charitable contributions. Take your communist nonsense elsewhere.

    61. Re:Welcome to the real truth by Duradin · · Score: 1

      If he doesn't eat his meat how can he have his pudding?

    62. Re:Welcome to the real truth by urusan · · Score: 1

      While you are technically correct, looking at the data you linked to there are only 8 years over that 65 year time period where it differed from a 17%-20% average: 1949-1951, 1959, 2003-2004, and 2009-2010. If you increase the range to 16%-20% then it falls to a mere 4 years, all of which were in the 14% range: 1949-1950 and 2009-2010. Also, these years tend to be clustered together, which probably indicates they were caused by short term events.

      It seems to me that these anomalous years don't shoot down the basic idea that Federal revenue has stayed close to 17%-19% of GDP regardless of tax rates, especially considering that none of these years are in the 1960-2000 range, which saw several huge tax changes and some severe economic events like the 1970's energy crisis. Even in the 2000's, more than half of the decade was in that range.

      This seems to indicate that this is a very stable phenomena, regardless of the number of contributing factors. In fact, you can more strongly say that "Since WWII, Federal revenue has been 17%-20% of GDP regardless of essentially all factors, including tax rates" with a reasonable degree of accuracy.

      Also, to say that over the 2000's it dropped from 20.6% to 14.9% is somewhat disingenuous, because it ignores the intermediate data, the rarity of 20% years, and the future predictions. It's more accurate to say that the 2000's started from an abnormally high 20.6% (probably in the wake of the dotcom bubble), slowly dipped to a low of 16.1% by 2004 (perhaps due to 9/11, the wars, and the Bush tax cuts), which was followed by a strong 17%-18% for four years, that was then followed by a crash to 14.9% in 2009 and 2010...which is expected to turn around by 2012 or 2013.

    63. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      The republicans have been in control of the house for quite a while now, and so far we've seen nothing but abortion law proposals and other useless wastes of time that have no chance of ever passing the senate.

      They've done nothing to help jobs in their time in congress, and this budget issue has nothing to do with differences of opinion between the democrats and republicans, but everything to do with the tea party base cheering "shut it down, shut it down" anytime the subject comes up.

      The republicans want the government shutdown to maintain their tea party inspired "no compromise" image. Just like every single bill that has passed the house so far (for example, take this very professionally titled bill "Repealing the Job Killing Health Care Law Act"), this is only for show.

      I'm equally critical of the democrats when they deserve it, but this particular bunch of republicans isn't even trying to pretend they are doing anything beneficial for the country. And unless you believe that the non-partisan congressional budget office is wrong or biased, the republican proposed budget is going to cause job loss and hurt the country. I honestly can't understand, even from a conservative ideological based point of view, how anyone can take this particular set of republican congressmen/women seriously.

    64. Re:Welcome to the real truth by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Leaving aside all the other issues with the fabricated 'budget crisis', when I start looking at the numbers, I'm even further baffled/angry.

      They are squabbling over 33-40 billion dollars, and the deficit is over a trillion.....

      I haven't heard one single mainstream news source call anyone out on this absurdity. The republicans want to cut some social programs, home heating oil help, early education, family planning, basically anything that helps the poor or elderly, but the cuts are a drop in the budget bucket.

      To me, it is pretty obvious that this is just all show, at the expense of the American public again. The tea party side of the Republicans just wants a shut down for ideological reasons, reality be damned. http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/04/mike-pence-shut-er-down-video.php

  10. Either way.... by guisar · · Score: 1

    Whether or not it shuts down I'm sure the Active Duty military and civilian employees will be paid. As I recall that's the way it worked the last time.

    1. Re:Either way.... by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Whether or not it shuts down I'm sure the Active Duty military and civilian employees will be paid. As I recall that's the way it worked the last time.

      A lot of the articles I've read have said that even military personnel may have a problem getting their paychecks. I think that pretty much every federal employee is at risk of not getting paid if the government shuts down. Oh, except for the politicians of course. They're making sure they still get paid, while the people who actually try to make this country better might not.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    2. Re:Either way.... by hubie · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is true only if Congress agrees to make it so after the fact. It would be political suicide to not pay active duty. Civilian employees might be a toss up depending upon whether they get lumped into the same bill as the active duty.

    3. Re:Either way.... by ICLKennyG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As the budget situation now is significantly worse than 15 years ago, it seems unlikely that Civilian employees will be made whole after the fact. I love the republicans talking about 'where are the jobs' and then deciding to furlough close to 4 times the number of workers that were added in the latest jobs report over the sum of ~$7B. If the government is closed for a week, that's less than the interest on the National Debt.

      The Active Duty military people will be forced to remain, even those that fulfill office type jobs, and will be unpaid until a resolution comes.

      This is worse than rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. This is arguing deck chair arrangement theory.

    4. Re:Either way.... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It would certainly be political suicide, unless carefully phrased(you can do a lot of crazy stuff to the troops in the name of supporting them, if your spin-fu is good); but, arguably, not paying the civilians might actually present more of a practical problem.

      The more heavily active-duty a soldier is, the greater the degree, and likelihood, that some or all of his basic logistical necessities(food, housing, some degree of medical care) will be being taken care of by Uncle Sam. They might not like not being paid; but they won't be starving in the street(and, because it's the military, just leaving qualifies as desertion...)

      Civilian employees, by contrast, with a few possible exceptions in isolated bases or research facilities or the like, are generally only seeing wages+benefits, and are responsible for turning those into food, housing, etc. on the local market. You won't have to go too far down the pay grade before you start running into civilian employees who are not too many weeks away from being unable to make minor little payments like 'rent' and 'groceries'. Quitting wouldn't necessarily be a good career move; but it isn't something their employer can do anything about, and they won't have much of a choice about at least moonlighting elsewhere, if not quitting entirely and job-hunting, if they can't keep food on the table.

    5. Re:Either way.... by chemicaldave · · Score: 1

      Only essential services will continue working. That means emergency workers, military, most defense jobs. The post office will remain operational as they are technically an independent agency. Parks, and museums close. So not all civilian employees will be paid.

    6. Re:Either way.... by afidel · · Score: 1

      Actually Gates just said any shutdown will mean half the pay will be lost on the next paycheck and a delay of longer than a few days will mean no paycheck. They will most likely be paid with a makeup check at some point (I believe they always have) but for people living paycheck to paycheck (basically everyone below an E5 and most enlisted people) it will be a significant impact.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    7. Re:Either way.... by jank1887 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Officially, civilians don't get paid. Not sure about the military. Last time, when they finally passed the resolution they opted to retroactively restore pay for those days (even though no work got done) as a good faith measure. they also realize what a paltry sum federal employee wages are when compared to the actual debt total, so it was a relatively cheap form of goodwill from the guys that just finished pissing off most of the country.

    8. Re:Either way.... by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      remember the size of the group referred to as 'defense jobs'. lots of civilians in the 'defense jobs' category aren't necessarily going to find themselves considered essential this time around.

    9. Re:Either way.... by mrxak · · Score: 2

      Just be careful when you're returning copper for cash that you don't accidentally cut Armenia's fiber internet line.

    10. Re:Either way.... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0

      If your employer is not paying, what exactly is forcing you to do any work at all for him ?

      This seems a classic case of ENAC (you're allowed to stop fulfilling your part of a contract without any consequences, and without destroying the contract, if the opposing party neglects their obligations to you). So why wouldn't government offices stay empty, with their employees
      1) hanging on to their job, their position
      2) actually working elsewhere until their next paycheck

      I *believe* (but IANAL) this even means that if the government resumes, the employees that didn't turn up for work are owed a paycheck for the time they did not work. Why ? Because they didn't work through no fault of their own, they were forced in that position by their employer. They might even be owed an amount of money on top of their normal wages because it's the government that broke the contract, not the employee, at the very least intrest for the relevant period.

    11. Re:Either way.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      actually no..and yes.

      Active duty will not be paid. If ti's a week, they will get half a paycheck, if the shut down is longer, then no pay. When it restarts, they will get back pay.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    12. Re:Either way.... by chemicaldave · · Score: 1

      Right. I should have been more specific. On one extreme, civilians working in intelligence will surely keep working, while the CIA cleaning ladies probably won't be coming into work.

    13. Re:Either way.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      just leaving qualifies as desertion

      I wonder how that would get ruled if the person wasn't getting paid.
      What happens when the non military people stop getting paid for logistics and food supply?

      This underscores the problem with using civilian contractor for front line supplies and services.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:Either way.... by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      You do realize that the budget being argued over IS the FY2011 budget. Of course one might question the wisdom of arguing the budget of the current year when we're already 4 months in but eh.

      Blame exists on both sides, not just the Democrats or Republicans.

    15. Re:Either way.... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      "Federal shutdown" is much more effective as a threat, than its actual consequences.

      If the federal government shuts down, it inconveniences a lot of people. There might even be some functionaries who experience some genuine hardship because of it.

      But if your job is important (meaning that people die if you don't show up), it's really irrelevant whether you get paid (on time or at all) and even less important that the organization you work for is "functioning" politically.

      What most people notice when these federal shutdowns happen is that the impact is not nearly as dire as the threats made it out to be. They notice life going on, since "nonessential" federal agencies tend to be seen as more of a nuisance than a necessity, and because most actual government that affects an individual is at a more local level anyway.

      I definitely don't think Rep. Boehner expected President Obama to call his bluff.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    16. Re:Either way.... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      They are probably contractors, not regular employees. They will get paid...

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    17. Re:Either way.... by karnal · · Score: 1

      We're more than 4 months in; from what I saw on the news yesterday, the budget runs from October to October....

      --
      Karnal
    18. Re:Either way.... by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      Ah yes. So that means that it makes even less sense that with 5 months left in the Fiscal Year, we're still arguing about the current year's budget...

    19. Re:Either way.... by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      just leaving qualifies as desertion

      Slavery is illegal. There have been a number of lawsuits where people have tried to enter voluntary slavery schemes, and every one was found illegal. Them not paying you but requiring you to be there is slavery (well, actually indentured servitude, which is legally identical at this point). Additionally, you sign a contract to enlist. That contract indicates that you'll get paid for your service. Once they don't pay you, they have breached the contract. The contract may require grievances within the contract be handled by the UCMJ, but legal precedent has indicated that a contract requiring one type of remedy only for violating the contract is effectively invalid if one side determines that the remedy is unfair.

      This underscores the problem with using civilian contractor for front line supplies and services.

      What, that when you violate your contract with active duty personnel, they will still work for free under penalty of firing squad (or whatever the penalty is for desertion in a time of war), but the civilians won't work for free because you can't shoot them? How is that a problem? If you can't afford to pay for them, perhaps you should evaluate policy of making war while bankrupt. There's nothing wrong with paying civilians for critical services. They are no less reliable than military (and in many cases are ex-military). There's a problem with slavery, whether you are civilian or military.

    20. Re:Either way.... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      This has happened almost every year (if not every year) for a very long time. Probably longer than you've been alive. But you only complain when you can blame it on the Democrats and not when the Republicans do it? Why? Apparently you aren't interested in what the problem is and how to fix it, but instead you've decided to pick one horse you don't like and blame them, despite the fact they are the same as the other one.

      Oh, and the "give-aways" are a tiny portion of the budget. The interest on the debt is much larger than the sum of all "give-aways" (assuming you ignore Social Security, which, despite all the horror stories, is still fully funded, on paper at least, making it not a give-away, but instead an insurance program).

    21. Re:Either way.... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      I'm certainly not up on US military case law, and won't pretend to be; but my suspicion(based on the number of historical situations where an army finds itself cut off/out of supply/attached to a tottering government/etc/etc.) would be that the rules(which tend to be made pragmatically to suit those making them) would be that logistical disruptions believed to be temporary would not be considered sufficient grounds to dissolve the obligations of the troops. In practice, of course, if the situation is bad enough, nobody can enforce the rules, so everybody just says 'the hell with it' and leaves; but that isn't supposed to happen.

      It would be very interesting to see what would happen to somebody who did just leave, and then litigated the matter; but I suspect that as long as the existing logistical services, and some sort of IOUs, continue to be distributed, leaving will be Frowned Upon.

    22. Re:Either way.... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      Given that the military has successfully gotten away with "stop loss"-ing a fair number of its people, sometimes repeatedly, I get the sense that they enjoy somewhat looser restrictions than do civilian contract-makers. How loose, I don't know.

  11. Re:I only wish... by MichaelSmith · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If the FAA is shut down then twitter could be used to transmit ICAO messages (FPL, CHG, APR, etc) and mobile pbone use on aircraft could be made compulsory.

  12. Not Midnight Friday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They mean at the end of the day Friday which is midnight Saturday. Midnight is the first moment of a new day. That is why it it 12:00 *am* or *00:00* hours.

    1. Re:Not Midnight Friday by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      They mean at the end of the day Friday which is midnight Saturday. Midnight is the first moment of a new day. That is why it it 12:00 *am* or *00:00* hours.

      I'm sure you can cite an official standard telling to which day midnight belongs?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:Not Midnight Friday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He can't, but I can. ISO 8601 states that midnight may be used either way: in this case, the shutdown begins at "2011-04-08T24:00-04" or at "2011-04-09T00:00-04" (assuming that they mean DC's time zone).

      These are two different representations of the same moment in time.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601

    3. Re:Not Midnight Friday by mcornelius · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. The shutdown would begin at 2011-04-09T00:01-04. (The federal government reckons midnight always as the last minute of the preceding day, not the first minute of the following day.)

  13. Re:I only wish... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well your plan helps planes, which helps airports, which helps the government's Pedophile Brigade molest people at security checkpoints. So yeah, your work is oppressive.

  14. Re:I only wish... by halivar · · Score: 1

    Isn't most software for the government written by contractors? As such, isn't that money already allocated? I would expect you would continue to get paid. Now, the air traffic controllers, on the other hand...

  15. Re:I only wish... by Tokolosh · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yes, my work on automation software flight plan management for the FAA is very oppressive to you. Douchebag.

    This function could just as well be performed by the private sector, more efficiently, and by people who do not regard their paymasters as douchebags. Welcome to the real world.

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
  16. Re:I only wish... by Nidi62 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here's a handy little tip for you. As long as you are able to complain about being oppressed by a government in a public forum, you aren't.

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  17. Re:I only wish... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 2

    Isn't most software for the government written by contractors? As such, isn't that money already allocated? I would expect you would continue to get paid. Now, the air traffic controllers, on the other hand...

    It depends on the project. The particular project I work on is a mixed team of contractors and feds, and I happen to be a fed. Regardless, the contractors are being furloughed along with the feds, since the contracting companies won't be able to bill the government during the shutdown. And no, I will not be getting paid unless Congress decides to back-pay. And with the Republicans in power, I doubt that's going to happen.

  18. Shutdown my ass by darjen · · Score: 0

    If there's a shutdown, why are we all still be paying taxes? It's kind of laughable how there are so many services deemed "essential" that will continue to be working. I wonder if people will even notice this shutdown. Somehow I really doubt this will cause the end of the world.

    1. Re:Shutdown my ass by Raven_Stark · · Score: 0

      Do you at least get paid for being a Koch sucker or are you just in it for the humiliation and smegma?

      --
      http://www.marxist.com/
    2. Re:Shutdown my ass by darjen · · Score: 1

      Nice website, bro.

      Do your Government masters pay you to make snide comments? Or are you the one who is really employed by them, trying out a bit of reverse psychology? I await your insightful response.

    3. Re:Shutdown my ass by timeOday · · Score: 1

      I true, full shutdown would cause rioting in the streets within days. Granted, it would mostly be senior citizens, but they're mean when they're hungry!

  19. What is the news here again? by hubie · · Score: 1

    Given that a shutdown means that work deemed non-essential will not go on, I'm struggling to see how a story about how web sites delivering non-essential services won't be updated is a headline of note.

    1. Re:What is the news here again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, we send non-essential workers home and we don't pay them? This sounds like a wonderful idea. This should be the permanent state of government.

    2. Re:What is the news here again? by faedle · · Score: 1

      How about we start with the 112th Congress?

    3. Re:What is the news here again? by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      For some, it just shines a light on the fact that the federal government provides a lot of non-essential services. Some consider this to be the central problem with government.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    4. Re:What is the news here again? by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      For some, it just shines a light on the fact that the federal government provides a lot of non-essential services. Some consider this to be the central problem with government.

      It's all in what you consider essential. For instance, projects related to developing a GPS infrastructure for flight plans to replace the old navaid/fix system will streamline the airline industry, increase safety, and reduce costs. Most of these workers are considered "non-essential" (myself included) because they do not have a direct *immediate* impact on public safety or property.

    5. Re:What is the news here again? by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1

      Yup! Seems like an excellent project with lots of value that we shouldn't take on until we can afford it. Of course we appreciate what you do and we want to fund it, but we shouldn't take out another loan when we're already in deficit and carrying too much debt.

    6. Re:What is the news here again? by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      Yup! Seems like an excellent project with lots of value that we shouldn't take on until we can afford it. Of course we appreciate what you do and we want to fund it, but we shouldn't take out another loan when we're already in deficit and carrying too much debt.

      The problem is that a a tax break on the wealthiest 2% of Americans added $900,000,000,000 to our tab. Maybe we should repeal that, and then we'll have hit the Republic target for cuts 15 times over.

  20. Re:I only wish... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, all airspace should have multiple air traffic control systems that airplanes can choose between in real time, rather than this statist, authoritarian "Federal Aviation Administration". That sounds like a recipe for efficiency and success!

  21. Re:I only wish... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    it was permanent. This shutdown only brings a temporary respite to the oppression the American people suffer at the hands of it's own government.

    Oh, yes, the American people are so oppressed. Maybe you should go live in the Middle East, or China, or Nigeria or any other place that the people really are oppressed. The sad thing is that the American people are so narcissistic that they think they are oppressed when they have more freedom and autonomy than most anywhere else on the planet.

  22. not too late to avoid becoming unproven/dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there's always hope, in this case hope, & the truth, are being fatally challenged by fear & deception, so even fear of getting hurt/killed doesn't really help. survival is instinctive. fear is a manufactured & contagious WMD (body, mind & spirit).

  23. Re:I only wish... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

    Yes, my work on automation software flight plan management for the FAA is very oppressive to you. Douchebag.

    This function could just as well be performed by the private sector, more efficiently, and by people who do not regard their paymasters as douchebags. Welcome to the real world.

    No, not really. Basically there are two ways this goes down in government:
    1.) Pay Oracle, Boeing, Lockheed, etc. to build it for millions and millions of dollars, then millions more to maintain the godawful piece of VB garbage, or
    2.) Retain control of the project with competent leaders, do it right, and save money both on the initial product, as well as on the support that's likely to last decades

    Believe it or not, feds are generally the people who used to work in the private sector on the contract side, but were deemed too important to lose and thus offered a federal position.

    Also, I do not regard my paymaster (my boss) as a douchebag. I regard you specifically as a douchebag.

  24. Can i get an explanation...? by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

    I want to know, did something happen that the government wants to shut down all internet website.....is this like a getting ready for something type move....like some reason why they do not want to be stuck with websites all together....???
    If anyone has links or info on why this would be their move...please share.

  25. Re:I only wish... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 4, Funny

    BigWingzDaddy: I'm in ur airspace, landing on ur runways (JFK #7) #jfk

    TehFlyinator: Hai guise you know what my altitude is in feet? IT'S OVER NINE THOUSAAAND! #lolz

    CommercialCeilingCat: Now taking off my zig (JFK #2) #jfk

    LearJetGangsta: Sorry I nearly hit u CCC, was holding the damn iPhone wrong #nearcollision #holdingitwrong

    CommercialCeilingCat: np

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  26. Re:I only wish... by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

    You think your DMV of the sky is so great only because you are not capable of imagining an alternative.

    As a taxpayer, I am paying you. I am your boss. Call me a douchebag if you wish.

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
  27. Approved Budgets? by jimmerz28 · · Score: 1

    From TFA:

    "Herndon, Va.-based Xceedium counts numerous federal agencies among its customers, and Ammon said, 'We have customers that are prohibited from purchasing anything until they get an approved budget.'"

    What a horrible thing to have happen! Getting an approved budget before you purchase something? What is our government putting its poor employees through!

    1. Re:Approved Budgets? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poor, poor, pitiful Democrats. Can't figure out how to buy votes without a budget anymore, can they?

  28. IRS is NOT a govt. agency!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The IRS is a private company that collects taxes for the US govt. It is just like the Federal Reserve, which is a private company that prints money for the US govt. They are no more federal than Federal Express, even though the red, white & blue trucks fool alot of people. This article implies (be it by design or ignorance) that the IRS is part of the govt. NOT TRUE! They're just a big, powerful "collection agency" that constantly garnishes your wages.

    1. Re:IRS is NOT a govt. agency!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The IRS is a bureau of the U.S. Treasury Department, and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue is chosen by the President and confirmed by the Congress, just like any high-level cabinet official.

      The Federal Reserve's Chairman and Board of Governors is likewise chosen by the President and confirmed by Congress. They are as much a part of the US government as the State Department is, but they like to pretend to be unattached because they think it helps improve investor confidence.

      Fred Smith, the chairman and CEO of FedEx Corporation, was not chosen by the President and confirmed by Congress, unless I'm very much mistaken.

      Do you see the difference?

  29. Re:I only wish... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glad to see the government will be giving you exactly what you deserve, then. If you need a hand however, I may have a couple bags of bottles and cans you could take to recycling.

  30. Re:I only wish... by m50d · · Score: 1

    Why would a totalitarian government need to do anything about people complaining, when no-one cares?

    --
    I am trolling
  31. You obviously don't get it by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    800,000 people in the US suddenly not working and not getting paychecks isn't a serious issue to you?

    They're on unpaid leave, likely for a few weeks. I know this may come as a shock to a lot of slashdotters, but federal employees and contractors are substantially better paid than the national average. If they can't survive for a few weeks while Congress sorts this mess out, then they deserve it.

    1. Re:You obviously don't get it by Skater · · Score: 2
      Actually, I do get it, as a federal employee. And I can survive for months without income without a problem. That's not the point. I'll spell it out for you, using myself as an example: I'm planning to spend several thousand dollars expanding my driveway soon. If not for this issue, it probably would already be done, but I'm saving my money. That's a small negative effect on the economy. If we don't get back pay, well, that driveway expansion is going to be on hold even longer, along with the new vehicles we were planning to buy. Plenty of other federal employees are probably holding off on major purchases too for the same reason. Add up all of those small effects, the stock market gets scared (I'm sure it'll drop Monday if the government is closed), and suddenly our little road to economic recovery is delayed/sidetracked.

      And this is good for our country?

    2. Re:You obviously don't get it by Skater · · Score: 2

      800,000 people in the US suddenly not working and not getting paychecks isn't a serious issue to you?

      They're on unpaid leave, likely for a few weeks. I know this may come as a shock to a lot of slashdotters, but federal employees and contractors are substantially better paid than the national average. If they can't survive for a few weeks while Congress sorts this mess out, then they deserve it.

      Also, your little statistic about "substantially better paid than the national average": stop drinking the Kool-Aid. It's only true if you ignore degrees and experience. I could earn more outside the government in my field; I choose not to because I love what I do and I enjoy knowing my work has a direct impact on the entire country.

    3. Re:You obviously don't get it by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      They're probably paid better than the national average because the government requires a lot more college-educated folks than the US economy as a whole does. I'm not a US government employee, but I am a skilled worker who gets paid well.

    4. Re:You obviously don't get it by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      federal employees and contractors are substantially better paid than the national average.

      This could possibly be something to do with the fact that the national average includes fruit pickers and burger flippers.

      Also, the lowest-paid federal workers are the most likely to be furloughed. These are not people who are earning substantially more than the national average. They are ordinary people with children to feed, payments to make, etc. Yeah, there are loads of other people out there who are suffering even more -- people who have already lost their jobs in the private sector, say -- but that doesn't mean that the potential for hundreds of thousands more ordinary people to face similar misery is something we should write off with a smug "meh, they were overpaid anyway".

    5. Re:You obviously don't get it by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1

      Wow.

    6. Re:You obviously don't get it by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1

      What do you do?

  32. Ok, stop paying taxes... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    Instead, begin gather volunteers to fulfill a mission of the government you fell qualified to fill and begin to accept donations. Optionally in bitcoins

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  33. Re:I only wish... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

    You think your DMV of the sky is so great only because you are not capable of imagining an alternative.

    As a taxpayer, I am paying you. I am your boss. Call me a douchebag if you wish.

    Imagining a thing does not make it so

  34. Re:I only wish... by Captain.Abrecan · · Score: 1

    Hold on a sec, is the FAA shutting down if they don't figure this out? My grandfather has to fly home to Massachusetts from Texas on Saturday. Would he be stuck there? Serious question, because he really can't support himself if he gets stuck out there.....

  35. Stop playing around by krenaud · · Score: 1

    What's the problem? With a record high deficit it is obvious that spending must be decreased and income increased. Start by restoring taxes to pre-GWB level, make serious cutbacks in the department of homeland security and cut military expenditure by at least 10%. And stop harassing tourists and you might even get more of us visiting your country. Then the healthcare sector also need an overhaul, but that will take longer before giving any budget effects I suspect.

    1. Re:Stop playing around by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Since WWII, federal revenue has been 18-19% of GDP, no matter what the tax rates were. This means that historical data suggests that increasing taxes will not result in any significant increase in governemnt revenue.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    2. Re:Stop playing around by krenaud · · Score: 1

      You won't solve the problem with cutbacks alone. The discussion should not be 30 or 60bn dollars, it should be at least 200 or 300bn dollars.

    3. Re:Stop playing around by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Have you seen Paul Ryan's budget proposal? It won't solve the problem, but it is a step towards doing so. Rand Paul has also put forward a proposal that is close to solving the problem (although that is probably not politically doable at this time). Where is the Democratic proposal that would even be a step toward solving the problem?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  36. Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by d3ac0n · · Score: 0, Troll

    The "budget" that hasn't been passed is the one that the Democrats were supposed to pass back in 2010 for FY2011. The Dems had absolute control of both houses of Congress and the White House and STILL didn't get a budget passed.

    The Republicans have been forced to create "continuing resolutions" to keep the govt. running, and are trying to pass a budget for the rest of 2011 so they can get onto working on the FY2012 budget. Since the Republicans only control ONE house of Congress, (The House of Reps) they are relying on the Democrats (who control the Senate) to either pass the budgets they are sending, or create their own and send it to the House for a vote.

    The Democrats have done NEITHER. They are ignoring the budget resolutions sent to them from the House and have done ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to create one of their own.

    So... How is a Government shutdown a Republican problem if they are the ONLY ones actually attempting to avoid said shutdown by creating, presenting, and voting on budgets?

    Answer: It's not. This shutdown (if it happens) is OWNED by the Democrat party.

    --
    Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
  37. Re:I only wish... by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

    Air Traffic Control is considered essential, and will continue to operate, as will essential support. At times I wish they would shut that down with the rest though, just to put a fine point on exactly why funding the government is important.

  38. !scifi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right now this is tagged !scifi. What does that mean?

    1. Re:!scifi by Diesel+Dave · · Score: 1

      Have you actually taken a look at the US Congress?

  39. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by zeroshade · · Score: 2

    Uhm, wow.

    1. All budget measures must, constitutionally, come from the House. Thus the Senate Democrats cannot submit a budget.
    2. The Democrats HAVE submitted a budget, including making some compromises to the Republicans. The Republicans insist they will not compromise on anything.

    Blame exists on both sides, but right now the shutdown is being caused by a lack of willingness to compromise.

  40. Incorrect by Zingledot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To say it screws everyone equally is wrong.

    Most higher income citizens couldn't care less, personally, about nearly all government programs. They still may support their funding and existance, but they wouldn't personally be hurt much if programs went away entirely.

    So no, it is not 'equal screwing' in reality, only politically - and in the end who's politics wins or loses is meaningless.

    1. Re:Incorrect by Bios_Hakr · · Score: 1

      If your SI (military?) is worth $500B, then you lose $50B. Then $45B. And so on.

      If your SI (advancement for arts) is worth $10M, then you lose $1M.

      Both programs, one vital and one a luxury, get equally screwed. But the Country as a whole is better off.

      --
      I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
    2. Re:Incorrect by Zingledot · · Score: 1

      Both points are arguable.

      A lot of military spending goes to troops benefits, which high-income people have less personal interest in.

      Arts spending, a lot goes to community projects or grants for artists, which may enrich our culture for all, but supports the lives of academics and artists - which probably aren't high income.

      This doesn't even go into progams specifically meant to help people.

  41. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by geekoid · · Score: 3, Informative

    wow, you need to find different pendants to listen too from time to time.

    You might want to fact check a little.
    the 2010 budget passed. I"m not sure why you think otherwise.
    There was some discussion with Blue dogs.
    The republican stalled the government through many tactics that where, quite frankly, abusive.

    To answer your question:
    The republican created an unrealistic and harmful budget. The current Republicans idea of compromise is 'Do it our way or you not compromising.'
    So yes, the blame rest solely on the Republican/Tea Party.

    Oh, I just read your sig. I should have done that first and not bothered. Clearly you can't think beyond whatever you neo-con masters claim. Her is an interesting fact: That 'whistle blower' situation was manufactured by the media. Specifically: Fox News.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  42. Useless pedantics by sjbe · · Score: 1

    So will the government shut-down or not? From some online dictionary, shut-down refers to: "ceasing operations or cause to cease operating."

    Sigh... Love to hear people being uselessly pedantic regarding the definition of "shutdown" which is well understood in this context by all parties involved. This has happened before and it will happen again and the word isn't going to change. Get over it.

    1. Re:Useless pedantics by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Some of us weren't around when it happened before, and everybody is just talking about the 'shutdown' without actually clarifying what they're talking about. One of the reasons I keep coming back to Slashdot is the fact that it's often the only place I can find an easy to understand summary of what's actually happening.

      Hasn't happened this time though...

    2. Re:Useless pedantics by repapetilto · · Score: 1

      My pay comes from grants. Grants are administered by an institution and to actually spend the money requires the signatures of various bureaucrats. If I work at a Veterans Affairs Hospital, should I be looking for other sources of income? This IS NOT a stupid question.

  43. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by gothzilla · · Score: 1

    We're beyond broke. We're 14 trillion in debt. There is no room for compromise on a budget that is only the beginning of a fix. Saying the Republicans are wrong for not compromising makes no sense.

    Say you make $100k a year.
    Your wife starts spending $500k a year.
    You give her a budget that says she can only spend $300k a year and it's just the beginning, more will be cut later.
    She says no way, I want $400k a year.
    Are you really going to compromise? Seriously? I hope to God you don't run the finances in your household.

  44. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by fishbowl · · Score: 2

    When were there sixty members of the Democratic Party seated in the Senate all at the same time?

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  45. Neither party has proposed anything meaningful by sjbe · · Score: 2

    But from what I understand, the Democrats aren't offering up anything for cuts, and are just trying to continue overspending at their current levels. If the media's wrong,

    $40 billion in cuts spread over several years when the single year deficit is close to $1 TRILLION doesn't qualify as offering anything either. That is a rounding error in a 3 Trillion dollar budget. Let's be frank, NEITHER party has offered a proposal that is meaningful in any way. The cuts being proposed by the Republican party members are insubstantial amounts designed to score political points, not to actually correct our fiscal situation. Any proposal which doesn't have some combination of tax increases and/or spending cuts totaling in the HUNDREDS of Billions of dollars (minimum) is not a serious proposal. The notion that either party is being responsible in this situation is ridiculous.

    In short you are correct that the Democrats haven't proposed anything but realistically neither have the Republicans.

  46. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by radtea · · Score: 1

    Answer: It's not. This shutdown (if it happens) is OWNED by the Democrat party

    Actually I think the current dysfunction at all levels of government in the United States is "owned" by partisan assholes who put the interests of the private organization they belong to before everything else.

    --
    Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  47. Just keep working, just keep working by dancinfrandsen · · Score: 1

    I wonder what would happen if those furloughed employees came to work anyway, under the assumption that they would not get paid for their time. I know other expenses exist (utilities, etc.), but the big chunk of expenses in any organization is salaries and wages. I wouldn't expect something like this to go on for more than a week or so, but would it not send a message to Congress that they are not all-powerful and that people actually care about this country?

    1. Re:Just keep working, just keep working by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      We (feds) are not allowed to work during a furlough. If you show up anyway, the guards turn you around and tell you to go home.

    2. Re:Just keep working, just keep working by dancinfrandsen · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing the guards would not be furloughed, then.

    3. Re:Just keep working, just keep working by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      Probably some of them will be, but they are mostly considered essential personnel.

  48. Does it matter? by zero0ne · · Score: 1

    If you are owed money from the IRS, you can file tax returns for up to 3 years ago.

    If you OWE the IRS money, they can demand payment for up to 10 years of back tax payments.

    **I am not an accountant, this is simply what I have heard from my accountant, and it may have changed recently.

    1. Re:Does it matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you owe money, its (up to) 6 years. Unless you committed fraud to hide the fact that you owe money, in which case there is no statute of limitations.

  49. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by DarkOx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Exactly this whole issue rests on the shoulders of House Democrats who under Pelosi should have drafted and FY2011 budget passed it and sent it to the Senate. This was all political calculation on their part. They already had lots of heat on them from Obama Care's disgraceful arm twisting method of passing and did not want to have to go into elections with a budget to answer for as well. The Republicans really need to do better at pointing this out.

    Democrats control the Senate and the Presidency has House Democrats drafted a budget it would most likely have been passed, and certainly could have gotten through the Senate and across Obama's desk. So all you little liberals out there if your favorite program sees its 2011 budget cut, if your pet project is furloughed in a shutdown its really not the Republicans you should blame, its your own pathetic leadership. Now FY2012 is another matter.

    The sad truth is at present debt levels and given what for the last 30 years have been apparent political realties non of this matters. It all amounts to a little less butter for some and little more for someone else. None of the real problems will or can be addressed. The world will keep on financing this nonsense because they don't know how to do anything other than by US Treasuries and would rather pretend the US is credit worthy than deal with the fact its not, which in a sick way makes it credit worthy, since its known the debt can be rolled over. Meanwhile rather than demand a balanced budget the citizens of this country will go on pay instead a hidden (VERY REGRESSIVE) inflation tax to the oil barons abroad and export the rest of our remaining wealth to the Chinese because they are the only ones who can produce goods cheaply enough Dollars will still buy them.

    This all ends in another depression and eventually World War sometime in the future maybe 40 years or so.

       

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  50. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Mr.+Arbusto · · Score: 2

    wow, you need to find different pendants to listen too from time to time.

    You might want to fact check a little.
    the 2010 budget passed. I"m not sure why you think otherwise.

    Because it hasn't been passed......we haven't had a budget since the September 2010. Starting September of 2010, congress has just been passing continuing resolutions agreeing to operate the government at current levels + new legislation. If a budget had already passed we wouldn't have the "Impending Shutdown because of the evil XXX" problem. We'd be fighting over the next budget.

    Generally I shy away from Wikipedia, but the information and sources here are mostly accurate.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_United_States_federal_budget

  51. No updates? Try no websites. by oneiros27 · · Score: 1

    We've been told to pull the plug on most websites.

    No work means no sysadmins to monitor if we've been defaced / hacked / whatever, so we've been told to expect them being blocked at the external firewalls, unless we can provide a specific reason of why it has to remain online.

    --
    Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
  52. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

    You are correct. The 2010 budget was passed in 2009. Where the OP made their mistake was that the fact of the matter is the Democrats did not pass the 2011 budget, which should have been passed in September of 2010. However, the Democrats did not want to have to defend their budget deficit while they were campaigning for re-election, so they did not even create a budget bill in 2010. If the Democrats had done their job when they controlled both Houses of Congress and the WHite House, we would not be in this situation.
    The fact of the matter is that last fall, the American voters sent a clear message that they want Congress to reduce the federal budget. The Democrats vastly increased the Federal Budget in 2009 in response to the financial crisis. Now they want to use that "emergency" spending as the baseline for al future budgets.
    Historically, since WWII the Federal government has spent around 21% of GDP each year, while collecting 18-19% of GDP in revenue. That is not sustainable. However, in the last several years the Federal government has been spending close to 25% of GDP, that is making the problem much more urgent. Raising taxes is unlikely to increase the % of GDP that the federal government collects, since that has been stable as the tax rates have changed.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  53. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're in a recession, dude. Deficit spending is what you do when you're in a recession. The problem is that whenever the economy is doing well and we have a surplus in this country, we always piss it away on some stupid bullshit rather than saving it for the next inevitable recession.

  54. just like 1995 all over again by Thud457 · · Score: 0

    Democratic president + Republican congress = shut down the government


    Hey, at least the teabaggers should like this, they just need to figure out how to make this a permanent situation.

    And WTF is with the Republicans attitude of "I'm going to hold my breath until I get what I want"? Oh, wait, president doormat folds every time. Guess that toddler attitude is working for Republicans.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:just like 1995 all over again by Mr.+Arbusto · · Score: 1

      It is a systemic/US issue not a democrat or republican issue. Both are unable restrain themselve when it comes to spending.

      As for the 2011 budget not being passed...when it was due is September, the democrats had control of the government when it comes to passing laws. Senate, Congress and Whitehouse.........

    2. Re:just like 1995 all over again by Duradin · · Score: 0

      If they were just dealing with Republicans you'd be right but they had to deal with Filibusticans, simply having the majority does not defeat them.

    3. Re:just like 1995 all over again by Mr.+Arbusto · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about. In 2010 when the budget was supposed to be passed the democrats didn't even submit a budget in to be filibustered. They also had enough majority it would have taken 6 republican vote to overcome a filibuster. Both parties at the time were in favor of keeping the status quo to fight it later....after fall elections.

      The filibuster is always bitched about but the party in power never wants to remove the filibuster because in the future when they are the minority they want to use it. Remember a few years ago when the democrats filibusters judicial nominees during Bush, or republicans filibustering gun bans under Clinton. Every time the majority bitches and moans but never changes the rule because they know the pendulum will someday swing the other way and they will want to use the filibuster.

      If the media would be less complacent over what a cut is in government baseline budgeting verses absolute dollars I think the narrative would be a lot different for the country. Because even if the republicans came forth with a budget of "No new spending, We will spend the exact same amount this year as we did last year." They would be railed against for cutting 400 billion from the budget because programs have automatic spending increases build into them and the cut that is talked about on TV is not absolute dollars but a reduction in the baseline of the next budget.

  55. Gov't Shutdown: Yeah by mr1911 · · Score: 1

    The government shutting down is the best thing that could happen to citizens and taxpayers. Let's hope that we not only see a shutdown, but that it lasts for a decade or two. There will be one or two useful things the government does that will be missed, but hundreds of stupid things that will be welcome to live without.

    --
    This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
    Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
  56. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, the Democrats did not want to have to defend their budget deficit while they were campaigning for re-election, so they did not even create a budget bill in 2010. If the Democrats had done their job when they controlled both Houses of Congress and the WHite House, we would not be in this situation.

    While this is certainly true, you have to remember that this happens in pretty much every even-numbered year, regardless of which party is where. Whoever thought that the fiscal year should start a month before Election Day was a moron.

    Also I'd like a citation on your last paragraph; I know we were spending less than we were pulling in in the late 90s, for instance, and either way, your simplistic mathematical model suggests that we would have an infinite GDP if we cut taxes to zero: even Laffer would laugh at that.

  57. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop subscribing to the partisan lie. Of course the repubs propose things and the dems send them back (and vice versa sometimes). It isn't *ine* party that's a problem, and believing otherwise makes you a genuine problem for those of us trying to promote sanity and reason. Help us out, will ya?

  58. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by superdave80 · · Score: 1

    Surplus? What's that?

  59. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    sanity and reason eh?

    Ok the Dems when they had both house during the last congress would have ordinarily passed a 2011 budget, thats right normally the next years budget is passed before the current fiscal year end. That should have been done while Dems controlled both houses but they DECIDED not to and most likely because the sought to avoid having to be accountable for the budget going into elections where they were already polling very badly.

    So now you expect Republicans to vote to fund things they don't want to fund when even Democrats who ostensibly do want to fund many of these programs refused to do it. That is not sane or reasonable pal, its not even fair.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  60. Re:I only wish... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well gee, people like Joe Lieberman say that we should be more like China all the time. We are becoming a lot more like them than they are becoming like us. 20 years from now, you'll have less of a point, and 20 years from then, your progeny won't even know what that "freedom thing" is. They'll say you are a conspiracy theorist if you think that people didn't always live under such a glorious Chinese system. Your grandchildren might even do "the right thing" and report you for talking about such subversive things such as "freedom".

    How's that sound?

  61. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by zeroshade · · Score: 1

    Actually, I'm saying the Republicans are wrong for not compromising on what to cut. The differences between the Democratic budget and the Republican budget, are not much different in the amount being cut, only where those cuts are happening. The Republicans insist on cutting Education, Medicare, Research, NPR, and Planned Parenthood, etc. While the Democrats' proposal chooses to cut Military spending, removing tax cuts, etc. They made concessions on cutting some of the things the Republicans want to cut, but they won't compromise at all on choosing different things that can be cut.

  62. Accepted vs. Excepted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TFA uses the term "excepted" while the summary uses "accepted". These are different words. If you need help making a distinction try a dictionary. That is all.

  63. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by superdave80 · · Score: 2

    There was no surplus while Clinton was president. He was still borrowing from the social security trust fund to make ends meet. Just because he was not borrowing from outside sources does not mean he was balancing the budget. That money will still need to be paid back from the general fund at a future date.

  64. Republicans do sometimes have great ideals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have realized for sometime that the majority of Slashdot users are anti-Republican.

    I just want to ask if anyone does not support this Republican's recommendation?

    Lawmakers should not be paid if the government shuts down, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) said Thursday.

    I admit, however, that while I'm all for severe cuts to our budget, I disagree with many of the following topics that were brought up by Republicans as possible budget cuts: research, education, Social Security, and Planned Parenthood.

    Further, I disagreed with the article's statement below:

    The point of this whole exercise is to help the economy.

    The reason for the budget cuts is AFAIK NOT to help the economy but to help keep the government running and hopefully force it to run within its means without raising taxes.

  65. Re:I only wish... by jyx · · Score: 1

    And here's a handy tip for you, if your walking along a path and see signs warning you of quicksand ahead, even though where you currently are is safe, it doesn't mean your wont go under when you continue onwards.

    Freedoms a little bit like air, you don't notice it until its gone..

  66. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

    The republican created an unrealistic and harmful budget. The current Republicans idea of compromise is 'Do it our way or you not compromising.'

    So you might say the Republicans are telling the Democrats they have to ride in the back? Oh wait...

  67. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    There is no room for compromise on a budget that is only the beginning of a fix. Saying the Republicans are wrong for not compromising makes no sense.

    Both want to spend more than we take in. The argument is more about which corporations to give welfare to, rather than how much of it to give away.

    So yes, the Republicans are wrong for not compromising.

  68. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    The fact of the matter is that last fall, the American voters sent a clear message that they want Congress to reduce the federal budget.

    Uh, no. They voted for a party that is responsible for the majority of the debt. Republicans are small spenders is a lie that is tossed around when the Democrats are in power. And the Republicans aren't submitting a balanced budget. They are just finding programs important to Democrats (condoms and alternative energy) and cutting them out. That's not balancing the budget, that's political posturing designed to cause a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation for the Democrats. Either they approve the budget that cuts things they want and funds everything the Republicans want, or they don't, in which case the government shuts down.

    It's not like the Republicans are cutting anything they like that they fund. All the subsidies for corn are still in there. And the billions for oil companies. Yup, all in there. Just cutting condoms (while whining about all the children poor people have - I still haven't figured out that one) and any power not generated from dead dinosaurs (while still fully funding payments to oil companies). That's not fiscal responsibility. That's spiteful politicking.

    Call me when the Republicans are fiscally responsible. The last time that happened was about 100 years ago.

  69. Re:I only wish... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Everyone in the private sector thinks that their paymasters are douchebags as well.

  70. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    Uh, no. They voted for a party that is responsible for the majority of the debt.

    That is not true. The Democrats controlled Congress since 2007. Most of the debt which accumulated under George W. Bush came since 2007. Even if that were not true, the Democrats have added more debt to the Federal budget since Obama took office than was added in the eight years that George W. Bush was President.
    If the Democrats had proposed any spending bills during this "negotiation", you might have a point, but they haven't. All the Democrats have done is propose numbers in the press with no details. Better yet, the Democrats could have passed a budget last year when they controlled both Houses of Congress (which is the way it is supposed to be done).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  71. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    To my knowledge, no budget was ever passed without the signature of the president. As such, every president approved the budget under his administration. Additionally, the insane practice of pointing to Congress or the presidency depending on who they want to blame, rather than who actually was responsible is the reason we have the problem we do.

    Partisan pricks like you caused the mess we are in.

  72. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    That still does not change the fact that the U.S. government debt has increased more in the last two years under Obama than it did for the entire eight years under Bush. So, when the American voters voted for Republicans in 2010, Republicans were not the party responsible for the majority of the debt, since the majority of the debt had accumulated while Obama was President and Democrats controlled both Houses of Congress.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  73. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    The first year of Obama was under a budget approved by Bush. Take that into account, and your statement is false. Furthermore, it doesn't address the issue of the "message" sent by electing the party that created most of the debt. It wasn't a question of which president to blame, but the party. The Republicans created more debt than the Democrats. Though, that's only because in the time since all fiscal responsibility was abandoned by both parties, Republicans held the office more.

    But, since you are obviously pushing a false party line, instead of addressing reality, it's obvious that you aren't interested in fiscal responsibility either. You just want to blame "the other guys." Both parties are the same. Sure, they quibble about which federal programs to cut, but they both agree whole-heartedly to spend more than we take in. There may be some reasons that there was a push for Republicans in the last election, but "budget balancing" wasn't something the Republicans have even pretended to do since before they elected Reagan. So if that is the reason why people voted Republican, then all of those voters are insane.

  74. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    You accuse me of pointing to the President or Congress according to who I want to blame, yet you do the same thing blaming the Republicans for budgets passed by Democrats, but approved by Bush. No, republicans in general are not fiscally responsible, but some Republicans are. Democrats don't even claim to favor reducing spending. You know, if a voter needs to choose between a politician who claims to want to reduce spending but does not do so and a politician who claims to want to increase spending and does, which one is the voter who wants the government to reduce spending better off voting for?
    I would argue the former because in that case the politician cannot claim a mandate to increase spending.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  75. Re:Repulicans?? Umm.. No. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
    No. I'm not blaming. I'm pointing out that the "they voted for Republicans for budget issues" is either factually incorrect or the voters are insane. The statement was unrelated to the blaming you already placed, but just pointing out that Republicans grow the debt at rates greater than the Democrats, such that voting for Republicans for their fiscal responsibility is insane.

    No, republicans in general are not fiscally responsible, but some Republicans are. Democrats don't even claim to favor reducing spending.

    So, since Republicans are proven to be worse at being "fiscally responsible" you are arguing that people should vote for the fiscally irresponsible party that's proven to be liars than the fiscally irresponsible party that doesn't lie (at least about that one thing)? Again, like I said, voting for the Republicans for their fiscal responsibility is simply insane. They are proven irresponsible every time they get a chance, yet people somehow think that they will be more responsible next time?

    which one is the voter who wants the government to reduce spending better off voting for? I would argue the former because in that case the politician cannot claim a mandate to increase spending.

    In practice, the Democrats have grown the debt more slowly than the Republicans. Therefore, I would discount the lies told by all politicians about what they'd "like to do" if elected, and instead look at what they have actually done. Furthermore, voting for the Republicans because they say one thing and do the other is rewarding liars by putting them into office. As such, I would argue that your statements are both factually and logically incorrect. If you want fiscal responsibility, the only option is to vote for a third party. If you don't want to vote for a third party (I don't know why that would be the case, but based on US voters, most people have a strong desire to not vote 3rd party), then you should always vote for the party not in the White House. Not because they are Republican or Democrat, but that the more conflict there is on Capitol Hill, the less they'll get done. The less they get done, the better off we are.

    It's sad when the best government we can hope for is the ineffective one. But given that the sum of military expenses (mostly constant from the Bush administration) plus the interest on the debt (as of the end of the last budget signed by Bush) exceeds the federal income tax receipts, it would be impossible for the Democrats or Republicans to balance the budget, even if they submitted a budget of $0. So focusing on which few billion the parties want to target in order to punish supporters of the other party is irrelevant politicking. Neither party wants to or has tried to balance the budget. Even the Teabaggers are warmongers who don't say the words necessary to balance the budget (which are, "we must abandon a standing military until we reduce our debt"). And, unless they do that (or default on the debt) the budget can never be balanced. So bickering over what will be funded until the US is bankrupt is, as others have said, like bickering about the bar tab on the Titanic.