Anonymous ID: c8ec79 Oct. 7, 2021, 11:28 a.m. No.14740583   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Good stuff.

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/the-us-has-never-defaulted-on-its-debt-except-the-four-times-it-did/ar-AAPf2Yn

 

Canada invited Chelsea Manning to country just so she could be thrown out

Two teenagers arrested for threatening to 'shoot up' Martin County High…

 

Every time the U.S. government's debt gets close to the debt ceiling, and people start worrying about a possible default, the Treasury Department, under either party, says the same thing: "The U.S. government has never defaulted on its debt!" Every time, this claim is false.

Janet Yellen wearing glasses and smiling at the camera: The US has never defaulted on its debt — except the four times it did © Getty Images The US has never defaulted on its debt — except the four times it did

 

Now Treasury Secretary Yellen has joined the unfailing chorus, writing that "The U.S. has always paid its bills on time" and "The U.S. has never defaulted. Not once," and telling the Senate Banking Committee that if Congress does not raise the debt ceiling, "America would default for the first time in history."

 

This is all simply wrong. If the United States government did default now, it would be the fifth time, not the first. There have been four explicit defaults on its debt before. These were:

 

Video: What Is The U.S. Debt Ceiling? Everything You Need To Know Amid Battle In Congress (Newsweek)

Video Player is loading.

Current Time 0:00

/

Duration -:-

0

What Is The U.S. Debt Ceiling? Everything You Need To Know Amid Battle In Congress

 

Giant hyper-realistic pandas watch over pedestrians from a 3D billboard in China USA TODAY Logo

London launches multi-function buses to provide 'vital services' to homeless people, such as doctor and dentist appointments as well as haircuts and showers. AFP Logo

What happens next after the Texas abortion law was suspended MSNBC Logo

 

>1 The default on the U.S. government's demand notes in early 1862, caused by the Treasury's financial difficulties trying to pay for the Civil War. In response, the U. S. government took to printing pure paper money, or "greenbacks," which during the war fell to significant discounts against gold, depending particularly on the military fortunes of the Union armies.

>2 The overt default by the U.S. government on its gold bonds in 1933. The United States had in clear and entirely unambiguous terms promised the bondholders to redeem these bonds in gold coin. Then it refused to do so, offering depreciated paper currency instead. The case went ultimately to the Supreme Court, which on a 5-4 vote, upheld the sovereign power of the government to default if it chose to. "As much as I deplore this refusal to fulfill the solemn promise of bonds of the United States," wrote Justice Harlan Stone, a member of the majority, "the government, through exercise of its sovereign power…has rendered itself immune from liability," demonstrating the classic risk of lending to a sovereign. In "American Default," his highly interesting political history of this event, Sebastian Edwards concludes that it was an "excusable default," but clearly a default.

>3 Then the U.S. government defaulted in 1968 by refusing to honor its explicit promise to redeem its silver certificate paper dollars for silver dollars. The silver certificates stated and still state on their face in language no one could misunderstand, "This certifies that there has been deposited in the Treasury of the United States of America one silver dollar, payable to the bearer on demand." It would be hard to have a clearer promise than that. But when an embarrassingly large number of bearers of these certificates demanded the promised silver dollars, the U.S. government simply decided not to pay. For those who believed the certification which was and is printed on the face of the silver certificates: Tough luck.

>4 The fourth default was the 1971 breaking of the U.S. government's commitment to redeem dollars held by foreign governments for gold under the Bretton Woods Agreement. Since that commitment was the lynchpin of the entire Bretton Woods system, reneging on it was the end of the system. President Nixon announced this act as temporary: "I have directed [Treasury] Secretary Connally to suspend temporarily the convertibility of the dollar into gold." The suspension of course became permanent, allowing the unlimited printing of dollars by the Federal Reserve today. Connally notoriously told his upset international counterparts, "The dollar is our currency but it's your problem."