They Blew Up the Debt, Stalled America’s Future, and Stuck You With the Bill. All to Enrich the Top 1% and Win Elections…
Discover how America’s debt crisis was built by the GOP and why everyday people are now stuck paying the price…
Republicans yesterday proposed an appropriations bill that will allocate a billion dollars to pay for Trump’s Golden Epstein Dance Hall (aka “Ballroom”). Every penny of it will be borrowed and we’ll be paying interest on that money for the rest of our lifetimes unless something dramatic changes.
This year, America will spend over a trillion dollars just to pay interest on the current $39 trillion national debt, a debt entirely the result of a 45-year-long GOP scam designed to make the rich richer and elect Republicans, all while simultaneously screwing Democrats and average working class people.
It’s the biggest scandal of the century and is almost never mentioned by the press, even when they noted last week that — for the first time since World War II — our debt is now larger than our entire economy. And by 2030, Fortune magazine reports, we’ll be paying $2 trillion in interest at the current rate of burn, as Republicans add more and more items to the national debt every day.
To put that in context, here’s the “lost opportunity cost” of what that trillion dollars a year we now pay in interest — roughly $3000 every year for every man, woman, and child in the country — on the GOP’s Debt could do for America:
— First, it could guarantee universal childcare and early childhood education nationwide that would free millions of parents to work or start businesses and would pay long-term dividends in better educational outcomes.
— Second, it could make all public colleges, universities, and trade schools tuition-free, while also wiping out existing federal student loan debt over time.
— Third, the U.S. could establish a universal healthcare system or at least a robust public option with zero premiums and minimal out-of-pocket costs, ending medical bankruptcies and improving public health outcomes.
— Fourth, it could fully fund a national infrastructure modernization program, repairing every deficient bridge in the country, rebuild highways, expand mass transit, and replace aging water systems, including lead pipe removal nationwide.
— Fifth, a trillion dollars a year could finance a rapid transition to clean energy: building out solar and wind at scale, modernizing the grid, subsidizing home electrification, and accelerating EV infrastructure to catch up with China.
— Sixth, it could end homelessness in America, with massive savings in healthcare and policing.
— Seventh, we could provide a guaranteed basic income (~$500 to $1,000 a month) to every adult American, or a more targeted version for lower- and middle-income households, dramatically reducing poverty.
— Eighth, it could expand Social Security and Medicare benefits significantly — raising monthly checks, lowering the retirement age, or both — while shoring up the system’s long-term solvency.
— Ninth, the U.S. could also fund universal paid family and medical leave, so no one ever again has to go to work sick or choose between a paycheck and caring for a newborn or a sick relative.
— Tenth, it could dramatically increase teacher pay, reducing class sizes, modernizing school facilities, and providing universal free school meals.
— Eleventh, it could launch a large-scale affordable housing initiative, building millions of units, stabilizing rents, and helping first-time homebuyers with down payments.
— Twelfth, it could rebuild and expand public health infrastructure, including pandemic preparedness, local health departments, research funding, and domestic manufacturing of critical medicines and supplies.
And even after doing several of those at once, there’d still be room for things like universal broadband, modernizing the postal system, expanding national parks and conservation efforts, and funding scientific research at levels that could accelerate breakthroughs in everything from cancer to renewables to clean water.
None of these things are happening, though, because Republicans insist “we can’t afford them because of the national debt” that they, themselves created.
It all started in the 1970s when Republican strategist Jude Wanniski noted that Republicans were viewed as Grinches while Democrats — who’d brought the people the minimum wage, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, free college, and dozens of other popular programs — were viewed as Santas.
His solution was twofold: have Republicans become the “tax-cut Santas” while forcing Democrats to “shoot their own Santa” in the face by cutting back on those gift-like programs.
The strategy was elegantly simple, and was adopted by the GOP in the first year of the Reagan presidency and is still in full operation. (There’s a more complete explanation and timeline here.) It has two parts:
1. When a Republican is in the White House, spend money like a drunken sailor, running up the debt as hard and fast as possible. All this deficit spending on the national credit card also produces “good times” by stimulating the economy like crazy, making Americans think Republicans are good with economics when in fact they’re only good at spending borrowed money.
2. When a Democrat is in the White House, start screaming about the debt and how “our children will have to pay for this!!!” to force that president and the Democrats in Congress to “shoot” their own social programs by cutting them back, producing hard times and reducing the deficits.
To justify all this deficit spending, Wanniski invented a term, “supply-side economics,” arguing that tax cuts for the morbidly rich would pay for themselves as wealth “trickled down” to average working people, and Art Laffer handily supplied a “curve” that seemed technical and scientific. The media lapped it up.
It was all, of course, bullshit, but the American press bought it and no Republican has been seriously challenged on it in 45 years.
The combined Reagan, Bush, and Trump tax cuts along with Bush’s two wars add up to more than our current national debt of ~$39 trillion. And the only way to fix all this without causing horrible pain for the American people is to undo those three presidents’ tax cuts and take America back to the tax system we had in 1980.
When Democrats take over and end the current GOP fascist experiment, they’ll have a huge job to do, unwinding all of this debt. Fully a third of all the debt in American history has come from one president — Trump — who once bragged:
“I’m the king of debt. I’m great with debt. Nobody knows debt better than me.”
Trump’s billion-dollar Golden Epstein Dance Hall is just the latest gilded insult borrowed against our children’s future, while the trillion dollars a year we now pay in interest on the GOP’s 45-year “Two Santas” tax-cut scam could be ending homelessness, guaranteeing healthcare, rebuilding our schools, and lifting millions out of poverty.
It’s beyond time to roll back the Reagan, Bush, and Trump tax cuts for the morbidly rich. As Graham Platner says, “We have to use the tax code to take back the money they’ve stolen from us.”
It’ll be a big job and the billionaires and big business will squeal like stuck pigs, but our debt — and the interest payments on it — have finally reached the point where the GOP’s Two Santas strategy risks crashing the nation’s entire economy.
Democrats need to start talking about this now and point out clearly how we got here with Wanniski‘s Two Santas strategy!
Share this article widely so Americans understand that every ballroom tile and each billionaire tax break has been paid for by Republicans stealing the prosperity working people once enjoyed and now deserve to get back.
Louise’s Daily Song: “You Sent the Bill”
Comments on Tuesday’s Daily Take:
How Trump, Republicans, and Their Billionaires Took Your Money and Then Sold You Hate
I was thinking about what Democrats would need to do (it would only be Democrats; Republicans would refuse to collaborate) to restore a powerful democracy. There would have to be a detailed plan--call it Project 2029--to evict corporate influence from government, beginning with setting the table for protracted battles in the courts. That means pouring resources into a reform-minded DOJ and stocking Federal courts with progressive judges.
~ Jeffrey Hobbs
Ego and a demand for recognition is not a good look for anyone, regardless of gender. My vote is going to go to people who are there for “the people” not for some elevated position that will enable them to steal through insider trading and bribes.
Trump’s Republicans just keep doing everything they can to generate more hatred. Friends, neighbors, and family need our love more than ever. See you in the streets.
~alis
My newest book, Who Killed the American Dream?: The Greatest Political Crime Ever Told is now available for presale from bookstores nationwide. It’s a modern-day telling of the “murder mystery” of how, in 1886, a great crime was committed against America by a cynical court reporter and an on-the-take Supreme Court justice that changed the course of American politics and led straight to Citizens United. It also details the massive ongoing cover-up of this crime and what we can do to fight back.





All true, all true. Trump and his supporters are now using glamor to launder the oligarchic takeover (see Lauren Sanchez/Bezos at the Met), and they’re winning the messaging war. Facts, figures and white papers aren’t cutting through, and as long as we permit Fox News to lie to 38% of the nation, they never will. Taking the tax issue into the legal system, Trump / Blanche and the DOJ have outright lied about the Southern Poverty Law Center in federal court, and are defending their false pleadings on Fox News, because that is the only audience that matters to them. It's clear to me that nothing will righted until we return to requiring accuracy in the news.
Thom, Can you write about Corbin Trent and A Fight Worth Having? They've published a detailed platform that progressives could run on. Their basic argument is that the US has to invest in public services, built and run by public funds, in order to remake our economy and society -- basically a 21st Century Green New Deal built on the principles of Roosevelt's New Deal. It's very interesting, and I would like to see what a veteran of the barricades such as yourself thinks about it. If it seems as sound to you as it seems to me, it should be something progressives actively support. There is no Democratic Party platform, no clear plan emerging for how a Democratic Party would govern, which means that there is no coherent message against the emerging GOP agenda. Is A Fight Worth Having worth supporting? Please let us know what you think about it. They've done a lot of detailed work. Their position that UBI can't work is something in particular that I would appreciate your analysis of. Thanks!