The Other Inconvenient Truth
December 6th, 2007
Thinking a lot about the future as I do, I keep coming back to the fact that there are five or six fundamental and critical issues that face America in this still new century. The degree to which we begin to face these key issues and to start to do so right now will determine whether our greatness as a nation will continue and build upon our magnificent history.
Will America continue to be the great nation we still think it is? As a nation will we be able to adjust to the rapidly changing realities of the world? As we move from the Information Age to the Shift Age will we have the resolve to make some really difficult choices and rise up as we have in the past to meet our national promise and legacy?
In just the last 18 months the awareness and acceptance of global warming has gone from a minority to a majority of us. This issue is one that we now see is something that while not greatly disrupting our lives today, might have catastrophic effects for our children and certainly for our grandchildren. The question for America is how and how quickly we can move from a society and economy based upon formerly cheap fossil fuels to one that is based upon renewable energy sources that are sustainable and non-polluting. We now see we are at risk and we are starting to take action.
The issue we must now also face is the alarming issue of our national debt. It is nothing less than a financial cancer growing inside our country that will, in the foreseeable future force us to react to it or risk the tearing of the fabric of our nation. We may not immediately feel its’ negative effect, but our children will. It is the other inconvenient truth we face.
In the past few years I have become alarmed both by the mounting national debt and the absolute non-acknowledgement of it by those that seek office. It is the great ‘wink, wink, nod, nod, say no more’ problem that politicians know about and completely avoid addressing, except for a few brave individuals. Many politicians perhaps are even unaware of the problem.
About six months ago I had the good fortune to meet a wonderful woman named Sheila Weinberg. In the early part of this decade she decided to make the federal budget her summer reading. What she found out was that it had no correlation to the basic rules of accounting that we as citizens and companies must live by. She closed down her accounting practice, founded the Institute for Truth in Accounting and dedicated her life to bringing awareness to this issue. We met because she was looking for a way to amplify this issue in time for it to become a central issue of the 2008 election year.
Sheila further educated me on how bad the national debt situation really is. Having seen the national debt clock, with its rapidly increasing dollar amounts, I thought that our national debt was somewhere around 9 trillion dollars. The real number is closer to 59 trillion. The difference is all the promises made regarding social security, medical care, veterans benefits and other entitlements that, guess what, the government does not look at as obligations. Don’t you believe they are obligations? Aren’t you expecting the government to honor them?
Let me make the national debt personal to you. Every man woman and child is now responsible for more that $190,000 of debt.
There has never been a budget surplus in our lifetimes, regardless of claims made. To use a household analogy, the government accounts for the budget as we look at a checking account. Money comes into the account, we pay our bills, and if, at the end of the month there is money left over, there is a surplus (and we know how rare surpluses are in government). What this check book version of cash accounting does not take into account is our mortgages, credit card debt and other loan obligations, all of which are very real. When speaking of the budget, the government does not account for future payments of obligations.
The Institute for Truth in Accounting, with some generous individual contributions, has just launched a web site, www.truthin2008.org . The goal of this site is to mobilize citizens, journalists and anyone concerned about this issue to make the national debt a central issue of the elections in 2008. The hope here is that this web site can become the catalyst to make the nation, and those that want to lead it, face this issue now.
If you want a bright future for America, if you want a bright future for your children and grandchildren, please visit www.truthin2008.org to begin to learn the truth. It is scary, and we need to face it now.
December 6th, 2007 at 4:14 pm
the list of problems is very long; i am sure i don’t need to say to you that solutions don’t live where the problem lives.
as sincere as http://www.truthin2008.org is, they have little to offer except information that things are worse than we think…
recontextualizing life, is the only thing i can imagine that changes consensus reality, i.e. the world view that has got us into the current situation…
it sounds frightfully new age, but the maxim, change your mind, change your life, seems to be the process going on that is the real news at this time. your example of changing awareness is only this..
if i think about my debt, i often won’t earn as much as if i am thinking about innovation or new projects, and truthin2008.org seems to think the political process has the hope of getting us out of trouble…
i think not, that process should be ignored, it is a relic of old thinking, and we must move on, …this is what innovators do
December 8th, 2007 at 10:09 am
gregory – I like the way you think, and to a great degree I agree with you. However, the idea and thrust behind the http://www.truthin2008.com web site is to bring this issue to the elections next year. The debt is a cancer growing in our country that politicians was to avoid discussing. No more deception can be tolerated.
So think of this as starting the process in the poltical arena, the place where the problem was created.
David
December 8th, 2007 at 12:59 pm
deception is nearly synonymous with politics, amusing but true… what it takes to run should automatically disqualify one from holding the office…
i was in silicon valley this past summer, and met amazing people, both industry and new age, all of whom, when “the shift” was mentioned, recognized it as having already happened, and never bothered with news or consensus reality … they were into innovation, solving all the problems of the world with passion, and it was very inspiring, bypassing the political “reality” was considered normal…
about the economy, it is essentially built on credit, the entire thing, and unless a new structure is deemed appropriate, how much or how deep is relative and not necessarily intrinsic…
i applaud any group working to change things, and thank you for bringing them to my attention
is any part of your new book online?
December 8th, 2007 at 7:38 pm
Gregory-
No, my book is not online, though when it finally comes out in late January/early February I will put some of it up on-line. Actually, a good part of it is updated and edited columns from this site grouped into chapters. There is a lot of new stuff about the age we are now entering. The title of the book is “The Shift Age”. No surprise to you it sounds like.
Thank you for your continuing comments on the blog.
David
December 10th, 2007 at 10:16 pm
a new site which may be of interest… http://bigthink.com/
February 10th, 2012 at 9:31 am
Awesome read. I just passed this onto a colleague who was doing a little research on that. He actually bought me lunch since I found it for him! So let me rephrase: Thank you for lunch!