The U.S. government’s number one priority is–obviously–returning to manageable finances before it reaches economic collapse, threatening everything that has been built in this country. No other single government goal can compete with that; all else must take a lower place until the clear and present danger passes. Setting any different priority is not only irresponsible, the stakes are so high for so many that it is evil.
The Democrat and Republican politicians who manage the U.S. government do not support that interest; they hold their personal interests above that of the country upon which they have battened and above the interests of the multitudes who voted them into office. They have fattened their own coffers and protected their own futures while presiding over the hollowing-out of the economy that now teeters toward implosion at their doing.
The totality of power is in the hands of 545 people: the President, Congress and nine Justices; no one else. They and their recent predecessors are responsible for the damage they have made while filling their own pockets with money looted from those they swore to serve.
They are spending the country into destruction; no earthly power can consume more than it takes in over time. They refuse to stop in fear that their particular beneficiaries will no longer keep them in place to continue their parasitism on the body politic. They expect to be safely ensconced in their mansions when what they have made falls in on the rest. Even now, the U.S. Senate is voting on setting the Army against the people who elected them, executing warrantless arrests and imprisonment of citizens here in the U.S. as a sheild for the governors responsible for our condition.
The elections of 2012 may come during the visible crumbling of what we have made for ourselves or that fall may hold off a bit longer. Those elections are the only present opportunity to resolve what the politicians are refusing to handle. And in those elections, any politician returned to office is a vote for what is happening–or not happening–now. The elections of 2012 may well offer not only the present but possibly, the only chance for such a change.




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