Sovereign Debt

Have you ever considered that it would be cheaper for Texas to assume the sovereign debt from the days of the Confederation than to continue with the mountain of debt foisted on us by tax and spend Congressmen? Have you ever considered that your money now goes to pay off Egypt and Israel with the Dayton Peace Accord? President Carter called it a “Peace Accord”, when in reality, the two nations were bought off by the US and paid not to fight any more. We can not afford such foreign policy. Buying off other nations with our taxes is not wise. It is not ‘true’ peace. You are also paying for abortions, bailing out financially irresponsible banks, and paying for numerous vacations being taken by people who hate you and want to control every aspect of your life they can.

Sovereign debt is important. The loans that the government takes out in your name means that you are on the hook for the note. The empire knows how important sovereign debt is. That is one reason why they forced the Southern States to repudiate their debt soon after they occupied the South. Bear in mind that in law, any action that was coerced is of questionable validity. The Southern States could force secession by repudiating the United States debt and resuming the debts of the Confederate government. This may sound outrageous, but how many of you have repudiated the debts of a wife or husband as part of a divorce? This is taking repudiation to a larger scale.

The assumption of the Confederate debt would automatically give us a credit rating and a debt that we could pay off easier than we could the current US debt. I wonder how many of the current US spending policies and debt obligations did you actually approve of? How many did you have any say in? How many did Congress have any say about?

There is also the joy of knowing that the O-regime would have to answer to China for all the debt they have to pay when the most prosperous region leaves them.

Think about it.

Liberty for Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati ,
Be Sociable, Share!
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

0 Responses to “Sovereign Debt”


  1. No Comments

Leave a Reply

You must login to post a comment.