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Bush acknowledges the collapsing US economy
Pravda ^ | today | Sergei Melinin

Posted on 08/13/2005 5:52:01 PM PDT by Rodney King

The US administration aims to spend $286 billion on the development of the American transport system

US President George W. Bush released a remarkable statement a short time ago. The remark has not been highlighted in the world media yet, although there is every reason to do so. Bush virtually acknowledged that the USA was experiencing a serious economic crisis. Moreover, the US government was taking immense efforts to avoid a massive outbreak of social uneasiness, the American president believes.

One may come to this conclusion from the newly-signed law about the development of the US transport system. The implementation of the law will cost tax-payers too much money. The US government plans to spend $286 billion on the implementation of the law during the forthcoming six years. Furthermore, Bush had to cut the costs of the law, which originally made up $400 billion. The US Treasury, however, will have to spend only $12.3 billion during ten years to guarantee the energy security and independence within the scope of the recently passed energy policy law. NASA's annual budget makes up $16 billion. Therefore, the sum of $400 billion makes a huge sum of money even from the point of view of American financial standards.

Passing such highly expensive laws is usually accompanied with heated debate, numerous changes and so on and so forth. This time, however, a bill was transformed into a law a lot earlier than usual. As it was supposed, 24 billion dollars were supposed to be used for governmental subsidies to the states, which will be fulfilling the projects of the law. Adversaries of the law said that congressmen and senators would most likely spend the money inappropriately, trying to insinuate their electorate. In addition, many protest against the unwillingness of the US Congress to control the state spending at the moment, when the budgetary shortage is to exceed the record-breaking $333 during the current year.

The law envisages 6,300 special projects in all states: bridges, highways, landscape accomplishment, snowmobile tracks, etc. Is it all so bad with the US infrastructure? George W. Bush released the key statement, which dotted all i's at this point: the law is meant to generate more jobs and give an incentive to the economic development of the USA.

The triumphant leader of the world's strongest superpower would never utter such words. The above-mentioned statements from the American president do not characterize the USA as a great empire. Quite on the contrary, the White House is desperately looking for measures to find employment for crowds of unemployed American citizens and hungry migrants, which threaten to enrage the rest of the States.

There were 9.3 million unemployed American citizens registered in the USA in 2004. The foreign trade shortage of the USA made up $617.73 billion in 2004, which became the record-breaking index for the USA. To crown it all, the US state debt reached unimaginable $7.22 trillion in 2004 too.

All optimistic reports about the rising US economy carry the short-term efficiency only - they are presumably destined to save the demising US dollar. Quarterly changes in the number of the unemployed by 100-200 thousand people do not change the general situation.

The USA has already faced such hard periods in its history. Taking a look back at the previous experience of the USA and estimating the new initiative of the American government, one may thus infer that the law about the transport system is like the last glimmer of hope for the US administration to keep the nation under control.

When massive unemployment put the USA on the brink of survival during the Great Depression of the thirties, the government started funding the development of the transport infrastructure - it became the only way out of the crisis. Highways, on which the government spent billions and billions of dollars, rescued the entire nation. It is worth mentioning that the value of the US dollar used to be lower during that time.

Here is another example, which bears some similarity to the present-day USA. When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, Germany was suffering from massive unemployment and helpless economy. Hitler mobilized thousands of the unemployed to build autobahns, which Germany is proud of still. The road construction gave a very powerful impetus to the revival of the German industry. Huge state investments triggered the industrial development, and Germany turned into one of the strongest European superpowers.

The White House is going along the same path now. However, there is a certain aspect, which distinguishes the USA from the above-mentioned examples. Both Hitler's Germany and the USA of the Great Depression period were raising their economies up from the bottom. Nowadays, the USA enjoys the peak of its triumphant development, which is currently being damaged with the flaws of the American economic system. The USA obviously has something to lose.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: bs; bush43; highwaybill; pork
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To: Rodney King
There's no news in Pravda.
41 posted on 08/13/2005 6:38:22 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (France is an example of retrograde chordate evolution.)
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To: Rodney King

Sounds like a retread to me.


42 posted on 08/13/2005 6:39:45 PM PDT by RGSpincich
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To: SuziQ
Typical PRAVDA.

Quit insulting Pravda.

43 posted on 08/13/2005 6:40:12 PM PDT by Euro-American Scum (A poverty-stricken middle class must be a disarmed middle class)
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To: Rodney King
Jesus!

If you don't have a freakin' story, make one up!
44 posted on 08/13/2005 6:40:29 PM PDT by ryan71 (Speak softly and carry a BIG STICK)
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To: satchmodog9

I think spending government $$ on highways is one of the best uses for taxpayer money. The money is going right back to the workers and transportation is key to a growing economy.


45 posted on 08/13/2005 6:41:54 PM PDT by zeebee
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To: somemoreequalthanothers

not to mention absorbing 11 million illegals aliens


46 posted on 08/13/2005 6:45:06 PM PDT by bdfromlv (Leavenworth hard time)
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To: somemoreequalthanothers

not to mention absorbing 11 million illegals aliens


47 posted on 08/13/2005 6:45:37 PM PDT by bdfromlv (Leavenworth hard time)
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To: kittymyrib
"No need to send us CARE packages, Sergei. Our biggest problem among the "poor" in the US is obesity."

LOL

In the article:
"There were 9.3 million unemployed American citizens..."

Hey Putin, there are 300 million people in the US, plus legal aliens working under the table, and only 9.3 million can't find a job. Doesn't sound so bad.

This article is straight up Soviet propaganda.
48 posted on 08/13/2005 6:49:47 PM PDT by JeffersonRepublic.com
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To: Rodney King
This writer is a knucklehead, even by Pravda standards.

His distortions of facts will not convince anyone not limited to his brand of "reporting" that the U.S. economy is on a similar path as Russia's disastrous experiment.

It might, however, get him for a job with the New York Times.

49 posted on 08/13/2005 6:52:39 PM PDT by TheClintons-STILLAnti-American
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To: JeffersonRepublic.com
Hey Putin, there are 300 million people in the US, plus legal aliens working under the table, and only 9.3 million can't find a job. Doesn't sound so bad.

And 8 million of those would not work unless you put a gun to their head.

50 posted on 08/13/2005 6:54:44 PM PDT by Always Right
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To: zeebee
While I agree that it is a good way to spend taxpayer money, there is still so much waste and theft involved. Road projects are over bid and given to politically connected companies. Roads are made of substandard materials that wear out almost at the same time a five year too long project is completed. Road closings due to construction cause more economic damage due to traffic jams that may harm local business and create more traffic in areas that get run off from alternate routes being taken by commuters. People wind up sitting in traffic for hours at a time wasting fuel and valuable time while waiting for a project to be completed. Road work is one of the biggest scams our governments burn us with each year. It is a necessary part of keeping the economy rolling, but it should be done in a more taxpayer and driver friendly manner.
51 posted on 08/13/2005 7:00:17 PM PDT by satchmodog9 (Murder and weather are our only news)
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To: Rodney King
Of course, the author does not understand the nature of Pork,

of course much of it is Pork and the political muggers wouldn't be doing their job if it wasn't but it can't be denied that it also can be seen as 'priming the pump' ..................

52 posted on 08/13/2005 7:06:19 PM PDT by varon (Allegiance to the constitution, always. Allegiance to a political party, never.)
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To: Rodney King
Shows complete incomprehension of his subject matter. He doesn't know the size of the US economy, let alone its state. Nor the budget of the US government, its role in the US economy, or the long tradition of transportation pork barrel spending etc. Just incredibly provincial and stupid.
53 posted on 08/13/2005 7:08:49 PM PDT by JasonC
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To: LA Conservative

No wonder. The LA Times is disgustingly recognized as the Pravda of the Pacific by those who have been exposed to it's filth long enough.


54 posted on 08/13/2005 7:24:10 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (US socialist liberalism would be dead without the help of politicians who claim to be conservative.)
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To: Rodney King; All

"... Bush virtually acknowledged that the USA was experiencing a serious economic crisis."


Let me tell you people .. if our President had made such a statement .. the leftist media would have been all over it and it would have been front page news.


55 posted on 08/13/2005 7:31:16 PM PDT by CyberAnt (President Bush: "America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth")
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To: Rodney King; All

The primary thing to take note of is how much Pravda has devolved back to its USSR mode.

I always thought Gorbechev had it half-right. He needed to develop the political infrastructure for Democracy and a multi-party system, not from the ashes of the old system but as part of a systemic dismantling of it. He knew what few westerners knew or understood. Take away the party and the structure of it's people in government and the only two groups that would remain intact and organized would be the KGB and the Russian mobs, the criminal underground. That criminal underground was always there, supported by the KGB and needed - to supply the grease to make life bearable for those who had the power or the means to pay.

Those two groups, the mob and the KGB, chafed somewhat under Yeltsin but outmanuevered him in the end. Putin is totally a KGB mobster of the first order and he has extended the hold that the two groups wield on the economics and politics of Russia today. I call it a mobocracy. The KGB is the mob's political enforcers, through Putin and the mob is the KGB's economic dictators, through the criminal oligarchs alligned with Putin. The country is run by and for their duopoly.

Russia seems locked in a czarist mode. It just changes the external appearance and features of it.


56 posted on 08/13/2005 8:34:19 PM PDT by Wuli
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To: Rodney King


Me thinks that Sergei got too much sun standing outside in the bread line.


57 posted on 08/13/2005 9:03:21 PM PDT by UglyinLA
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To: Rodney King

Pravda, hmmmm..... I thought I was reading the usual fare from the NY Times, WaPo, etc. Interesting how our MSM and Pravda are so much alike....


58 posted on 08/13/2005 9:29:12 PM PDT by Enchante (Kerry's mere nuisances: Marine Barracks '83, WTC '93, Khobar Towers, Embassy Bombs '98, USS Cole!!!)
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To: Rodney King

If it makes the people reading that paper feel better about their pathetic situation, fine.

Realize that a socialist lives in a literal imaginary alternate reality. He has too! Otherwise he can’t accept that pseudo-religion he believes in.

Red6


59 posted on 08/13/2005 9:37:46 PM PDT by Red6
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To: All
Projection: When someone is threatened by or afraid of their own impulses so they attribute these impulses to someone else.
60 posted on 08/13/2005 9:38:04 PM PDT by True_wesT
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