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To: kcvl

Well, I hope comrade zero and the scumbag dhims are happy, they are getting what they wanted.


2 posted on 07/13/2011 2:44:10 PM PDT by mapmaker77
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To: mapmaker77
Well the GOP will cave for sure now..
5 posted on 07/13/2011 2:45:24 PM PDT by Hojczyk
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To: mapmaker77
Well, I hope comrade zero and the scumbag dhims are happy, they are getting what they wanted.

I would bet anything that Obama & Company pressured and pushed for this.

Anything.

They want this so that they can say, "See? See what'll happen if you don't raise the ceiling?"

30 posted on 07/13/2011 3:28:19 PM PDT by mountainbunny
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To: mapmaker77

Moody’s Investors Service said Wednesday it has put the U.S. government’s top-notch credit rating on review for a possible downgrade because of the risk that Washington will not raise the federal debt ceiling in time to avoid a default.

The firm added that even a brief failure of the government to pay its bills would mean that the United States’s Aaa rating “would likely no longer be appropriate.”

The announcement comes after Standard & Poor’s, another of the major credit rating agencies, has said that it would dramatically downgrade the U.S. government’s credit rating if payments were missed.

The U.S. has long been able to borrow money cheaply because global investors believe the government can be counted on to repay its debts. If credit rating agencies downgrade the U.S. and investors lose their faith in the creditworthiness of the government, the cost of borrowing money — in other words, the interest rate — could rise.

The Treasury Department has said that on Aug. 2, it will run out of legal tools to meet the government’s financial obligations in the absence of an agreement to raise the $14.3 trillion legal limit on how much debt the government can maintain.

The Moody’s review is prompted by “the possibility that the debt limit will not be raised in time to prevent a missed payment of interest or principal on outstanding bonds and notes,” an announcement from the firm said Wednesday. “Moody’s considers the probability of a default on interest payments to be low but no longer to be de minimis.”

It added that an actual default, or failure by the federal government to pay its bills, “would fundamentally alter Moody’s assessment of the timeliness of future payments.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/moodys-moves-one-step-closer-to-downgrading-us-debt/2011/07/13/gIQAPRUyCI_story.html


36 posted on 07/13/2011 3:36:14 PM PDT by kcvl
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