You're assuming Social Security and Medicare are untouchable. Maybe they are politically untouchable, but mathematically they are not. There are lots of things you can do to rein in that spending, such as means testing, upping the retirement age, etc. A tough problem, sure, but not impossible. As for the military you could cut it by half and still have the best fighting force in the world.Kestrel wrote:Social security and medicare taxes are about 42% of government revenues, and about 39% of government spending. Interest is 5%, "other mandatory" is 17%, 39+5+17 = 61%. The government has a constitutional duty to provide for the national defense, so you still have to leave something in the budget for the military whether you like it or not.
It works today in Scotland. And it worked in the US until 1933. It's not ludicrous.Competing currencies within the same country??? That's completely ludicrous. It worked back in the colonial days only because interstate commerce was virtually non-existent. It won't work now.
Also consider that hardly anyone uses notes anymore, we use checks and credit cards. Banks are able to handle multiple check issuers and credit card companies just fine. Banks already routinely handle other banks instruments, and will be able to handle notes from other banks just as easily. That's what clearing houses are for.
That's because we had inflated so damned much that other nations were sucking out our reserves. And that was the international gold exchange standard. Actual gold backed currency had disappeared in 1933.One of the reasons the US got off the gold standard was because the reserve fraction was reduced so much during the Viet Nam War that the connection became nearly meaningless.
Please note that I am not trying to convince or convert you. I am only rebutting your assertion that "the math doesn't compute". The math does indeed compute, it just doesn't correspond to your subjective political opinion.