Mark Steyn on the Decline

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Brilliant, as usual, on the state of the nation's finances, which is not strong:

Brokest Nation In History On Edge Of Armageddon

… And, if none of these parties seems inclined to pay down the debt now, what are the chances they'll feel like doing so by 2020 when, under these historic “cuts,” it's up to $23 trillion-$25 trillion?

Like America's political class, I have also been thinking about America circa 2020. Indeed, I've written a book on the subject. My prognosis is not as rosy as the Boehner-Obama deal, as attentive readers might just be able to deduce from the subtle clues in the title: “After America: Get Ready For Armageddon.”

Oh, don't worry, I'm not one of these “declinists.” I'm way beyond that, and in the express lane to total societal collapse. The fecklessness of Washington is an existential threat not only to the solvency of the republic but to the entire global order. If Ireland goes under, it's lights out on Galway Bay. When America goes under, it drags the rest of the developed world down with it.

When I go around the country saying stuff like this, a lot of folks agree. Somewhere or other, they've a vague memory of having seen a newspaper story accompanied by a Congressional Budget Office graph with the line disappearing off the top of the page and running up the wall and into the rafters circa mid-century.

So they usually say, “Well, fortunately I won't live to see it.” And I always reply that, unless you're a centenarian with priority boarding for the ObamaCare death panel, you will live to see it. Forget about mid-century. We've got until mid-decade to turn this thing around.

Otherwise, by 2020 just the interest payments on the debt will be larger than the U.S. military budget. That's not paying down the debt, but merely staying current on the servicing — like when you get your MasterCard statement and you can't afford to pay off any of what you borrowed but you can just about cover the monthly interest charge.

… No author writes a dystopian apocalyptic doomsday book because he wants it to happen: Apart from anything else, the collapse of the banking system makes it hard to cash the royalty check. You write a doomsday book in hopes you can stop it happening.

But time is running short. If you think we've got until 2050 or 2025, you're part of the problem.

As readers know, I'm not convinced we even have the four years Steyn says we have (I think it's more like two or three), but Steyn is far closer to the truth than the Congressional Budget Office or most of the rest of Washington will admit.

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