The United States lost its top-notch triple-A credit rating from Standard & Poor's Friday, in a dramatic reversal of fortune for the world's largest economy. ... This came after a confusing day of reports: Standard & Poor's told the U.S. government early Friday afternoon that it was preparing to downgrade the U.S.'s triple-A credit rating but U.S. officials notified S&P that it had made a $2 trillion mathematical error. The error was in the calculation of the U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio over time and was based on a misreading of what the correct congressional baseline was, government sources indicated. They said that once informed of the error S&P revised its rate-cut rationale to emphasize the political aspects of the country's debt situation. "A judgment flawed by a $2 trillion error speaks for itself," a Treasury spokesperson said. – CNBC
Dominant Social Theme: You cannot trust the private sector with this sort of thing... the State knows better.
Free-Market Analysis: We have been suggesting for quite a long time now, perhaps ten years or more, in various books, editorials and publications, that the US monetary and political system was in serious trouble and would eventually face a severe "reality check." Today, we see the headwinds of reality crashing into the structural edifices that have been erected as a means of population control and economic enslavement. The US dollar is a license to steal, one that has been granted via legal tender laws, and the heist has now been revealed to millions during this dawning era of what we call, the Internet Reformation. The US political establishment – in this case the Treasury Dept. – can criticize S&P's downgrade all they like, but the truth of the matter is that the US is broke and soaked in a sea of unsustainable debt. To whine about a $2 trillion "error" – that isn't really an error at all, considering the Treasury Dept. is disputing S&P's misuse of "congressional baseline" numbers that somehow accurately forecasts the "U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio over time" – is nothing short of laughable. Suffice to say, why should anyone, including S&P base any of their numbers on congressional baseline numbers when all the government does is tell one lie after another? Does anyone with any semblance of understanding of the fiat-money system really believe that the "wise leaders" acting/running the US are going to master the great ship's rudder and pull off a last minute "miracle-manouver," thus avoiding the treacherous shoals it is destined to crash into? We think Hurricane Reality is about to teach the "Captains of Fantasy" and their believers a severe lesson. Now S&P cannot come out and say that, but we can.
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