• 5 months ago
In a fiery speech on the House floor, Rep. David Schweikert (R-AZ) denounced the level of government spending, and lamented the massive amount of national debt the US has accrued.

Fuel your success with Forbes. Gain unlimited access to premium journalism, including breaking news, groundbreaking in-depth reported stories, daily digests and more. Plus, members get a front-row seat at members-only events with leading thinkers and doers, access to premium video that can help you get ahead, an ad-light experience, early access to select products including NFT drops and more:

https://account.forbes.com/membership/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=growth_non-sub_paid_subscribe_ytdescript


Stay Connected
Forbes on Facebook: http://fb.com/forbes
Forbes Video on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/forbes
Forbes Video on Instagram: http://instagram.com/forbes
More From Forbes: http://forbes.com

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00Mr. Speaker, and to my friend from Missouri, thank you.
00:07Actually, sometimes I come behind these microphones and often what I want to share, what I need
00:12to share, it's my therapy, is a bit dour, and it's sometimes fun to listen to someone
00:19that actually has happy and joyous.
00:21All right, now that the uplifting portion of this program is over, let's get to the
00:25facts.
00:26Mr. Speaker, or now Madam Speaker pro tem, you see the number, $35 trillion, guess when
00:36we hit it?
00:38We should be very, very excited and proud of ourselves.
00:42We did something that so many economists said we would never get to this quick.
00:47My math says this coming Friday, 3 p.m., the United States gross debt will cross over
00:55$35 trillion.
00:58Now understand, that's not the way Europeans calculate our debt, which they calculate our
01:03debt dramatically higher because of our obligated, unfunded liabilities.
01:07But you're going to watch the Treasury Friday about 3 p.m. post up a number, $35 trillion.
01:16We did it, congratulations.
01:23And how many people have you heard come find the microphone today or this week understanding
01:29wanting to talk about that?
01:31What we've gotten is people coming behind the microphone and not telling the truth.
01:36We all want to protect Social Security.
01:38The way you protect Social Security is you know the math and how it actually works.
01:47We're on track in a decade to double senior poverty.
01:51But God forbid any of us tell the truth about math.
01:58Because the truth gets you unelected and a bunch of really angry ads at home.
02:04So this place runs around and avoids telling the truth.
02:08So let's walk through another little factoid.
02:12My math basically says this year, 45.68% of all the income tax collections, receipts your
02:26government takes in just cover the cost of interest.
02:32I'd been coming behind the microphone and saying a interest in 2024 this fiscal year
02:37would be somewhere around a little less than $1.2 trillion.
02:41I apparently have that wrong.
02:43It's probably going to come in about $1,140,000,000,000 to $60,000,000,000.
02:49Either way, I'm off a fraction.
02:53But 45.68% of every dime we're collecting in your income tax now just pays interest.
03:06And I've tried to say over and over and over at home and other places, and you get people
03:11just stare at you go, huh?
03:14Who really runs this government?
03:16Seriously, it's an honest question.
03:20I need you to think like adults, maybe those who actually went to a finance class, who
03:26actually now runs this government.
03:29I'm going to argue the debt markets, the bond markets from around the world.
03:32If you have to bring almost $10 trillion to market this fiscal year, two, two and a quarter
03:39trillion virgin new issues because we're borrowing, it's like $75,000 to $80,000 a second right
03:45now.
03:46And the economy is good.
03:49The actual baseline data on GDP is good.
03:52And you're still burning almost $80,000 a second and borrowing.
03:58What happens the second you have a US debt auction that's undersubscribed or there's
04:04not enough people there?
04:05What happens to US interest rates?
04:06How much of the world goes into depression?
04:10But we're going to talk about that.
04:11Oh, God, no, no, no, because that would require math that require being serious.
04:18You know, we passed a bill here earlier today, I voted no on it.
04:23And look, they worked hard on it, they lowered the top line spending, but you got to deal
04:28with a really uncomfortable discussion.
04:32Every dime a member of Congress votes on is borrowed.
04:35Okay, let's process that.
04:40Every dime a member of Congress votes on is borrowed and depending on some of the projections,
04:46that's about a quarter of Medicare.
04:50Social Security has its own trust fund, it runs out in like nine, 10 years.
04:53And then we got to figure out what's going to happen there.
04:55And we can continue to get Democrats coming behind the microphone and lying about it,
05:00which makes it almost impossible to actually lay out the math and try to fix it.
05:04And remember, raising the cap, doing the Democrats plan of $400,000 up and just raising the cap
05:10only covers about 38% of the shortfall.
05:16You had the president in that debate last month saying, if we just tax rich people 1%
05:24more, and I brought I have a chart in here will show it's a fraction of a fraction of
05:28a fraction of the shortfall.
05:30Remember, if you take $400,000 and up the Democrats definition of rich, and you tax
05:36them at 12.4%, you only cover 38% of the shortfall.
05:40So 1%.
05:42And this is the nature of our discussion.
05:50When every dime a member of Congress votes on is borrowed.
05:55Is it moral to borrow money here, to send it to entities around the country, even though
06:02their programs, many of them I love, I think they're the right thing.
06:07I just think the way we finance it isn't.
06:10Is it right to send them cash to that city to that state to that county, and they have
06:16their own taxing authority, they may have more cash in the bank than we do as a percentage.
06:22Do you borrow money because that's what we're doing today we're borrowing money.
06:26And the crazy thing when you do the adjustment for the ability for interest to be tax exempt
06:32from municipal debt.
06:34We have municipalities in this country that have a better credit rating, have a better
06:40credit rating than the United States.
06:42Remember Greece can sell a 10 year bond cheaper than the United States today.
06:48We are number 14 on the credit stack, meaning there's 13 other countries that can sell a
06:5310 year bond cheaper than the United States.
06:56And if you read the instruments, if you read the Moody's, the S&P's, their documents and
07:01the reps and warrants and and their analysis on US debt.
07:06They don't trust this place.
07:10They do not believe Congress, particularly because it's our job, we're supposed to be
07:15the adults in the room, we make policy, the White House carries it out.
07:20Remember that little thing the Constitution, maybe someone tried reading it.
07:25And they don't trust us, they don't, and they have no reason to trust us.
07:29How much discussion have you heard anyone who's been listening to these microphones
07:32this week?
07:34Heard people like me, which maybe I'm just an idiot for actually giving a damn.
07:42Get behind these microphones and actually walk through the math and explain there's
07:47a way we keep our our promises.
07:50There's a way we meet our obligation for the earned benefits.
07:54There's a way to make this work.
07:56You don't have a lot more time to keep screwing around.
07:59But if you do it in the next three, four years, this is another American century.
08:04I have my eight-year-old sitting over here.
08:06I also have a two-year-old.
08:09My wife's exactly my age.
08:10Yes, I'm pathologically optimistic.
08:15The math says her generation will be the first generation to live poorer than her parents.
08:23Great morality, guys.
08:25Very proud of us.
08:31And anyone who listens to my diatribes here, thank you.
08:34I think this is almost like my therapy session because I get angry all week long listening
08:41to absurdity and people saying things that mathematically have no basis in fact.
08:48One hundred percent of the debt, and this makes everyone angry, and it's factual.
08:54One hundred percent of the U.S. debt from today through the next 30 years is demographics.
09:00Huh?
09:02What's demographics?
09:05And this is your country's leadership.
09:07It's demographics.
09:09We got old as a society and we didn't set aside the resources to keep our promises.
09:13And since 1990, U.S. fertility has been falling.
09:17I won't use the word collapsing.
09:18But last year, we estimate 2023, 1.63%, maybe 1.62% fertility, meaning the United States
09:27now has fewer children than much of Europe.
09:33Now tell me how I build a pay-as-you-go system to keep our promises to those who paid into
09:39Social Security, those who paid into Medicare.
09:41And remember, the Medicare taxes you pay only cover about 38-40%.
09:49And there is, and okay, oh what the hell, why don't we do this right now?
09:55Social Security does not add to the U.S. debt, technically.
10:00But the paying back the money that was borrowed from the Social Security trust fund does.
10:07So there's some $3 trillion-some dollars that have been borrowed out.
10:11And for the last few years, every month, there's not enough tax collections coming in on the
10:17FICA tax at 12.4% to make the payments to Social Security recipients.
10:22So every month, I want you just to visualize this, Social Security says, hey, Treasury,
10:28I'm holding a bunch of your bonds.
10:30You owe us some money.
10:31And they cash them in.
10:32And Treasury goes and borrows money.
10:36And pays interest.
10:38And pays interest for that borrowed money.
10:41So Social Security doesn't create the debt, but Treasury does, because Treasury has to
10:45go out and borrow money to pay back the money they've taken out of the Social Security trust
10:49fund.
10:55And if you add it all up, plus interest, and forgive me, I'm partially doing this off
11:04the top of my head.
11:05I calculate maybe $6 trillion, three plus in principle, and then over the time the interest
11:12paid back, it's probably another three.
11:17How many times have you had anyone just try to be honest about it?
11:21It's not Republican math.
11:22It's not Democrat math.
11:23It's just math to be avoided because we're terrified of our voters to tell them the truth
11:28because we've lied to them for so long.
11:31How many times have you had a Democrat go around here and say, if we just tax rich people
11:35more, I've done entire presentations here, and for those on the Republican side, if we
11:42just cut discretionary spending, well, dammit, I can come up with about $300 billion in discretionary
11:49can be cut down.
11:50They'll be screaming.
11:52But that's still 1% of GDP.
11:54And for the Democrats, every tax hike they genuinely propose that could be executed when
12:00you adjust it for its economic effects would be about 1.5% of GDP.
12:05So you've got 1.5% there on tax hikes.
12:07You've got 1% in cuts over here.
12:09Hey, it's a big 2.5%, right?
12:12Right?
12:132.5%.
12:14We're borrowing 7% of the entire economy this year.
12:21Great job, guys.
12:25And I guess part of my anger is I love some of the people I work with here.
12:30They're smart.
12:31They care.
12:32But they run away from me when they see me coming because I want to talk about this stuff.
12:36This chart is the pie chart of America's spending.
12:40Do you see this number?
12:4274% is in the red.
12:44The red doesn't get a vote from a member of Congress.
12:47That is on autopilot.
12:49It's called mandatory.
12:51It's earned benefits.
12:53Some of the benefits you get because you're part of a certain tribal group or you fall
12:56below a certain income.
12:58But this is earned.
12:59You see the blue?
13:00It's defense and non-defense.
13:04Every dime of defense is borrowed.
13:08Every dime of what we call non-defense discretionary is borrowed.
13:12And a wedge of this over here is borrowed.
13:15And when you see over here when we say net interest, I've tried to explain.
13:19The difference between net interest and gross interest.
13:23Net interest this year will be $892 billion.
13:30That's interest we pay to people out in the world.
13:34Your pension fund, a nice family on the other side of the world, the union retirement fund
13:41over here.
13:42They buy U.S. debt.
13:45The other debt is we owe to the trust funds.
13:49We've borrowed the money from the trust funds.
13:51But we still have to pay it back.
13:53We still have to pay it interest.
13:56So it's one of the great cons we do in our budgeting here is, well, it's gross interest
14:01is only $890 billion, Schweikart.
14:04Why do you keep going around saying $1.2 trillion interest just this year?
14:08It's because that other chunk of interest, we've got to pay.
14:14And we're going to have to pay back the principal, just as I just did the explanation on how
14:18Social Security works.
14:19So once again, if you're a member of Congress and you're doing a town hall or putting out
14:24something and you're not showing this chart, you're not helping our brothers and sisters
14:33across the country understand how serious this election is.
14:39How serious putting people in office that stop pandering to your need for a dopamine
14:45hit in your brain, but maybe own a calculator.
14:50Once again, I can make this math work.
14:54But you don't pretend we can tax rich people.
14:58We can just cut our way there.
15:00You may have to do a bit of both of those.
15:02But it's policy.
15:05I've done presentation after presentation after presentation on how you could crash
15:09health care, how you could adopt artificial intelligence to reduce the size of this government
15:13dramatically and still have better customer service.
15:18How the mechanics of talent-based immigration could actually grow the economy, but shutting
15:23down the borders, stopping importing competition to our working poor, making our working poor
15:30poor.
15:33But you've got to think like an economist.
15:35And the idiot, the folks here want to talk down to you, talk to you like you're a child
15:43and say, well, if we just did this, we'd be fine.
15:47It doesn't work that way.
15:49We are now so upside down debt-wise that unless you do something that's holistic with lots
15:55of moving parts, none of the math works.
16:00And we're uncomfortable telling that truth.
16:02So let's actually walk through a board I don't think I've ever shown before.
16:07Fiscal year 2024.
16:09Here's sort of where we're at to date.
16:13We've taken in $3,755,000,000,000.
16:19Do you see the red here?
16:21The red is the individual income tax.
16:24Your country is an income tax-based economic system where other countries may rely more
16:30on a value-added tax, which is a really regressive tax, crushes potentially the middle class.
16:39The blue over here, when you start to look at that, this is functionally, we call it
16:44social insurance and retirement programs and Social Security.
16:47Well, that's actually going out the door immediately.
16:51And we have to borrow some to cover it.
16:53The blue over here, well, that's actually corporate income taxes.
16:59Remember the United States back in about the late 80s, early 90s, we changed much of
17:05our corporate tax structure when we started having pass-throughs.
17:09Do you remember LLCs, subchapter Ss, partnerships, those things?
17:14So much of what is corporate activity in the United States flows through to that individual
17:19tax line.
17:21So when you get the brain trust here, it says, we're just going to raise corporate taxes.
17:25Great.
17:26Okay.
17:28And that's going to solve something?
17:30Remember, and we're trying to vet the paper I got the math from, but we have a paper from
17:38about a year, year and a half ago, that said in the 2017 tax reform we did, 67% of the
17:48corporate tax rate reduction went to wages.
17:54So when you have someone from the left who runs around here saying, we're going to raise
17:56corporate taxes, what they're doing is basically screwing over the working men and women of
18:02the country.
18:03That's how it works.
18:07When your wages go up, the old saying used to be it's inflation, well, that doesn't get
18:13you anything, or it's productivity because you built a tax code that said we can afford
18:18to buy the next better piece of equipment.
18:20We can build better processes.
18:22We can build better supply chains.
18:23We're becoming more productive, and you as a worker get part of that.
18:27But part of that productivity also is a tax system that maximizes economic vitality.
18:33Economic growth is moral.
18:36If you want to have fewer poor people in your society, if you want to close income inequality,
18:42you do it not through transfer payments.
18:44We have data over data over data that many of the transfer payments at the end of the
18:48decade make people poorer because you disassociate them, their lives from being part of the society,
18:55part of work.
18:57So the secret is have an economy that grows, that needs them.
19:03It's getting economics right is moral.
19:06But this is the reality.
19:08When you get people, when we start talking about, do you see these tiny little wedges
19:13there?
19:14Well, that's excise taxes.
19:16Some will think of it as tariffs.
19:18When you actually see some miscellaneous, your society is functionally financed.
19:23Income tax, this is FICA, and this is corporate.
19:34Mark my words, I'll probably be long gone from this place.
19:39What the Democrats are doing policy-wise, and honestly, the Republicans' unwillingness
19:43to actually do tough things, into this decade, you're going to all be having a discussion
19:49of having a national VAT, value-added tax, just like the rest of the world.
19:55And all the crap discussion of, well, it's not progressive enough.
20:00It's regressive.
20:01It hurts working men and women.
20:02Working men and women are getting their heads kicked in because it's the only way you can
20:08start to confiscate enough resources from people.
20:11So let's actually talk through.
20:12Let's knock down some of the craziness that keeps being said around here.
20:16This is a brand-new chart for me, U.S. fiscal dynamics, now and then.
20:20And we're going to go way back.
20:22Let's actually do the previous, from 1984 to 2023, and then current.
20:30Our tax revenues are up.
20:33We're taking in more receipts.
20:35Technically, they're not revenues.
20:37Revenues are what you earn.
20:39Receipts are what you confiscate.
20:40So just a bit of tax lingo there.
20:43But it's our spending.
20:44You see tax receipts are up, but our spending is way up.
20:49And when you see the white line over here, deficits, it's just basically the derivative
20:55of, hey, tax receipts are up, but we're spending faster than those receipts are going up.
21:01Therefore, you get a deficit.
21:04If you get someone who says, well, those 2017 tax cuts, no, tax receipts are up.
21:13I have another chart.
21:14I'm going to show you corporate tax rates, or corporate tax collections.
21:18Don't think about the rate.
21:19It's about what you take in, are actually above the mean.
21:28And how much of this spending is the Orwellian-named Inflation Reduction Act?
21:35So the Democrats lost their mind when we did 2017 tax reform.
21:40Remember, it was actually a few trillion dollars, five, five and a half, five and a half trillion.
21:48But functionally, four of it were also covered with direct taxes.
21:52We just moved things around to maximize productivity.
21:56It was about getting companies to move back to the United States, move their organizations,
22:00their intellectual property, the things they were making money on.
22:03Get them back to the United States.
22:05We had to become competitive in the world again.
22:07The other trillion and a half, well, that's actually, oh, the Democrats, that's the driver
22:11of the debt.
22:12No, it's not.
22:13Because it turns out it wasn't a trillion and a half.
22:15The latest data is almost $900 billion of that has been covered by the economic growth.
22:22Yet, when the Democrats controlled this place in the last session, they dropped $2 trillion
22:29in subsidies, handouts to big business.
22:36And all that's borrowed money.
22:40How many people, when was the last time you had a reporter that actually covered any of
22:43this fairly?
22:44How many, when was the last time you met a reporter that owned a calculator?
22:47Public has no understanding what's going on out there.
22:52And I keep trying to provide this chart over and over.
22:55This is U.S. government revenues.
22:58The sign should say receipts.
22:59This is mislabeled.
23:01Green, individual income taxes.
23:04Remember, we're mostly an individual income tax country.
23:07When you see spikes like this, this is the dot-com bubble of functionally 1999 or 2000,
23:162001.
23:17Dot-coms.
23:18That's capital gains.
23:20This spike here, that's actually functioning people were getting lots of COVID money.
23:26So it was direct spend from the federal government.
23:28We borrowed it, gave it to them, they had to pay taxes on it.
23:32This line here, the blue, that's FICA taxes.
23:36That's your Social Security, that's your Medicare.
23:37Very stable.
23:39Down here, this is corporate taxes.
23:41Do you see the line?
23:43Remember, this is the regime of the new corporate tax rate since 2017.
23:49Tax receipts, the actual tax dollars are up.
23:53And it's above the mean of the last couple decades.
24:01You need vitality.
24:04You need dynamism.
24:07And there's, look, there's lots of things we could do policy-wise.
24:09The United States is becoming a bit more oligopoly.
24:13So many of our businesses are becoming far too big and far too protectionist.
24:17But that's government.
24:18Government likes big organizations because they're easier to manipulate to get them to
24:22do what they want.
24:23Hey, here's a subsidy.
24:26Wink wink, nod nod, engage in our social policy, engage in our political policy, and we're
24:32going to hand you billions.
24:34Instead of what you do when you do tax reform, everyone, knife fight, battle it out.
24:39The best product, the most dynamic company, the one that moves fastest, the most innovative,
24:44wins.
24:45That's the way an American economy, a market economy is supposed to work.
24:49Instead now you have a, and you'll actually have our brothers and sisters on the left
24:53here actually go behind these microphones and use, our industrial policy is this.
25:00Our planned economy is this.
25:02God, I keep waiting for them to build a five-year plan and hold up the little red cards.
25:09You don't get that reference, go look it up.
25:13So, this is the driver of the debt.
25:21Remember I showed you tax receipts are up, but our spending is up more.
25:27Well, where's that spending?
25:29It's in what we call mandatory.
25:32In many ways, this isn't Republican or Democrat.
25:35It's what we are as a society.
25:38We calculate in about 10 years, 22, 23% of our population will be 65 and up.
25:51But the politics will weaponize that very sentence I just gave you, but it's math.
25:55It's what we are.
25:56It's demographics.
25:58We're having dramatically fewer children than have for the last couple decades, and we got
26:03older.
26:04If we tell the truth about that, we can look at what is the cost driver.
26:09So when you get folks that come in and say, well, almost all the cost driver is interest
26:15in healthcare costs.
26:17And a decade from now when the Social Security Trust Fund is gone, do we backfill it?
26:21So the brain trust here will say, well, let's do this.
26:24We'll do the ACA, Obamacare, or the Republican alternative, or Medicare for All.
26:28Those are financing bills.
26:32Once again, if our body here would tell the truth, that's who gets subsidized and who
26:36has to pay.
26:37They don't change what we pay.
26:40Technology, cures, disruptions, better ways to do it.
26:46But we keep much of the technology that could crash the price of healthcare here, we keep
26:49it illegal.
26:52Because there's armies of lobbyists in our hallways who don't want to compete against
26:57your ability to use technology to keep yourself and your family healthier.
27:06How many ... I've been able to attach a handful of AI and algorithm bills to provide customer
27:14service at the IRS, or the VA, or other things.
27:18And the hate we've gotten from the government employees unions, from these.
27:22But the fact of the matter is, it's moral.
27:25It would be better customer service for our constituents.
27:29It would be faster, better, cheaper.
27:33And the fact of the matter is, there's no pension with it.
27:36There are solutions that's not tax or cut and burn.
27:40It's a policy.
27:42And this place won't engage in the policy because we're afraid of the ... We are protectionists.
27:49We are protections of the government bureaucracies and incumbent business models.
27:54Is that Republican or Democrat?
27:56It's math.
27:57Oh.
27:58Yeah, I'm not going to bother you with that.
28:04Madam Speaker Pro Tem, may I ask how much time I have?
28:14Gentleman has 23 minutes remaining.
28:17All right.
28:18And for those who are trying to take down my words, I'm sorry for talking so fast.
28:25Tax revenues projected billions of dollars.
28:29I'm just, once again, want to make the point.
28:32Individual income taxes projected to be up dramatically.
28:36Payroll taxes up fairly substantially.
28:39Corporate income taxes fairly healthy, just that they're staying within.
28:43Other types of receipts are also up.
28:44But where I really want to get back to is trying to make this point, and then we're
28:49going to do some actual tax history.
28:53This is from CBO, Congressional Budget Office.
28:56It's not Republican or Democrat, it's math.
28:59100% of the next 30 years of debt, health care and interest, and then in 10 years if
29:05we backfill Social Security.
29:07The rest of the budget is calculated to have almost $9 trillion positive balance.
29:19So when was the last time this place actually was willing to have one of the most difficult
29:22discussions?
29:24About a month, month and a half ago, the joint economic economists on the Republican side
29:29took the leap and told the truth.
29:31We wrote a detailed report about demographics, tax policy, maximizing economic growth, and
29:36then we talked about health.
29:40And this is where I get the crap kicked out of me.
29:44Tell them the truth.
29:47Obesity in the detailed line item, and we spent months and months and months and months
29:52working on these numbers and vetting them, could be as high as $9.1 trillion of additional
29:58health care costs over the 10 years.
30:01Having a society where we're about to have the fifth year in a row where prime age males
30:05are dying younger.
30:06Is that moral?
30:08Having a society where we calculate in three to four years 50% of America will be obese.
30:15Is that moral?
30:16What we do in the Farm Bill, what we do in nutrition support, and what we do in trying
30:20to have a healthier society.
30:22Is that Republican or Democrat?
30:24I often accuse my Democrats of wanting to engage in policy to maintain people's misery
30:29where those of, at least myself, I want to cure the misery, I want to end the misery,
30:33cure diseases, move the types of investment, but also the policies so the FDA can use technology
30:40to bring cures to market faster.
30:43We have a whole portfolio of these ideas.
30:48Not one of those was a tax, not one of those was a major cut.
30:57We calculate that 16% of all U.S. health care, $600 billion, is people not staying
31:04on their statin or taking their insulin properly or their calcium inhibitors so they're having
31:09a stroke.
31:12So 99 cent pill bottle cap that beeps at you.
31:16And I can't get a damn hearing on that for years.
31:19Simple ideas that could crash the price of health care.
31:23Our society is dying.
31:25In 15 years, we calculate we have more deaths than births.
31:29Oh, but that doesn't work in the next election.
31:33That's not what I'm going to use in my propaganda.
31:36The attack ads that are going to come at you, Schweikart, well, we're going to say you mentioned
31:41the word Social Security and Medicare, but we're going to lie that you're one of the
31:44few idiots here trying to find a mathematical way to save it.
31:49This place is absolutely immoral.
31:59I've done this before.
32:00I've tried to walk through the actual cost to the poor on what we're doing at our border.
32:07I'll do this quickly.
32:11You're the individual.
32:12You're the couple.
32:13You didn't finish high school.
32:15What you sell is your talents.
32:17You're willing to go out and hang drywall.
32:19You work yourself off as hard as you can, and then you get a White House that engages
32:26in border policy where millions of people with the same skill set as you have come in
32:31and they consume the housing stock.
32:34So you want to know why the lowest tiers, the least expensive housing has had some of
32:38the highest inflation, why they can't find a place to live, and now their wages are going
32:43down because you're competing against millions of people of the same skill set.
32:48The cruelty of the current border policy crushes the working poor.
32:57Can we have a discussion like economists instead of, well, you're immoral, you want to, no.
33:04And on the flip side, we have entire charts that talk about a talent-based immigration,
33:09and talent could be a skilled carpenter or a synthetic biologist, grows the economy.
33:16And I will argue a number of the economic policies I propose, I cannot make work math-wise
33:23unless I actually, unless we actually.
33:27Because in the 70s, 80s, the world fought for hydrocarbons.
33:32Last decade we fought for rare earths.
33:34I can build you the math model that says this decade and the next three decades we're going
33:38to fight for smart people.
33:40The entire world.
33:42We educate people here and then we send them away?
33:45Are we out of our minds?
33:53Madam Speaker, Pro Tem, I'm going to just, I'm going to skip a bunch of the boards and
33:56just try to close this out with just a couple more.
34:00This is 2023.
34:03Total outlays, total spending, $6.1 trillion.
34:10Total receipts, $4.4 trillion.
34:13So what is that?
34:14That's a $1.7 trillion borrow.
34:17This year, borrowing is going to be about two and a quarter.
34:20And this is a time where the economy is doing remarkably well.
34:25Now it's subsidized, so it's basically a sugar high, but it's still doing well.
34:29And now our problem is, in 2023, gross interest was about $700 billion.
34:39This year we're heading towards $1 trillion, $140, $160 billion.
34:46But this differential here, almost every dime of that $1.7 trillion borrowing, the growth
34:57on it, now much of it is Inflation Reduction Act, the shortfall from tax reform, but we've
35:04never been given the run to show how it's growing tax receipts, and I've shown you even
35:10corporate tax receipts with the different rates are up.
35:14Turns out it's healthcare and interest now.
35:16And now as we're moving back to more normalized interest, how many of you live in a fantasy
35:19world where you think interest rates are going back to zero?
35:23You realize the current interest on 10-year notes still aren't at historic norms when
35:29you take away the years of suppression on the rate.
35:36And for my brothers and sisters on the left who like to say, well it was tax, you gave
35:40away to rich people, today the rich, the rich as defined by you, pay a higher percentage
35:47of federal income taxes than they did before.
35:49The Republican tax reform was more progressive than the previous tax code.
35:55And when we get to some of the other charts, here's my chart showing that President Biden
36:00in the debate said something insane about covering Social Security.
36:04Let's see if I can find, 10 years gross debt will be $56.8 trillion.
36:12But here's one of the points I desperately want to make.
36:17Historically when we've had very high marginal rates, eh, we get 17.6, 18, 18.2% of GDP in
36:25taxes.
36:27When we've had very low marginal rates, eh, we get 17.6, 18.2% of the economy in taxes.
36:36Because the economy changes in growth.
36:39So when you look at it, the black line is receipts, revenue.
36:43The line above it is interest and healthcare.
36:51So when our friends keep saying, well we're going to tax the rich more, great, but I've
36:54already shown you if every tax worked absolutely to its maximum efficiency, you get a point
37:00and a half a percent of GDP, and we're borrowing seven this year.
37:16We'll make this the last one.
37:22Until we're actually willing to first have the same definitions of, here's the drivers
37:33of debt, here's the innovations we're willing to bring into our society.
37:44This is our future.
37:46Our future is just absolutely crushing.
37:50And it's percentages of GDP.
37:52We expect Social Security and Medicare outlays as we start to head to the 30-year budget.
37:5817.6% of the entire economy.
38:01Where revenues are 6.3.
38:03Okay, no one has any idea what you're talking about.
38:06But my basic point is, today through the next 30 years, it's demographics.
38:14It's mostly healthcare, and then the cost of financing that shortfall.
38:21Helping people live longer, live healthier, live freer of disease is moral.
38:31Is it Republican moral, Democrat moral?
38:32It's just moral.
38:37And yet every piece of legislation I've brought here over the last few years can't get a hearing
38:43or get shot down because the bureaucracy despises it, the interest groups care more
38:52about their money than they care about my eight-year-old's future.
39:03There is a path where the math can be made to work.
39:10But for everyone around here, you think there's a simple solution.
39:14My father used to have this great saying, for every complex problem, there's a simple
39:19solution.
39:20That's absolutely wrong.
39:23We will have to do complexity to save our future, save my retirement, save my children.
39:36We have put it on paper.
39:38We've done economic modeling.
39:39We've had multiple PhD economists do the math.
39:43There's a way it works.
39:47Will this place step up and buy a calculator, put batteries in it, and then sit down with
39:51those of us who want to save our future and make this another American century?
40:01But we run around terrified from doing what's hard.
40:06Madam Speaker, thank you for the therapy session of letting me vent.
40:12I'm going to bite my tongue from saying what I had to say, but I am going to throw one
40:20last thing.
40:25There's a number of people who watch these presentations on YouTube.
40:30Half the comments are bots.
40:31They're fake.
40:32They're Russian troll farms.
40:35About half the remaining half are people who care more about saying ideological insanity,
40:44but there's about a quarter of them that help, that actually have sometimes brilliant ideas,
40:51are engaged in saying, what if you did this?
40:53What if you looked at that?
40:54We're diving into ideas on things of consolidation, things of mandatory, and those ideas actually
41:01came from the population that's been willing to watch these presentations over the years.
41:09One of my last great hopes is when I would do these economic presentations five years
41:18ago, I'd get 12 people who would watch them.
41:22Today I'll have several hundred thousand.
41:25Maybe, just maybe, our Democrats, our Republicans, the people who are independent, are tired
41:34of being treated like children, and they're ready.
41:38They're ready for us to start talking to them like honest brokers of policy.
41:44With that, Madam Speaker, I'm going to yield a couple minutes to Congressman Mooney, and
41:51he can consume what time I have left.

Recommended