tet1953
Well-Known Member
Obama and the democrats should simply thumb their collective nose at the republicans and tea partiers. Let them hem and haw all they want. They don't have a legal leg to stand on.
I have just heard about something that should change the whole debate. I have always felt that arguing whether to raise the ceiling is moot because we are talking about money that congress has already authorized..spent, really. So it is disengenuous at best to hold our obligations hostage to ideaology.
Well, guess what folks? Any notion of a debt ceiling is unconstitutional to begin with. Section 4 of the 14th amendment states, in part:
Once congress budgets and appropriates money, they're done unless they vote again to take it out of the budget. But to budget it and then later say we won't pay for it (i.e. have a debt "ceiling") is just not allowed under the constitution. If we owe it, we will pay it.
I have just heard about something that should change the whole debate. I have always felt that arguing whether to raise the ceiling is moot because we are talking about money that congress has already authorized..spent, really. So it is disengenuous at best to hold our obligations hostage to ideaology.
Well, guess what folks? Any notion of a debt ceiling is unconstitutional to begin with. Section 4 of the 14th amendment states, in part:
Section. 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.
The rest of that section just talks about how public money can't be used against the U.S.
Once congress budgets and appropriates money, they're done unless they vote again to take it out of the budget. But to budget it and then later say we won't pay for it (i.e. have a debt "ceiling") is just not allowed under the constitution. If we owe it, we will pay it.