The Reprehensible Audacity Of FEMA Being Broke
We don’t even have the decency to fake as though we care about our own citizens anymore.
Part of what I love about having this blog is that it is cathartic for me when I want to be heard, understood, or otherwise just bitch and moan about things in the world of finance, the economy, and politics that I find askew.
From the jump, one of the things I have written about is how dead wrong both sides of the political aisle have our fiscal and monetary policy. With monetary policy, both parties have quietly fallen in line under the mutated breed of Keynesian economics our Federal Reserve implements, which rests on the sole idea of printing money and praying that either hyperinflation doesn’t occur or the economy doesn’t collapse.
Republicans occasionally criticize the Federal Reserve and pepper in objections here and there about our abuse of the dollar, but when all is said and done, they fall in line behind monetary policy as it stands today. Democrats have gone full non sequitur and, through the miracle of faux-intellectual academic bullshit squared, have somehow convinced themselves that none of the basic rules of economics—such as debits and credits and supply and demand—exist anymore.
When it comes to fiscal policy, Democrats are the main offenders. Republicans have a longer track record of wanting to rein in spending and reduce the size of government, whereas Democrats are often pushing for larger government and more spending. There have been exceptions, like when Bill Clinton balanced the budget and when Donald Trump ran some of the largest deficits in the country’s history, but that’s the general gist of things.
No matter what lens you look at it through, the nation has racked up an accelerating tab of debt at a pace that is mind-boggling. For example, just over the last month, the United States added over $300 billion to our national debt, which is now fast approaching $36 trillion.
We have consistently shown ourselves to be unable to balance the budget, and no matter how much we tax our citizens, we are always going to wind up spending more than we are bringing in. It’s the American way for everyday individuals at home with their personal savings and credit cards, just as it is the American way for those who run our Treasury.
It’s been a mainstay of this blog that I believe our spending addiction is going to end very poorly for the United States. And sadly, I’ve made some peace with it. I truly don’t believe there’s turning back from the dire situation we’re in now.
But let me clue you in on something I haven’t made peace with.
After the devastating effects of Hurricane Helene, FEMA has all of a sudden come out and said it doesn’t have enough funds to make it through hurricane season. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas warned this week that FEMA is running low on funds.
“We are meeting the immediate needs with the money that we have. We are expecting another hurricane hitting,” Mayorkas said. “FEMA does not have the funds to make it through the season.”
While Mayorkas didn’t specify the exact funding needed, his comments reflect growing concerns from President Biden and lawmakers that a supplemental spending bill may be necessary this fall to support recovery efforts.
I’ve spent the last four years watching as millions of people have crossed unchecked through our southern border and have been treated like royalty by the Biden administration while everyday citizens struggle with rising prices, crumbling infrastructure, and the negative effects of suffocating regulation.
I’ve also spent the last four years watching the United States dole out close to $50 billion in foreign aid, mainly to Ukraine to help it press on with a war that realistically it has little chance of winning, while shaking down waitstaff, Uber drivers and anybody using Venmo for purposes of more than $600 for tax receipts.
And in my short time in the world of finance, I’ve seen enough omnibus spending bills—with funds allocated for things like border security in Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, Tunisia and Oman and family planning to halt population growth that "threatens biodiversity or endangered species"—to have developed a deep loathing for how our government and our Treasury manage finances.
So when sorry-ass Alejandro Mayorkas—who has sworn up and down for the last three years that there’s no crisis at the southern border while parts of the country have been overrun and overwhelmed by unchecked, undocumented, and sometimes criminal migrants—takes to publicly decrying that FEMA is out of money in the midst of one of the largest domestic disasters in the country’s history, it’s absolutely revolting to watch.
Not only is it grotesque because of how we have squandered away hundreds of billions of dollars on things that everyday U.S. citizens are not going to see an impact from, but it’s even worse when examined under the umbrella of how we run monetary policy in this country.
There once was a day when, if you needed to fund government entities, you actually had to have the revenue coming in from taxpayers because we couldn’t just print dollars ad infinitum anytime we wanted. Those were the days of sound money, and they are long gone.
FEMA being broke today means not just that we have pissed away the money that we could have allocated for it to non-U.S. citizens and fruitless causes — it’s far more insulting than that. It means that in a day and age where we can theoretically print endless fiat dollars and have an ‘infinite amount of cash’—an idea that I think is completely batshit insane, but our Fed governors don’t—that we still have not stocked the coffers of our domestic agencies with the bare minimum necessary for them to help the American people when they need to.
In other words, if the money is all fake, and we can conjure up as much of it as we want without any consequences, as both political parties would have you believe over the last several decades, why should FEMA ever be asking for more money to help hurricane victims?
If we want it, the solution isn’t bringing in more money from taxpayers, nor is it even spending less on other useless bullshit. The solution is literally moving a couple of decimal places on an Excel spreadsheet somewhere, probably at the New York Federal Reserve, and then in the Treasury Department, and then hitting a button.
As I’ve written a million times on this blog, this is a deeply troubling way to run monetary policy that is ultimately going to result in devastation for the country, in my opinion. But it takes things to a new level of sad for me to realize that not only do we not have the decency to run monetary policy in an honorable way in this country, we don’t even have the decency to press a couple buttons, make the hollow gesture to stock FEMA’s bank accounts before the nation goes bankrupt and at least fake as though we care about our own citizens anymore.
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I understand the reasons some are voting for Kamala. I listen thoughtfully to them about the buffoonish antics of Trump, the post 2020 antics, the 1/6 riot he inspired and then sat on his hands for hours and watched the chaos unfold. I don’t disagree with any of those sentiments. I listen to them giggle about the juvenile remarks he made about the “pet eating Haitians”. I hear them go on about his business history, his overt narcissism, his rallies where he drones on endlessly. I listen to all of it, and frankly don’t argue that they are wrong.
However, I myself will pull the lever for Trump, without a second thought. I’ll do it because of the imbecilic actions outlined in Chris’s article, for the absolute disaster the Democrats have created at the border. I’ll do it because the current administration has presided over two new wars bringing us closer to the possibility of nuclear war than any other time in my life. I’ll vote for Trump because the other side of the isle believes in censorship, weaponizing the judicial system, authoritarian control over those with dissenting opinions. They have adopted an energy policy that, whether or not you buy climate change, is totally disconnected from reality or common sense. I’ll vote for Trump because the other side will attempt to make structural changes to government like packing the Supreme Court, eliminating the filibuster, legalizing millions of migrants they allowed into this country, giving statehood to Puerto Rica and DC. I’ll vote for Trump because Harris believes in wealth redistribution and identity politics.
I explain all of that to any Dem voter that will listen. They nod, tell me none of that is really true, and that they will vote for Harris because she seems upbeat and positive.
I just shake my head, order another drink, and console myself with the thought that I’m living in interesting times.
You really capture the absurdity of US monetary policy: We're totally fine creating money out of thin air with a few mouse clicks, but we have to draw the line somewhere, and that line is for devastation due to natural disasters. WTF?!