I don't get it either. Aren't we (balancing the budget every year" as Dr. Williams says by borrowing the money from China and forcing future generations to pay it back?
The Washington, D.C.-based Tax Foundation does a yeoman's job of keeping track of how much we're paying in taxes and who's paying what. It turns out that American taxpayers worked this year from Jan. 1 to April 17, 107 days, to earn enough money to pay their federal, state and local tax bills. That statistic requires some clarification, and I ask my readers to help me examine it.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, Congress will spend $3.8 trillion this year, about 24 percent of our $15 trillion gross domestic product. But federal tax revenue will be much less, only $2.5 trillion,...











I think a key point is that there IS a huge impact on the THEN: The loss of opportunity THEN because of a stunted economy in the past (NOW). Dr. Williams only alludes to this.
I think a key point is that there IS a huge impact on the THEN: The loss of opportunity THEN because of a stunted economy in the past (NOW). Dr. Williams only alludes to this.
I think a key point is that there IS a huge impact on the THEN: The loss of opportunity THEN because of a stunted economy in the past (NOW). Dr. Williams only alludes to this.
I think a key point is that there IS a huge impact on the THEN: The loss of opportunity THEN because of a stunted economy in the past (NOW). Dr. Williams only alludes to this.
I think a key point is that there IS a huge impact on the THEN: The loss of opportunity THEN because of a stunted economy in the past (NOW). Dr. Williams only alludes to this.
I think a key point is that there IS a huge impact on the THEN: The loss of opportunity THEN because of a stunted economy in the past (NOW). Dr. Williams only alludes to this.