- Joined
 - Jan 15, 2006
 
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In the final debate (which happily actually resembled one) Hillary Clinton asserted that she "will not add one penny to the debt".  While various fact-checkers agree that her policies would not increase the debt, several pointed out that even so, the standing obligations of the U.S. government will increase the national debt to something like $23 trillion during four years with her in office.
I find this unacceptable. For starters, it will just provide a political mudball to be flung around, continuing to assign blame wherever partisans like regardless of facts. The only way to avoid/escape that is to not merely not add to the debt with one's own policies, but to change existing policies sufficiently to not add to the debt at all, but to reduce it.
After reading articles from several pages of a web search about taxes and reducing the debt, I find that there is a definite consensus that the debt cannot be touched by spending cuts alone, that revenues have to be increased. So looking at what now seems the inevitability of a Clinton presidency, I am pressed to ask:
Can Hillary do what is needed to actually reduce the debt?
(I'm not going to mention any policies yet, just leave the question open).
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			I find this unacceptable. For starters, it will just provide a political mudball to be flung around, continuing to assign blame wherever partisans like regardless of facts. The only way to avoid/escape that is to not merely not add to the debt with one's own policies, but to change existing policies sufficiently to not add to the debt at all, but to reduce it.
After reading articles from several pages of a web search about taxes and reducing the debt, I find that there is a definite consensus that the debt cannot be touched by spending cuts alone, that revenues have to be increased. So looking at what now seems the inevitability of a Clinton presidency, I am pressed to ask:
Can Hillary do what is needed to actually reduce the debt?
(I'm not going to mention any policies yet, just leave the question open).


						














