Congressman Randy Forbes
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Boiling Point


Grocery shopping on a day with temperatures bobbing into the 90s and the air thick with humidity is ordinarily out of the question.  Nevertheless, the bare refrigerator coupled with my outspoken stomach had outmatched good sense.  Having filled my cart and lingered a bit longer in the cold sting of the freezer section, I made my way to the front of the store where a line of carts stood waiting for the single open register.  There I found myself last Monday making small talk with the man in line ahead of me. 

We talked pleasantly about the mixed emotions of moving his first daughter into James Madison University and the drive from his North Carolina hometown where he retired after 25 years in the military.  He told me about his plans for the barbecue reunion that evening with old Navy friends and we swapped tips on the perfect burger ingredients as the cashier rung up his charcoal, ground beef, and potato salad. As he swiped his debit card he turned back to me. “What do you do?” he asked.

“I am a Congressman.”  I replied and extended my hand.

His eyebrows rose slightly, and I could see a couple horizontal wrinkles appear across his forehead.  The cheerful tone of our conversation evaporated and his face displayed the intense consideration of his next words.  I knew where the exchange was headed.

“Huh. Okay. Well, good to meet you,” he said as he shook my hand. I stood in surprise as he turned, took his receipt from the cashier and pushed his cart towards the sliding glass doors disappearing into the piercing midday sun. How rare, I thought: someone that doesn’t want to weigh in on what’s going on in Washington.

Minutes later as I approached my car though I noticed a folded note pinned under the blade of my windshield wiper.  Anger and frustration was palpable in a thick scrawl of the hurried block letters: “YOU PEOPLE IN WASHINGTON ARE DESTROYING OUR NATION.  STOP TRYING TO TAKEOVER MY HEALTHCARE!!”

Americans will put up with a lot.  In large part we tolerate government ineptitude, we stomach bureaucratic waste, we shake our heads at scandals, we hold our noses at political posturing, and we put up with belated, incomplete, and sometimes even poor leadership.  We expect Washington to be underwhelming. 

But recently anger and frustration at Washington has weighed like a thick film across America. As spring has given way to summer, dissatisfaction has boiled over into open protest.  This week the Administration released its annual mid-session budget review; Washington will spend $30,958 per household, tax $17,576 per household, and borrow $13,392 per household this year. Americans are sickened that this unbelievable spending will cause our nation to run its first ever trillion-dollar budget deficit. Even worse, the President's budget would borrow an additional $9 trillion over the next decade, more than doubling the national debt. By 2019, America will be spending nearly $800 billion on net interest to service the debt incurred by Washington’s chronic addiction to the national credit card – more than we spend on national defense.

Americans feel their future is in danger.  They feel raw anger at the arrogance undergirding the scope, scale, and repetition of bloated federal spending.  They feel chest-tightening exasperation at the unrelenting and illogical march of the-more-you-spend-the-more-you-save talking points coming out of Washington. And they feel the sickening weight of the realization of what our future will look like as we become deeper and deeper debtors to nations like China.

At times the application of these emotions is unrefined, indelicate, and sometimes inappropriate. But as leaders prepare to return to Washington, it’s not the screaming protestors or high-profile confrontations captured under the lens of the 24-hour media to which our leaders need to be most closely tuned.

Instead, it is the small business owner working a second job to keep his business afloat who forgoes the rare pleasure of an extra hour of sleep to spend his Saturday morning holding a sign on a busy thoroughfare.  It is a young mother who corrals her two preschoolers long enough to call her friends about her frustration with the direction of the nation.  It is the young professional who spends his evening sharing news articles and facts on Facebook rather than watching the preseason game playing on the television in the background. It is the polite and reserved middle-aged woman who normally confines her conversation-starters to her neighborhood happenings who is compelled to purchase a domain name and organize a bus trip to Washington. It is the man who digs through his glove box in 90 degree heat to find a piece of paper and a pen while his groceries melt in the August sun.

If you really expose the core of the frustration across our nation - there is one simple, yet largely unarticulated theme: Americans have an unequivocal intolerance of those that imperil our chances of creating a better future.  Our citizens will put up with a lot but they will not stand idle to the slaying of their dream of a better tomorrow. We have many problems to solve and reforms to be made.  But the American people want and deserve a future built with common sense, thoughtful ideas, and considered proposals. 

The fuel of American life is the faith that tomorrow will hold more possibility and more promise than today. Our dreams for where our hard work will take us make it possible to put up with inadequacies of our leaders, but nothing will provoke passionate action more quickly than holding hostage our aspiration that we can leave better futures for our children. Woe to the generation of American leaders that bleeds the spigot of American optimism for the benefit of today’s sound bite. Nothing is more tightly connected to the happiness of our nation than our optimism in tomorrow.

Just the Facts: Debt and Deficit


Record Deficit:
With two months still left to go in the fiscal year, the government recorded its largest deficit ever, at $1.268 trillion.

Record Debt:
* As of July 31st the national debt stood at: $11,669,251,349,504 ($11.7 trillion).

* With a population of just under 307 million, that works out to $38,043 for every man, woman, and child in America.

Increase in the Last Month:
* During the month of July, the national debt increased by $123.976 billion.

*That is an increase of $3.999 billion a day; $166.6 million an hour; $2.8 million a minute; and $46,287 a second.

* The government spent $19 billion just on interest in July. That is $612 million a day in interest payments.

Increase Since the Democrats Took Control of Congress:
* As of June 31st, the national debt had increased $2.992 trillion since the Democrats took control of Congress on January 3, 2007.
That works out to an increase of $9,754 per person.

Foreign Ownership of U.S. Debt:
* At the end of May, the U.S. government owed China $801.5 billion. We owed Japan $677.2 billion, and we owed oil exporting nations such as Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Kuwait $192.9 billion.

* In the first five months of this year alone, our debt to China has increased by $74.1 billion or 10%.  

What’s the Difference between Debt and Deficit?

National Debt: The net amount of accumulated dollars that have been borrowed by the federal government in all previous years.

Federal Deficit: The difference between what the government spends and what it receives in one year. Each year's deficit is added to the existing debt.

Healthcare Tele Town Hall on September 8th 

 

 


Have you talked with Congressman Forbes on healthcare yet? Join him for a Healthcare Tele Town Hall on Tuesday, September 8th. Use the link below to register.

 

Follow this link to register. 


Protect Your Family From the Flu

 


As your kids head back to school, stay informed - not panicked - on the Swine Flu. Congressman Forbes has compiled Frequently Asked Questions and resources to help you stay informed.


Follow this link for information. 


How Will the Healthcare Bill Impact Small Businesses?
 



In his blog, Congressman Forbes lists ways that small businesses would be negatively impacted by the current healthcare bill, H.R. 3200.   

Follow this link to find out. 


Other News

Aug 18, 2009 
Just the Facts: Debt and Deficit  
 

Aug 18, 2009
Forbes Published Healthcare Reading Guide  

Aug 4, 2009
Forbes Introduces Bill to Extend Homebuyer Credits to Military Members Serving Overseas  


ON THE HILL
PHOTO GALLERY
Congressman Forbes meets with officials from Isle of Wight.
Congressman Forbes speaks at a Disabled American Veterans ceremony.
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