The Federal Reserve is a private corporation, but is authorized
to print all the dollars it wants to lend. Most of this lending in past years
has been accomplished by purchasing Treasury Bills and toxic mortgages. It is the reason the Federal Government never
runs out of money. The dark side of this
blessing is that the Federal government always overspends and has absolutely no
reason to stop. Our current bout of
overspending began in 2001 with the Gulf Wars and doubled down after the 2008
Meltdown with UN Agenda 21 implementation.
Bond Debt
Bonds act like mortgage loans. Cities, Counties, States, Public School
Systems, Redevelopment Authorities, Development Authorities and Special
Districts can sell bonds and, in effect, borrow the face amount of the Bonds
for their construction projects. A 30
year Bond at 5% interest costs double the face amount of the Bonds. If Cobb
County sells $400 million in Bonds, the actual cost would be $800 million after
you take interest payments and fees into account.
Young families are able to purchase homes is they qualify
for mortgage loans. Despite having to pay double, they normally have no other
option. Government entities have no
excuse to sell Bonds unless they are faced with having to replace a water or
sewer system and even these should be paid for with reserve funds, set aside
and accrued to fund this maintenance.
Although State and local governments have laws that require them to
balance their budgets, their path to overspending is funded by borrowing.
The maximum amount a city or county can borrow in Georgia
is 10% of the value of all property within its borders. That includes all private property on the tax
registry including your property. Your
local government is using your equity to borrow money. In Cobb County, the tax registry is about $26
billion, so Cobb can borrow up to 2.6 billion.
Cities and Counties should be limited to borrowing up to the value of
their own assets, not 10% of ours.
Bonds with No Voter Approval
Not too long ago, Bond Issues were voted on by city and
county voters. This is no longer the
case. State laws now enable cities and
counties to borrow without voter approval.
These laws need to be challenged and revisited to protect voters’ rights
to prevent reckless overspending, the corruption that accompanies it and
bankruptcy.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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