If you were under some quaint illusion that the Senate might temper the House’s deficit-blowing tax package, time to disabuse yourself. The Senate Republicans have unveiled their own Frankenstein monster of the “One Big Beautiful Bill”—and it’s uglier than anyone dares admit.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, this Senate version balloons deficits by a cool $3.3 trillion over the next decade. That’s half a trillion dollars more than the House’s already grotesque $2.8 trillion shortfall. And it’s all happening against the backdrop of a debt-to-GDP ratio already north of 120%.
Translation: the United States is functionally insolvent. And rather than course-correct, our esteemed legislators are stomping on the accelerator.
How did they cook these numbers? Simple—by redefining reality. Instead of calculating costs using the usual “current law baseline,” Republicans demanded a “current policy baseline.” That means they just pretend all Trump-era tax cuts never expire, so extending them somehow costs nothing. If you ran your household budget this way, you’d be in prison. Here in DC, you get re-elected.
Even the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a think tank that usually tiptoes around partisan toes, called this the “biggest and most economically costly gimmick in American history.” And they’re right—because this precedent guarantees future administrations will do the same. Every four years, Congress will just extend every expensive program, slap “current policy” on the label, and pretend the deficit never moves.
Spoiler: it does. The Joint Committee on Taxation still estimates the real price tag of extending the 2017 cuts is $3.8 trillion. That’s not even counting the $693 billion in other tax giveaways tucked into the bill like candy for lobbyists. But because the Senate only “counts” the latter figure, they get to say the bill is affordable.
This is the legislative equivalent of moving your overdraft notices to the junk drawer so you can keep swiping the credit card.
Naturally, Democrats seized the moment to scold Republicans about fiscal responsibility—an irony so rich it should be taxable. But they’re not wrong: with the US barrelling toward $40 trillion in debt inside of two years, this is suicidal.
And that’s the real point. No matter who’s in charge, the machine is too bloated, too corrupt, and too addicted to borrowed money to ever stop. Medicaid cuts, food stamp tweaks, corporate tax perks—they’re all rearranging deck chairs. The iceberg is the debt itself.
Senate Republicans also made sure to permanently cement three business tax breaks and set new caps on deductions for state and local taxes, a bone tossed to their donors while they pretend to care about middle-class relief. House and Senate negotiators even worked out a side deal: a five-year cap on deductions instead of ten years, just to make sure this monstrosity squeaks under the wire procedurally.
You want to see what the real numbers look like? Forget CBO modeling. Just add up the Treasury’s cash withdrawals. It’s the simplest metric: money out the door. And no accounting voodoo can disguise that the US federal government is bleeding trillions faster than it can print them.
Bottom line:
Stop letting red jerseys or blue jerseys blind you to the obvious. This is non-partisan financial malpractice.
If you’re tired of being a pawn in this debt-fueled con, arm yourself now.
Download Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure by Bill Brocius. It’s free, and it might just save your assets when the house of cards collapses: Download Here
Gold’s recent pullback during the Iran conflict confused millions of investors who expected the metal…
Gold and silver prices may look stalled to casual investors, but beneath the surface, the…
Americans are surviving, but they are no longer buying the fairy tale coming out of…
The global financial order is changing faster than most Americans realize. As BRICS nations accelerate…
The corporate media keeps insisting the economy is “strong,” but the cracks are getting harder…
Washington keeps telling Americans that China is the greatest economic threat facing the United States.…
This website uses cookies.
Read More