[Pages H142-H146]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




           PRIMARY DRIVER OF U.S. DEBT AND INTEREST FRAGILITY

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of 
January 3, 2025, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Schweikert) is 
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
  Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Madam Speaker, I think we are going to try to do a 
bit of a continuation of what we were doing last week. If you don't 
like math or economics, please turn off C-SPAN.
  There are a couple of things that we have to walk through. Last 
Thursday, I think I took 38 minutes here, and the two concepts I was 
trying to walk through were, one, the demographics of the United States 
being the primary driver of U.S. debt--it is not that complicated, but 
it seems to really bother people--and the second thing was this concept 
called interest fragility. That is a big word.
  What it basically means is that when you have $36 trillion in debt, 
$28 trillion to $29 trillion publicly financed, and when, over a year, 
you are going to refinance almost $10 trillion, bring maybe $2 trillion 
to $2.3 trillion new issuances to market, that little movement in 
interest rates could be a boatload of cash.
  What happened last Friday? We got a knockout jobs report.

[[Page H143]]

  Here is the irony that people need to understand: The United States 
and a few other governments, such as China, are bingeing on so much 
debt that they have a ravenous appetite to grab people's savings and 
borrow it around the world. When the bond markets see that the U.S. 
economy is actually doing okay, which means more individuals and more 
businesses will be in the market to consume debt, we are going to raise 
interest rates. The United States gets its head kicked in when our 
interest rates go up.
  I think I was trying to show a chart the other day. It doesn't 
completely work this way because you have to refinance into it, but if 
we went to a 5 percent handle on U.S. sovereigns--that means, from the 
short term to the 30 years, you had a 5 percent interest rate that was 
our mean interest rate on U.S. debt--it is almost $9 trillion of 
additional borrowing, spending, and interest over that next 10 years.
  Functionally, going to 5 percent is double everything we are pretty 
much talking about in the extension of the tax reform. There is this 
lack of understanding. We are on the cusp of the bond market, the debt 
markets, actually being the number one influencer on U.S. policy, not 
Congress.
  When you borrow $70,000 a second--and I have charts, which I didn't 
bring this time, but I have done it in the past. Where we are in 9 
years, it is no longer $70,000 a second, but it is almost doubled.
  How many of you understand we borrow $70,000 a second? The math will 
tell you almost 100 percent of that borrowing from today through the 
next decade is interest and healthcare, but we don't want to tell 
people that.
  Of the $2.3 trillion that my math says we are going to borrow this 
year--and CBO is going to publish something in the next day or so, and 
we will see how close my math got to what their prediction is--half of 
it is interest.
  Even when we do all sorts of things to reduce spending, to modernize 
on how we deliver services, to change the costs, we have this interest 
monster because we have $36 trillion and, basically every 125 days, 
Madam Speaker, we click off another trillion dollars.

                              {time}  1515

  To the poor Clerk staff, I am so sorry. You have to be so tired of 
hearing idiots like me--well, me--getting up and saying some of these 
things over and over, but it doesn't seem to sink in around here.
  Look, one of the reasons I am here today is I am trying to sell a 
concept.
  This is a chart and it is almost unreadable. I accept that, but what 
it was saying is, we are up against a series of tax expirations at the 
end of this year. $3.7 trillion of it is individual. Your individual 
taxes are going up at the end of this year, but then we have estate 
taxes and passthroughs and LLCs and partnerships, all those other 
things.
  I think the Treasury Department a couple days ago scored it not at 
4.6; they scored it at 5.5, which is a timing effect because it is a 
different year and higher interest rates.
  There was an economic study done by CBO and a couple outside groups 
saying, if Congress can find a way to offset it--and that is hard. You 
are talking $400 billion a year we would have to find in modernization 
and changing spending. If Congress could step up and pay for it, you 
not only maintain current tax policies so our brothers and sisters, all 
of our taxes don't go up but you get additional growth in the economy 
because you didn't just pull that much more money out of the economy 
and then have interest pile up on it.
  I think it was a year or so ago or 2 years ago, we had, I think, 3 
months where we had to borrow money to pay for our borrowing.
  When we go home and talk to our voters, how many of them will look 
back at us and understand the scale?
  You get these responses, well, if you just cut this or that--I am 
going to show a couple of those charts again, and they are rounding 
errors. Sometimes they are just a few hours of borrowing from an entire 
year, but that is what we speechify because it is easy to understand, 
it is a great sound bite on talk radio, and it is crap math.
  Once again, the basic premise of this chart--and it was reconfirmed 
by the Joint Economic Committee and the baseline math was also done by 
CBO. It said, if you want to maximize economic prosperity in the United 
States, extend current tax policy, fix depreciation--we call it 
spensing; research and development expensing because that is actually 
where you get the productivity curve because God knows you will hear 
the Democrats come behind the mike and talk about look how good the job 
market is.
  Many Americans are actually poorer today than they were 4 years ago. 
They may be employed, but they are poorer, and that is because 
inflation went up faster than their wages.
  I represent a district in the Phoenix-Scottsdale area that had, I 
believe, 27 percent inflation over the last 4 years. So unless your 
wages are up 27 percent, you are poorer today.
  How do you raise wages? How do you raise purchasing power?
  Two things: Wages go up with inflation. That just means you are 
treading water.
  Productivity. There are things we could do in the tax policy that is 
coming to fix the things that create the productivity boost, the things 
we can do in regulatory reform, in modernization, the adoption of 
technology as a regulator.
  You get people here that go around saying, oh, we are going to 
deregulate. Fine, but how about doing smart regulation. We are all 
walking around with these supercomputers in our pockets. The idea is 
that you could crowdsource certain data, crash the size of the 
bureaucracy, make them less intrusive, and yet air quality, water 
quality, and all these other things can be much safer.
  It costs a fraction of what we do today, but you just have to be 
willing to think like a scientist, a data person, and deal with the 
army of lobbyists that are outside in the hallway who are upset that 
you are making them change their business model or their unionized 
bureaucracies, they show up here angry at you saying, what do you mean 
you want to use technology at the IRS?
  Remember, Madam Speaker, the IRS is the second largest unionized 
workforce in the Federal Government. I believe the VA is the first one. 
Every time we try to add modernization to do it better, faster, 
cheaper, and fairer, can you believe they get cranky?
  The math is the math. If you want to maximize economic vitality for 
this country, do your very best to offset as much as you can of the tax 
policy extension.
  The other thing I have to give you that is going to make me sound a 
little cranky is when you hear a Member of Congress, particularly a 
couple of our Senators, running around here and saying, we are just 
extending baseline. Huh?
  It is a whole made up term now. The law is the law. The law says the 
tax cuts for individuals, passthroughs, estate, and alternative minimum 
tax, all those things, expire at the end of 2025. We have made up a 
term around here saying we are just going to extend current policy. I 
heard someone this morning say we are going to extend current law.
  Current law says it expires. Take a look at all your CBO and your 
debt projections. It has the expirations in there. You take it away, 
fine. Be honest about what it means. It is another few trillion dollars 
of debt over the next 10 years that we have to pay interest on.
  Here is the fragility, and we are going to do this on a chart or two 
here. When you do that, you are going to go home and tell your voters, 
I extended your tax cuts. Great. I don't want to raise taxes on anyone, 
but if you do it without paying for it, when the interest rates go up 
and that family's credit cards, car debt, mortgage, and everything else 
gets more expensive, when the economy slows down because interest rates 
are up, it is because you have made the bond market nervous.
  Oh, but David, that would require thinking like an economist. I am 
going to get re-elected by telling people I just extended their tax 
benefits from the 2017 TCJA. Great.

  How do we explain to people that there are no free options anymore? 
We have the moral obligation to not make the world debt markets 
nervous. You have got to understand--and I need to double check my math 
because Great Britain, you saw what they did. They were doing all sorts 
of tax policy this

[[Page H144]]

summer and the pound crashed and their interest rates exploded, but 
most of the industrialized world actually has lower interest on their 
10-year bond than the United States.
  Greece today can sell a 10-year bond almost a full percentage point 
cheaper than the United States.
  Let me repeat that: Greece today can sell a 10-year bond almost a 
full percentage point cheaper than the United States.
  Does anyone understand there is a risk premium? If you screw around 
with this stuff, there is a thing called a term premium. It is a fancy 
way of saying, we actually want a little higher interest for the risk.
  One of my predictions for 2025 is Moody's, which is the last of the 
three big rating services. I think we are going to get downgraded if we 
do this stuff without even an attempt to pay for some of it, offset 
some of it, modernize our costs in how we deliver services. If we do 
that, we are going to get downgraded by all three rating services. The 
other two have already downgraded us.
  Does anyone here care, or do we just want to do happy talk and sugar 
highs? We just want a good dopamine hit on social media, but don't give 
a damn about the math.
  The fact of the matter is most of the industrialized world today has 
a better credit rating. You see it not by the credit rating services 
but by the way they can sell their debt cheaper than the United States.
  When you hear people talk about the extraordinary privilege the 
United States has, there are actually two of them. The fact that the 
world uses the U.S. dollar as the ultimate arbiter of exchange. Great. 
Let's not screw that up.
  The other one we often never talk about it, and I am going to do it 
in a future presentation, it is actually from an economist's standpoint 
and may be bigger than the fact that we get to buy and sell in our own 
currency. This second extraordinary privilege is that smart people from 
around the world, entrepreneurs from around the world, investors from 
around the world want to do it here. They want to live here, go to 
school here, produce their products here, invest here. From an 
economist's standpoint, the United States has two remarkable, 
extraordinary privileges: our currency and people want to be with us.
  In a couple of moments, I am going to show you why that is so 
important, but back to a baseline.
  If you are one of our new Members, please, you have got to memorize 
this. You see the blue on the chart that is upside down so I look like 
an idiot. Let's get this right. That is discretionary. All defense we 
consider is discretionary.
  Everything most people think is government: the FBI, the Park 
Service, the foreign service, those things. That is blue. We call that 
nondefense discretionary.
  Everything a Member of Congress votes on is borrowed money. If I do 
the math off the top of my head, it may be $400 billion of what is in 
the red, which is mostly earned benefits. That is your Social Security, 
your Medicare, your veterans benefits, your Federal pensions, those 
things.
  Functionally, I think this year it is like 75-25, 75 percent of all 
spending is on autopilot. We don't vote on it.
  I shouldn't be yelling. I have had a lot of caffeine.
  What we do vote on, what we give speeches on, which we screw around 
with all the time, is discretionary and in the scale of what we can 
reduce, it is almost--a lot of what we debate here is rounding errors. 
We have actually had debates on the floor here where the amount of 
money that we are trying to save, we borrowed more money during the 
time of the debate than it would save that year because we don't 
understand if you are clicking off $70,000 of borrowing every second--I 
wonder what this speech is costing. If I go a full hour, you start to 
see the idea.
  So far this fiscal year, we are borrowing about $10 billion a day. I 
think it will come in at $6 billion, $7 billion a day once we get tax 
receipts in April. I am trying to explain the fragility.
  Here is the point I was just trying to make a couple of moments ago. 
If we went back to a 5 percent interest rate, it is just shy of $9 
trillion over 10 years. Just the interest rate move is double 
everything we are talking about. How many times do you hear idiots--I 
mean, excuse me--elected officials like me get behind these microphones 
and talk through--it is not only having good fiscal policy but we are 
also going to be disciplined because how are we going to communicate 
to the bond markets that we are worthy of future investments?

  Where this gets really dangerous is--remember how I was just 
criticizing people walking around here saying, let's just ignore 
everything. Let's just keep doing what we are doing, don't have any 
offsets. If we do that, in 9 years, 9.2 percent of the entire economy 
is borrowed.
  This year, my math is, we are going to kiss up, around 7 percent of 
the entire economy is going to be borrowed money.
  What happens if we have some large disasters? Can you imagine that 
happening? What happens if we have another pandemic? What happens if we 
have a war?
  Do you understand how fragile you are making the greatest country on 
Earth because we are not willing to tell the truth about the fiscal 
situation?
  For my friends on the left who go, well, let's just raise taxes. I 
can bring my charts over and over, as I have in the past when we have 
had high marginal tax rates, we get about 17 percent of GDP. When we 
have had low marginal tax rates, we get about 17 percent of GDP. I 
think we have 75, 80 years of history of that showing it always falls 
back down to that margin.
  The secret is grow. The other side should stop lying about growing. 
One percent of GDP--and I am going to do this and double check myself 
in my head--1 percent of GDP is $300 billion. If you get 17 percent of 
that, that is about $48 billion.
  If you are borrowing $7 billion a day and you did all these things to 
get another point of GDP, you have covered yourself for a week. You get 
these folks who want to say, happy talk, we are going to grow our way 
out. To cover this year's debt, you would need almost a 50 percent GDP 
growth. Come on. Join reality world with us. Put batteries in your 
calculator. We can do this. We can do this together.

                              {time}  1530

  One point I wanted to make for our brothers and sisters on the left, 
I have done multiple presentations here showing that if you do all 
their tax hikes for $400,000 and up, you get about a point and a half 
of GDP.
  If we do all of our spending cuts in the nondefense discretionary, 
which is what most of us have talked about for the last couple years, 
you get about 1 percent of GDP, so you have a big 2\1/2\ percent.
  We are borrowing 7 percent of the entire economy this year, so all of 
the left's solutions and the things we as conservatives often talk 
about don't get you actually anything close to what is necessary. It is 
terrifying.
  Madam Speaker, I am having a sort of personal crisis of confidence 
because I do this every week. My math is good. We do our best. We make 
mistakes on occasion, but we try to double, triple check it. No one 
seems to care. Is it really that terrifying to tell the truth to our 
voters?
  The press around here has no interest in telling the truth on the 
math. I have a couple Bloomberg reporters, a Wall Street Journal 
reporter, and, on occasion, believe it or not, a public television 
reporter seem to be the only ones who ever want to look at these 
charts. Everyone else, they basically want to write a gossip story.
  Yet, these things decide if my 2\1/2\ year old has a future. It also 
decides if your retirement becomes a miserable disaster.
  I hear a little person up in the balcony. If that little person is 2 
years old today, when that little person is 22, his or her taxes have 
to be double what they are today, a 100 percent increase.
  When my 2-year-old is hopefully finishing up his university and going 
into grad school before he does his post-doctorate doctorate, I have 
high ambitions for him. We actually are trying to put into the family 
rules he is not allowed to run for office. The same thing with my 9-
year-old daughter. That is both funny and actually true.
  Think of this: A child born today, when they are about 22, 23, the 
United States has to double every single U.S. tax--tariffs, income, 
corporate, everything--just to maintain baseline services. The math 
says a child born today

[[Page H145]]

will be part of the first generation in U.S. history who will be poorer 
than their parents and grandparents.
  Great morality around here. Let alone our inability--we are not 
allowed to talk about Social Security even though the Social Security 
actuaries, the CBO, the outside groups, the left groups, the right 
groups, all say, hey, 9--now 8\1/2\ because we just gave away a couple 
hundred billion dollars out of it--9 years or so, we double senior 
poverty in America because when the trust fund is empty, and you all 
get a 20 percent cut in Social Security, we double senior poverty.
  How many people do you see coming behind these microphones and 
saying, we need to fix it? It is immoral where it is going. If you do 
that, the left now has a political consultant writing attack ads on you 
because they care so much more about winning the next election than 
saving the society and not doubling senior poverty.
  We already have the trouble after the inflation cycle how many baby 
boomers are now living on the street because they can't afford their 
rent. The math is the math, and the math will win. If we continue 
current policy and not follow the law, in 9 years, 9.2 percent of the 
economy will be borrowed in U.S. debt. This chart doesn't even factor 
in the new higher interest rates because we are up a full point from 
early December. Great job, guys.
  Look, I have done this chart the last couple weeks because it seems 
to have an impact. For every dollar we take in in tax collections, we 
spend $1.39. Huh? Take in a dollar, spend $1.39. By 2034, if we went 
back to a 6 percent interest rate. I know that is a couple points 
higher than we are at right now, but 6 percent, I think that is sort of 
what we were paying in the 1980s, 1990s, early 2000s up to the Great 
Recession. If we go to 6 percent, think of this, in 9 budget years, 45 
percent of all tax collections go just to interest.
  Does anyone care? No, because we would have to tell people the truth.
  This is a new chart, and I am trying to actually sort of explain. Our 
brothers and sisters on the left who want basically a socialized, 
planned economy, industrial policy, they did on the CHIPS Act and then 
their version of I guess they call it the Inflation Reduction Act, 
there is some good economic data now that says if you want to do 
something much less expensive, created much broader economic growth, 
and created much more productivity, you should not do what the 
Democrats did, which is let's thank some of our favorite industrial 
entities. Their executives, their investors will write us political 
checks.
  However, if you had done something like research and development 
expensing, and expensing when a company buys a piece of equipment to be 
better, faster, cheaper, it is dramatically less expensive, and it 
actually has more economic value, more economic growth, and it is 
spread throughout the economy.
  The problem with the Democrats' industrial policy, we are going to 
give all this money to certain green technologies, we are going to do 
CHIPS Act, is you often are writing checks, so you get rent-seeking, 
writing checks for last-generation technology. There is a little part 
of that I would have voted for, for primary research and development to 
do it better, faster, cheaper.
  It is like the old joke, what is the fastest way to make every 
computer in America worthless? Have someone invent a quantum computer, 
and suddenly that leap. It is like when all of a sudden you have a new 
photovoltaic panel, if it goes up 20 percent--there are experiments in 
the lab right now--all the other ones now are out of the money and 
don't make economic sense anymore.
  That is the concept. Creative destruction is one of the hallmarks of 
a society that becomes more productive. The way you get that is not the 
arrogance.
  When I first got here, I think I stole this joke from my wife--she 
looked at me, what is the two times in life, Mr. Speaker, you think you 
know everything? When you are 13 years old, and the day after you get 
elected to Congress.

  Oh, come on, guys, that is funny stuff.
  The fact of the matter is, when you see these sort of policies coming 
from Democrats where they are so smart, they get to choose the 
industries that get the corporate handouts, the cash handouts, and you 
can't imagine that there were strings attached. Yet, if we had just 
done an egalitarian tax policy, say we want to maximize productivity 
across the society because we are smart enough to know what the 
breakthrough is tomorrow. That breakthrough tomorrow is the thing that 
raises all boats, I guess that is the saying, and makes us productive.
  What do you get in a society that is more productive? Wages go up.
  All right. I just want to make a point, and I did a little bit of 
this last week. We held a little bit of a contest, I think back in 
December, where we asked, give us your ideas of how you would modernize 
or improve or reduce spending, these things.
  So far this budget year, if you got rid of foreign aid, this is for 
the 2025 fiscal year, all foreign aid, get rid of it, it is one week of 
borrowing.
  Get rid of all the salaries at the Department of Education. Okay, I 
am fine with that, but you have got to understand, it basically comes 
out to 9 hours of borrowing for an entire year, and that is not 
spending. That is borrowing.
  You have these people like me who get behind these microphones and 
speechify: If we get rid of the Department of Education, we are going 
to balance the budget. No, all the salaries just covered 9 hours of 
borrowing. There is a scale problem. I know seeing 12 zeroes, when you 
start talking a trillion, is hard. It is also our job. It is our job to 
understand the complexities here.
  One of the complexities that we are terrified to talk about is, if 
anyone is interested in what we are really up against, go online, grab 
Congressional Budget Office's report from yesterday. Every year they do 
an estimate on population, fertility, growth in the society. We were 
using the Census Bureau's data.
  I have come here behind the microphone and said, hey, our quick look 
at the Census Bureau data was in 11 years the United States was going 
to start to have more deaths than births. CBO came back yesterday and 
said, no, the way they are calculating where fertility rates are in the 
United States, in 8 years the United States will have more deaths than 
births.
  Demographics is destiny. You want people like me to figure out the 
financing of Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, which were all 
designed systems for population growth. Remember, today's worker pays 
for today's beneficiary. Even when we do the adjustments for net 
immigration, you pick up a couple more decades.
  Think about that, living in a society with more deaths than births in 
8 years. Matter of fact, I believe there were 17 States that last year 
had more deaths than births.
  This goes back to my productivity argument. If you want a society and 
a country that still economically grows, that can still defend itself, 
that still is the envy of the world, that has the extraordinary 
privileges, are we going to adopt regulatory tax policies that maximize 
economic growth?
  It turns out, you are going to have to do things that maximize 
productivity, maximize labor substitution, use that technology, use the 
supercomputer in your pocket. It is shocking how many people freak out 
every time I start to talk about using AI and these things. You don't 
have a choice. If we are going to keep growing, we have got to thread a 
needle here while jogging. We have got to manage the debt. We have got 
to convince the debt markets we are serious, so don't raise our 
interest rate because if interest rates go up a bunch, it is almost too 
late because we are carrying so much, our demographics are against us.
  We have to have this productivity spike, and it is going to come 
through functionally two things--AI and synthetic biology--but I will 
save that for another speech. However, there is a way it can work. 
There is hope. There is only hope if this place sharpens its intellect. 
You can't keep saying the same things you were saying in the 1990s or a 
decade ago. The world is different.
  I hope the staff, the voters, others start to really think this 
through and start demanding, saying, I need intellectual robustness, if 
that is a word.

[[Page H146]]

Learn your math. Learn the opportunity, but also learn to think like an 
economist.
  Let's put up the one chart that gets me the most hate, and it is more 
than a year, year-and-a-half out of date. The numbers are worse today, 
but it is the truth. For anyone crazy enough to watch, how many Members 
of Congress are willing to show this to you?
  This is directly from CBO, numbers from about a year-and-a-half ago. 
They update it every year. CBO projects $115 trillion debt over 2024-
2054. Social Security and Medicare account for $124 trillion of 
deficit. The rest of the budget has a $9 trillion surplus. Let me walk 
that through. It basically means everything when we talk about 
nondefense discretionary, defense discretionary, all those are 
projected to grow slower than tax receipts, but Medicare, Social 
Security, and the interest that goes on top of their deficit financing 
produce about $124 trillion of borrowing.
  How many of you think the world is going to lend us $124 trillion 
over the next 30 years?
  This is based on current interest rates. Actually, it is sort of 
based on last year's interest rates. I was playing with a calculator a 
couple days ago. With my math, I have this going to $135 trillion, not 
$124 trillion.

                              {time}  1545

  It is not Republican. It is not Democratic. It is demographics.
  The fact of the matter is that you could substantially change much of 
Medicare's costs and make services better, faster, and cheaper. Just 
join this century of technology in taking care of people.
  The ring I am wearing that does my vitals or the technologies to 
incentivize things, do we pay a Medicare provider to help people be 
healthier instead of making more money when someone is sicker?
  We did a whole presentation multiple times last year showing obesity 
in America is an additional $9.1 trillion of spending over the next 10 
years. Maybe as a society, we should consider changing the farm bill 
nutrition support to help our brothers and sisters because it is both 
moral and great economics.
  Suddenly, people can come back into the labor force. They can form 
families. They can do all these other things. We have States where more 
than half of the population is technically obese, and we are paying for 
it. It is government policy in many ways that is doing it to these 
people. It is immoral.
  I am going to get hate texts saying: You can't talk about that. Screw 
you.
  Let's do what is right for our brothers and sisters in this country. 
We are Americans. Don't hide from the math. Embrace it, and fix it.
  This one is the last. If you saw my staff, they were slipping me this 
because we were sort of speed doing the math. Let me explain.
  We are trying to do this more often. We will get these questions that 
come in on the comments. Someone asked this, and they actually did it 
as a legitimate question: Foreign aid over 4 years is $198 billion. 
Think of that. Every dime of foreign aid, if you said for the last 4 
years and took 4 years of borrowing, it would cover 8 days, 8.2 days of 
debt. Those of you who get up in front of these mikes and say that if 
we got rid of foreign aid, we will balance the budget, even when I do 
the average of the last 4 years, it is just a little over 8 days of 
borrowing.
  It is hard when you get up in front of an audience at home and tell 
them the truth when it is not the same thing they heard 10 minutes 
earlier on a talk radio show or on a cable television show.
  This isn't about ratings. This isn't about today's dopamine hit of 
you being angry because you saw something on the Drudge Report. This is 
about saving this Republic.
  If you are like I am, you believe this Republic was divinely 
inspired. If you believe like I do, do you not have a moral obligation 
to save this country?
  How about being a dad? My wife is my age. We were blessed. We got to 
adopt a couple of kids. Should they be part of the first generation 
that is poor? They don't have to be.
  There is a way the math works. It just turns out, Mr. Speaker, that 
it is hard.
  We have to do complex things. We are going to have to tell lobbyists 
and people from home that you have to modernize, join this century, and 
change your business models.
  They are going to be mean to us. They might not even contribute to 
us, but there is a way to make the math save our future. I am going to 
argue that in the next 6 weeks around here.
  We are going to make some decisions. Are we going to modernize the 
delivery of government? Are we going to find a way to offset? Are we 
going to convince the bond markets that we are serious about the 
future?
  For everyone out there, watch us. We all give these beautiful 
speeches about the morality of what an amazing country we have and our 
place in the world and our place in history.
  Mr. Speaker, these are the weeks we are going to make that history or 
have to live with the sins of what we do.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Gill of Texas). Members are reminded to 
direct their remarks to the Chair and not to a perceived viewing 
audience.

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