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  #1  
Old 08-12-2005, 02:48 PM
jokerswild jokerswild is offline
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Posts: 180
Default So you are on a 3 trillion losing streak?

The Neocon solution?
Steal the money from the working staff!

Try that at your local B+M the next time that probability cracks your Aces and Kings!
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  #2  
Old 08-12-2005, 03:13 PM
bobman0330 bobman0330 is offline
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Posts: 52
Default Re: So you are on a 3 trillion losing streak?

good post
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  #3  
Old 08-12-2005, 05:05 PM
FishHooks FishHooks is offline
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Default Re: So you are on a 3 trillion losing streak?

I'm not getting this....
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  #4  
Old 08-12-2005, 05:37 PM
adios adios is offline
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Posts: 2,298
Default Federal Deficit for July Narrowed As Revenue Hit Record for Month

He's just ticked about this in particular:

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

and this in general.

Federal Deficit for July Narrowed
As Revenue Hit Record for Month

By DEBORAH LAGOMARSINO
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
August 11, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Buoyed by record revenues, the federal government ran a monthly budget deficit of $52.79 billion in July, down from $69.16 billion a year earlier, the Treasury Department said.

Last month's deficit was smaller than the Congressional Budget Office's projection for a $58 billion budget gap and was the smallest for that month since 2002. A budget surplus in June was unrevised at $22.43 billion.

Receipts totaled $142.09 billion in July, the most ever for that month, up 5.7% from $134.42 billion a year earlier, but down from $234.81 billion the previous month.

Outlays totaled $194.88 billion in July, down 4.3% from $203.58 billion a year ago and down from $212.38 billion the previous month, Treasury said.

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

CBO has said the fiscal 2005 budget deficit will be significantly less than $350 billion and possibly below $325 billion. CBO will issue updated budget projections Aug. 15. The White House has projected the budget gap this year will narrow to $333 billion from a record $412 billion last year.

So far this fiscal year, the government has taken in more receipts than it did at this point in fiscal 2004, but it has also spent more so far this fiscal year than at this point in the previous fiscal year. Individual income tax receipts totaled $756.13 billion in fiscal 2005 through July, up 15.1% from $656.98 billion at this point in fiscal 2004.

The government in July paid $15.76 billion in net interest on the federal debt. Net interest excludes interest paid on nonmarketable government securities held by federal trust funds, such as Social Security. The government has paid $156.52 billion in net interest on the federal debt so far this fiscal year, up from $139.39 billion at this point last year.
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  #5  
Old 08-12-2005, 05:46 PM
TomCollins TomCollins is offline
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Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 172
Default Re: Federal Deficit for July Narrowed As Revenue Hit Record for Month

What you expect the government to turn a profit every year?
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  #6  
Old 08-12-2005, 05:46 PM
bobman0330 bobman0330 is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 52
Default Re: Federal Deficit for July Narrowed As Revenue Hit Record for Month

Even in light of this article, the OP makes no sense. Except for the (poor) AA and KK analogy (part of it), i don't think there's a single sentence or phrase that is the least bit coherent.
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  #7  
Old 08-13-2005, 12:07 AM
TransientR TransientR is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: NJ
Posts: 0
Default Re: Federal Deficit for July Narrowed As Revenue Hit Record for Month

[ QUOTE ]
He's just ticked about this in particular:

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

and this in general.

Federal Deficit for July Narrowed
As Revenue Hit Record for Month

By DEBORAH LAGOMARSINO
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
August 11, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Buoyed by record revenues, the federal government ran a monthly budget deficit of $52.79 billion in July, down from $69.16 billion a year earlier, the Treasury Department said.

Last month's deficit was smaller than the Congressional Budget Office's projection for a $58 billion budget gap and was the smallest for that month since 2002. A budget surplus in June was unrevised at $22.43 billion.

Receipts totaled $142.09 billion in July, the most ever for that month, up 5.7% from $134.42 billion a year earlier, but down from $234.81 billion the previous month.

Outlays totaled $194.88 billion in July, down 4.3% from $203.58 billion a year ago and down from $212.38 billion the previous month, Treasury said.

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

CBO has said the fiscal 2005 budget deficit will be significantly less than $350 billion and possibly below $325 billion. CBO will issue updated budget projections Aug. 15. The White House has projected the budget gap this year will narrow to $333 billion from a record $412 billion last year.

So far this fiscal year, the government has taken in more receipts than it did at this point in fiscal 2004, but it has also spent more so far this fiscal year than at this point in the previous fiscal year. Individual income tax receipts totaled $756.13 billion in fiscal 2005 through July, up 15.1% from $656.98 billion at this point in fiscal 2004.

The government in July paid $15.76 billion in net interest on the federal debt. Net interest excludes interest paid on nonmarketable government securities held by federal trust funds, such as Social Security. The government has paid $156.52 billion in net interest on the federal debt so far this fiscal year, up from $139.39 billion at this point last year.


[/ QUOTE ]

What a record of success!

Hope China and Japan don't call our markers [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]

Frank
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  #8  
Old 08-15-2005, 04:37 PM
ptmusic ptmusic is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 513
Default Re: Federal Deficit for July Narrowed As Revenue Hit Record for Month

[ QUOTE ]
He's just ticked about this in particular:

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

and this in general.

Federal Deficit for July Narrowed
As Revenue Hit Record for Month

By DEBORAH LAGOMARSINO
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
August 11, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Buoyed by record revenues, the federal government ran a monthly budget deficit of $52.79 billion in July, down from $69.16 billion a year earlier, the Treasury Department said.

Last month's deficit was smaller than the Congressional Budget Office's projection for a $58 billion budget gap and was the smallest for that month since 2002. A budget surplus in June was unrevised at $22.43 billion.

Receipts totaled $142.09 billion in July, the most ever for that month, up 5.7% from $134.42 billion a year earlier, but down from $234.81 billion the previous month.

Outlays totaled $194.88 billion in July, down 4.3% from $203.58 billion a year ago and down from $212.38 billion the previous month, Treasury said.

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

CBO has said the fiscal 2005 budget deficit will be significantly less than $350 billion and possibly below $325 billion. CBO will issue updated budget projections Aug. 15. The White House has projected the budget gap this year will narrow to $333 billion from a record $412 billion last year.

So far this fiscal year, the government has taken in more receipts than it did at this point in fiscal 2004, but it has also spent more so far this fiscal year than at this point in the previous fiscal year. Individual income tax receipts totaled $756.13 billion in fiscal 2005 through July, up 15.1% from $656.98 billion at this point in fiscal 2004.

The government in July paid $15.76 billion in net interest on the federal debt. Net interest excludes interest paid on nonmarketable government securities held by federal trust funds, such as Social Security. The government has paid $156.52 billion in net interest on the federal debt so far this fiscal year, up from $139.39 billion at this point last year.


[/ QUOTE ]

Thanks for the info. Do you have the deficit numbers from the years prior to GWB's presidency?

I'm glad we're all learning something here!

-ptmusic
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  #9  
Old 08-15-2005, 04:50 PM
ptmusic ptmusic is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 513
Default Re: So you are on a 3 trillion losing streak?

The best thing to do when the cards (major issues) are running bad, your stack (popularity) is way way down, and you want to avoid completely ruining your entire bankroll (country):

get up out of your seat and give someone else a chance.

-ptmusic
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  #10  
Old 08-15-2005, 05:44 PM
hetron hetron is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 175
Default Re: Federal Deficit for July Narrowed As Revenue Hit Record for Month

[ QUOTE ]
He's just ticked about this in particular:

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

and this in general.

Federal Deficit for July Narrowed
As Revenue Hit Record for Month

By DEBORAH LAGOMARSINO
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
August 11, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Buoyed by record revenues, the federal government ran a monthly budget deficit of $52.79 billion in July, down from $69.16 billion a year earlier, the Treasury Department said.

Last month's deficit was smaller than the Congressional Budget Office's projection for a $58 billion budget gap and was the smallest for that month since 2002. A budget surplus in June was unrevised at $22.43 billion.

Receipts totaled $142.09 billion in July, the most ever for that month, up 5.7% from $134.42 billion a year earlier, but down from $234.81 billion the previous month.

Outlays totaled $194.88 billion in July, down 4.3% from $203.58 billion a year ago and down from $212.38 billion the previous month, Treasury said.

For the first 10 months of fiscal 2005, the U.S. government is running a $302.59 billion deficit, much smaller than the $396.32 billion deficit the U.S. was running at this point in fiscal 2004. The current fiscal year ends Sept. 30.

CBO has said the fiscal 2005 budget deficit will be significantly less than $350 billion and possibly below $325 billion. CBO will issue updated budget projections Aug. 15. The White House has projected the budget gap this year will narrow to $333 billion from a record $412 billion last year.

So far this fiscal year, the government has taken in more receipts than it did at this point in fiscal 2004, but it has also spent more so far this fiscal year than at this point in the previous fiscal year. Individual income tax receipts totaled $756.13 billion in fiscal 2005 through July, up 15.1% from $656.98 billion at this point in fiscal 2004.

The government in July paid $15.76 billion in net interest on the federal debt. Net interest excludes interest paid on nonmarketable government securities held by federal trust funds, such as Social Security. The government has paid $156.52 billion in net interest on the federal debt so far this fiscal year, up from $139.39 billion at this point last year.


[/ QUOTE ]

It's still not a profit. And the more of a deficit we have, the more of a debt we have, and the more interest we have to pay on that debt...right?
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